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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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While posting the "recipe" of the cauliflower pastiche I was wondering if
bechamel with grated cheese is really a Mornat sauce. I checked up wikipedia in italian and it said a Mornay is a bechamel with added egg yolk and cream, then I checked up wikipedia in english and it says a Mornay is just bechamel and grated cheese, then I checked up the franch wikipedia and it says that a Mornay is bechamel with added egg yolk and grated cheese. Reminds me of a polish saying: three Poles, four opinion. They all cite the book "Le Cuisinier royal", in particular its tenth edition: the french and italian wikis say that Mornay sauce appeared for the first time on that book, while the US version says the exact opposite: "Sauce Mornay does not appear in Le cuisinier Royal, 10th edition, 1820; ". Why this paragraph? It is obvious to everybody that someone quotes a book if the book is relevant to the matter, not if it is totally nonrelevant: this said, my guess is that the US page has been translated by soemone who didn't well understand the french. So we remain with 2 options: bechamel plus eggyolk and grated cheese (fr) or bechamel plus cream, eggyolk and grated cheese (it). I'd stand with the French but I'd prefer soem more info. Anyone has a copy of the tenth edition of "Le Cuisinier royal" in a pocket right now? ![]() -- "Un pasto senza vino e' come un giorno senza sole" Anthelme Brillat Savarin |
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