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Lean on classics like sandwiches or stews, but with a little New Orleans flair—try our classic muffuletta or our shrimp po’ boy burgers (hot tip: turn them into sliders!), or make a big batch ...
Bread pudding—a sweet dessert made from bread, milk, eggs, and sugar, often served warm and topped with whiskey sauce, rum sauce, or caramel sauce [46] Doberge cake —a cake with many thin layers, separated with dessert pudding or custard [ 23 ] (often half chocolate and half lemon), and with a glazed outer frosting [ 47 ]
Rouille sauce. Rouille (French pronunciation: ⓘ; Provençal: rolha, lit. 'rust') is a sauce that consists of egg yolk and olive oil with breadcrumbs, garlic, saffron and cayenne pepper. [1] It is served as a garnish with fish and fish soup, notably bouillabaisse. Rouille is most often used in the cuisine of Provence.
Mornay sauce is a smooth sauce made from béchamel sauce (butter, flour, milk), grated cheese, salt, and pepper, and often enriched with egg yolk. [5] [6] When used for fish, the sauce is generally thinned with fish broth. [7] [8] The cheese may be Parmesan and Gruyère, [6] [9] [8] Parmesan alone, [5] Gruyère alone, [10] or various other cheeses.
Local newspapers warned that when the last of the "race of Creole cooks" left New Orleans "the secrets of the Louisiana Kitchen" would be lost. The recipes published in the cookbook were compiled by an unknown staffer at the Daily Picayune, who said the recipes came directly from "the old Creole 'mammies'". Since its initial publication it has ...
Normande sauce: prepared with velouté or fish velouté, cream, butter, and egg yolk as primary ingredients; [2] [3] some versions may use mushroom cooking liquid and oyster liquid or fish fumet added to fish velouté, finished with a liaison of egg yolks and cream. Poulette: mushrooms finished with chopped parsley and lemon juice
Sauce gribiche (French pronunciation: [sos ɡʁibiʃ]) is a cold egg sauce in French cuisine, made by emulsifying hard-boiled egg yolks and mustard with a neutral oil like canola or grapeseed. The sauce is finished with chopped pickled cucumbers, capers, parsley, chervil and tarragon. It also includes hard-boiled egg whites cut in a julienne ...
Eggs Sardou is named for Victorien Sardou, a famous French dramatist of the 19th century, who was a guest in New Orleans when the dish was invented around the turn of the century (from 19th to 20th). An example of an eggs sardou recipe includes poached eggs, artichoke hearts, creamed spinach, and hollandaise sauce. [1]