Bavarian cream

Bavarian cream

Bavarian cream with strawberries and caramel sauce
Alternative names Crème bavaroise, Bavarois
Type Custard
Course Dessert
Place of origin France
Main ingredients Pastry cream, gelatin
Cookbook: Bavarian cream  Media: Bavarian cream

Bavarian cream, Crème bavaroise or simply Bavarois[1] is a dessert similar to pastry cream but thickened with gelatin or isinglass[2] instead of flour or cornstarch, and sometimes flavoured with liqueur. It is not to be confused with crème anglaise, which is a custard sauce thickened with egg.

History

Bavarian cream is a classic dessert that was included in the repertoire of chef Marie-Antoine Carême, who is sometimes credited with it. It was named in the early 19th century for Bavaria or, perhaps more likely in the history of haute cuisine, for a particularly distinguished visiting Bavarian, such as a Wittelsbach. Escoffier declared that Bavarois would be more properly Moscovite, owing to its preparation, in the days before mechanical refrigeration, by being made in a "hermetically sealed" mold that was plunged into salted, crushed ice to set—hence "Muscovite".

True Bavarian creams first appeared in the U.S. in Boston Cooking School cookbooks, by Mrs D.A. Lincoln, 1884, and by Fannie Merritt Farmer, 1896. The Fannie Farmer Cookbook offers a "Bavarian Cream".[3]

Preparation and serving

Bavarian cream is lightened with whipped cream when on the edge of setting up, before being molded, for a true Bavarian cream is usually filled into a fluted mold,[4] chilled until firm, then turned out onto a serving plate. By coating a chilled mold first with a fruit gelatin, a glazed effect can be produced. Imperfections in the unmolding are disguised with strategically placed fluted piping of crème Chantilly. In the United States, it is not uncommon to serve Bavarian cream directly from the bowl it has been chilled in, similar to a French mousse. In this informal presentation, Escoffier recommended the Bavarian cream be made in a "timbale or deep silver dish which is then surrounded with crushed ice".[5]

It may be served with a fruit sauce or a raspberry or apricot purée or used to fill elaborate charlottes.

Though it does not pipe smoothly because of its gelatin, it could substitute at a pinch for pastry cream as a filling for doughnuts. The American "Bavarian Cream doughnuts" are actually filled with a version of a crème pâtissière (pastry cream), causing local linguistic confusion.

See also

Notes

  1. Bavarois is masculine because it stands for fromage Bavarois: compare the coeur à la crème made with mascarpone.
  2. See Louis Eustache Ude's The French Cook, translated into English and published in London, 1828. Reprint (Arco Publishing:New York) 1978 p. 360f
  3. Cunningham, Marion (1990). The Fanny Farmer Cookbook (13 ed.). Bantam. pp. 961–962. ISBN 0553568817.
  4. The mold should be coated first on the inside with almond oil, according to Escoffier, Le Guide Culinaire.
  5. Escoffier, The Complete Guide to the Art of Modern Cookery, 1903, tr. by H.L. Cracknell and R.J. Kaufmann. Reprinted (New York:John Wiley) 1999, p. 544)

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, January 24, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.