Monday, August 31, 2009

Notes - Hors d’oeuvre and Appetizers

Chapter 06 : Hors d’oeuvre and Appetizers

‘Faire manger-les sans appetit, faire briller l’esprit de ceux en out et faire trouver a ceux qui en desirent, est le supreme role des hors d’oeuvre’

(For those who are not hungry…….to perk up the spirit of some and to give spirit to others who are without it, this is the task of the hors d’oeuvre on a menu)

This definition/explanation of the hors d’oeuvre, was presented by Escoffier in one of his earlier books.

Hors d’oeuvre is a French expression and its true definition is a preparation served outside of the menu proper, at the beginning of the meal before the main course. It comes from the French term outside (hors) and goes back to the early times when at banquets, the appetizer (hors d’oeuvre) was served in a separate room (ante chamber/room) while the guests assembled and waited for the arrival of the host and the chief guest. Hors d’oeuvre or appetizer as it is called in English can be described as a small tidbit, which should be light, delicate attractive and tasty. The term hors d’oeuvre should never be spelt with the final s, since there is plural form for the term in French. An hors d’oeuvre can be either in the solid form (appetizer) or in the liquid form (aperitif) which may be an alcoholic or non-alcoholic beverage.

Hors d’oeuvre may be classified in various ways:

Hot and Cold hors d’oeuvre

Vegetarian and Non vegetarian hors d’oeuvre

Classical and Contemporary hors d’oeuvre

Hors d’oeuvre Singulaire and Compound hors d’oeuvre

However, a more comprehensive classification would include:

- Meat based hors d’oeuvre

Pate, Terrines, Sausages (salami and mortadella), Ham

- Fish based hors d’oeuvre

Oysters, Caviar, Roll mops, Snails, Prawn cocktail

- Egg based hors d’oeuvre

Egg mayonnaise, stuffed eggs, devilled eggs, Gulls/Plovers eggs

- Vegetable based hors d’oeuvre : Asparagus, Artichokes, Corn-on-the-cob

- Fruit based hors d’oeuvre : Melon, Grapefruit, Florida cocktail

Sometimes, Hors d’oeuvre are classified as:

Cold Hors d’oeuvre

Hot Hors d’oeuvre

Zakuski and

Canapés

Cold Hors d’oeuvre are of two categories:

  1. The ready to serve variety, available in the market off the shelves, like smoked salmon, pate, sausages.
  2. Those which require culinary preparation and that, when made properly have the advantage of being freshly prepared from fresh ingredients with maximum flavor and appeal. This is where fine cuisine can make a contribution to eating pleasure.

Hors d’oeuvre varies are often served at lunch and consist of many items served in a container called raviers. Various items can qualify to be called a part of hors d’oeuvre varies such as olives, pickled onions, cornichons (pickled gherkins), sliced salami, ham and even items like smoked salmon and gulls/plovers eggs

Hot hors d’oeuvre could generally be served at a cocktail party or before a dinner but seldom at lunch. Although there are some hot hors d’oeuvre that are considered to b classical, there are many others that are strictly prototype and serve as a basis for many different preparations. As a matter of fact, every branch of cookery that is reduced to a smaller portion is or could be used in the preparation of hot hors d’oeuvre. Paillettes, allumettes, beignets, frittes, bouchees, croustades, rissoles, ramequins and even the classsic quiche can all be served as hot hors d’oeuvre when reduced in size.

What are Zakuskis?

In the 1890s, zakuski, or hors d’oeuvre a la russe or canapés a la russe became very popular.

These cold hors d’oeuvre are considered to be classical and made up of certain specified ingredients. Chefs in Russia were patronized by the Czars and reached the pinnacle of heir profession. It consists of a base of Blinis; the famous Russian pancake made out of buckwheat flour. This was topped with a topping that would be meat, fish, vegetable or combination of these. A characteristic of the topping is that it would most often be flavored with a smoked fish or meat. The surface would be decorated elaborately; and here is where the chef had the chance to demonstrate his imagination and his skill. Intricate garnishes of exquisite designs would decorate the zakuski. This would then be finished off with a glaze of aspic. The zakuski is a dinner hors d’oeuvre and are larger in size than the canapé. They are presented to the guest individually, without an accompaniment or sauce.

Cold Canapés

How would you describe a canapé?

These are tiny open faced snacks, which are cut into a variety of shapes – round, rectangular, oval, triangle or other shapes. The size and thickness will depend upon the nature of the ingredients used. A canapé will have three parts:

The base – which would normally be bread – toasted or plain, white or brown. However, a variety of other base ingredients could also be used – puff pastry, flaky pastry, short crust, pizza dough, choux pastry, are examples of the variety that can be used. Sometimes, a spread would be applied to the base to prevent it from soaking up the moisture of the topping.

The topping – almost anything could be used to top the base. However, it should be suitable and must complement the base. It should be fairy dry and must hold shape. A slice of cheese, hard boiled egg, ham, salami, mushrooms or chicken coated with a thick cream sauce, marinated mushrooms and prawns could all be used as topping. The list is limitless and can only be contained by the imagination.

The garnish – this is done more to increase the visual appeal and the appearance than for any functional value. A slice of olive, a sprig of parley, a dice of capsicum or even a green pea can all be used to increase the presentation of the platter of canapés

Canapés are usually served as snacks at cocktail parties and are never featured on the regular menu. Some classical canapés are served as the savory course. Here are some popular canapés:

Canapé Rigoletto: Butter a canapé with cayenne butter. Sprinkle with a mixture of finely chopped whites and yolks of egg, ham, tongue, fine herbes and truffles.

Canapés a la danoise: Butter rye bread with horseradish butter, arrange slices of smoked salmon and filets of marinated herrings on top.

Canapés cancalaise: Butter a canapé with tuna fish butter, top with a poached mussel and decorate with a sprig of parsley.

Canapé rejane: Butter a slice of bread with lobster butter, top with a mound of chopped egg and mayonnaise and decorate with lobster coral.

Canapés a la nicoise: Butter the bread with anchovy butter. Pile stuffed olives on top and fill the gaps with anchovy butter.

Canapés poulette: Butter round canapés with anchovy butter, sprinkle sieved boiled egg yolks and top with a shrimp.

Canapés vie vile: cover a canapé with tarragon butter, top with a slice of ham and decorate with tarragon leaves.

Assignment: make a list of innovative canapés breaking them into the base, the topping and the garnish.

VERNON COELHO

ihm mumbai

2008-09

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