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Baking, Grilling & Cooking With Extra Virgin Olive Oil


[1] Use extra virgin olive oil for much more than salad dressing (photos #1 © Flavor Your Life).


[2] Brush the grill, and your food, with EVOO (photo © California Olive Ranch).

Olive Oil Cake
[3] Bake super-moist cakes with EVOO. Here’s the recipe (photo © Lucero Olive Oil [now closed]).

Rosemary Ice Cream
[4] EVOO adds extra creaminess to already-creamy ice cream. Here’s the recipe (photo © Local Food Rocks).

Olive Oil Bread Dipper
[6] Dip bread in olive oil. It’s delicious as well as good for you. Butter is delicious, but not good for you (photo © Murray’s Cheese).


[7] Poach fish in olive oil. Here’s the recipe for this poached salmon (photo © Pom Wonderful).


[8] Make a pesto for pasta, or just use the olive oil as your sauce. Here’s the recipe for this casarecce pasta with broccoli rabe and pesto (photo © Love & Olive Oil).

 

Thanks to California Olive Ranch, producer of extra virgin olive oils, for our Tip Of The Day: baking, cooking and grilling with EVOO. Extra virgin olive oil is one of the best oils to cook with. Use it for baking, frying, poaching, sautéing and finishing. Extra virgin olive oil holds up well under high temperatures, and brings a uniquely nuanced flavor profile to your dish. Plus, its health benefits, including heart healthiness, are terrific.

Plan ahead: June 1st is National Olive Oil Day and August is National Olive Oil Month.

> The History Of Olive Oil
 
 
GRILLING WITH EVOO

It’s a common misconception that olive oil’s smoke point is too low for grilling. That may be true of much grocery store olive oil, but high quality EVOO has a smoke point of more than 425°F.

A grill’s temperature is 400-450°F for high heat, 350-400°F for medium-high, 300-350°F for medium, and 250-300°F for low heat.

Extra virgin olive oil is some of the freshest and highest-quality oil available among cooking oil. All those antioxidants help it hold its form at higher temperatures.

Lower quality olive oils such as virgin olive oil or simply “olive oil”, on the other hand, have a high free fatty acid content and will smoke at a lower temperature (the different types of olive oil).

Brush the grill. A light brushing of EVOO on the grill will do wonders in keeping your foods from sticking. Just don’t get heavy handed: You don’t want oil dripping into the flames.

Mist your meats and seafood. Use an EVOO spray several times as they are grilling. This creates a glaze and adds yet another layer of flavor.

Instead of a spray, dip herbs in EVOO. Tie together a bunch of fresh rosemary or thyme, and use it as a brush to baste your foods with olive oil as they grill. It will infuse your food with flavor as it grill. Alternatively, you can tie fresh herbs onto your basting brush and infuse their flavor that way.
 
 
COOKING WITH EVOO

A staple in your kitchen, EVOO is versatile and useful for many purposes beyond grilling. Some key uses:

  • Butter substitute (much healthier!)
  • Bread dipper
  • Marinades and rubs
  • Pan-frying, sautéing and roasting
  • Salad dressings
  • Sauces (pasta, pesto, etc.)
  •  
     
    BAKING WITH EVOO

    Baking with extra virgin olive oil is a sure way to add complexity of flavor and more moisture to baked goods.

    Here are the benefits of baking with olive oil instead of butter.

    For starters, it’s a great way to reduce the amount of saturated fat in of your favorite treats.

    Baking with extra virgin olive oil is easy with this conversion chart.

    You can even make olive oil ice cream! Here’s a recipe.
     
     
    FRYING WITH EVOO

    A long-standing myth is that olive oil’s smoke point can’t stand up to the high heat required for frying.

    High-quality extra virgin olive oil has a smoke point upwards of 425°F, well above the ideal frying temperature of around 350°F.

    A general rule of thumb: the higher the quality and the fresher an oil is, the higher the smoke point will be.

    Lower quality olive oils such as virgin or crude, on the other hand, have a high free fatty acid content and will smoke at a lower temperature

  • Here are more uses for EVOO.
  • How To Substitute Olive Oil For Butter
  • Check Out Your EVOO I.Q.
  • Check Out Smoked Olive Oil
  •  
     
    MORE ABOUT OLIVE OIL

  • Check Your Extra Virgin Olive Oil
  • Glossary Of Olive Oil Terms
  • How To Taste & Evaluate Olive Oil
  • More Uses For EVOO
  • Overview Of Extra Virgin Olive Oil
  • Sensory Wheel: The Different Flavors & Aromas Of Olive Oil
  • Why You Should Switch To Olive Oil

  •  
    OLIVE OIL RECIPES

  • Banana Muffins With Chocolate Chunks
  • Chocolate Olive Oil Cake
  • Dark Chunk Loaf With Olive Oil
  • Dense Olive Oil Cake With Orange & Mint
  • Green Olive Tapenade
  • Ice Cream Sundae With Olive Oil
  • Kalamata Olive Bread
  • Maialino’s Olive Oil Cake
  • Olive Oil Ice Cream
  • Olive Oil Martini
  • Olive Oil Polenta (Cornmeal) Cake With Grapes
  • Lemon Olive Oil Poppyseed Muffins
  • Olive Oil Cornmeal Cake With Lemon Olive Oil
  • Olive Oil Gelato
  • Olive Oil Ice Cream With Shaved Parmesan Cheese
  • Olive Oil Marmalade Cake With Orange Olive Oil
  • Olive Oil Citrus Cake
  • Orange Olive Oil Cake With Greek Yogurt & Grand Marnier
  • Pistachio Olive Oil Cake With Rosemary Olive Oil
  • Olive Oil Martini
  • Olive Oil Poached Salmon
  • Recipes With Smoked Olive Oil
  • Savory recipes for quick breads and skillet cornbread.
  •  
     
    ________________

    *The grades of olive oil based on levels of acidity: Extra Virgin Olive Oil, Virgin Olive Oil, Lampante Virgin Olive Oil, Refined Olive Oil, Refined Pomace Olive Oil, Olive Oil and Pomace Olive Oil. Each type has a different smoke oil. Unless labeled Extra Virgin, a grocery store olive oil brand is typically Refined Olive Oil or Olive Oil.

    Some grocery store brands labeled Olive Oil, Cooking Olive Oil or Pure Olive Oil. Pure olive oil is not at all pure: It’s a portion of Extra Virgin or Virgin Olive Oil blended with Refined Olive Oil. The blending method is often used when the extraction quality of the Refined Olive Oil is not as good as expected. In order to improve the quality, the refined oil has to be mixed with a better quality one for better flavor [source].

     

      

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    The Student Vegan Cookbook & More Excellent Vegan Cookbooks

    You don’t have to be a student to enjoy Hannah Kaminsky’s eighth vegan recipe book, The Student Vegan Cookbook (see all eight below).

    Anyone who has a tight budget, a crazy-busy schedule, and limited kitchen equipment can make amazing vegan meals, snacks and treats.

    The Student Vegan Cookbook shows you how, with tips, tricks, and hacks for dormitory-room and small-kitchen cooking.

    There are lots of creative, nutritious, and delectable recipes spanning the whole day, from rushing-off-to-class quick-fix breakfasts to midnight treats for chilling and unwinding.

    Award-winning vegan blogger Hannah Kaminsky has walked the walk, cooking delicious meals for herself and her roommates during her own college years.

    Fast-forward a few years: Hannah is now a professional food writer and photographer who has created a stunning book full of truly scrumptious, easy-to-make, 100% vegan recipes.
     
     
    WHAT’S IN THE STUDENT VEGAN COOKBOOK

    There are 85 yummy recipes, each with its own beautiful photograph. They include:

  • Drinks: Super-healthy smoothies, shakes and juices.
  • Loaded Toasts: Avocado toast is not the only way to turn toast into a meal!
  • Lunch Favorites: Wraps, tacos, burritos, and sandwiches, for lunches and casual dinners on the fly.
  • Noodles: Fast and easy noodle dishes, from pasta, soba and udon to new ways to fix ramen, the perennial student favorite.
  • One-Pan and One-Bowl: Colorful and filling meals that need only one burner.
  • Snacks and Party Treats: Incredible tasting and good for you.
  •  
    Whether you’re a vegan, a vegetarian or simply an omnivore who wants to eat healthier…

    Whether you live at home, in your own apartment or in a dorm…

    You’ll kick your cooking and eating game up to the next level with this inventive and incredibly useful book.

    Stock up for holiday gifts!

    Get your copy wherever fine books are sold; Amazon links to Hannah’s cookbooks are below.

    Order directly from Hannah’s website if you’d like a personalized signed copy.

    MORE NEW RECIPES: Sign up for Hannah’s blog to get her latest vegan recipes.
     

    VEGAN COOKBOOKS, WRITTEN & BEAUTIFULLY PHOTOGRAPHED BY HANNAH KAMINSKY

  • Easy As Vegan Pie: One-Of-A-Kind Sweet And Savory Slices
  • My Sweet Vegan: Passionate About Dessert
  • Real Food, Really Fast: Delicious Plant-Based Recipes Ready in 10 Minutes or Less
  • Super Vegan Scoops! Plant-Based Ice Cream for Everyone
  • Sweet Vegan Treats: 90 Recipes for Cookies, Brownies, Cakes, and Tarts
  • The Student Vegan Cookbook: 85 Incredible Plant-Based Recipes That Are Cheap, Fast, Easy, and Super-Healthy
  • Vegan A La Mode: More Than 100 Frozen Treats Made from Almond, Coconut, and Other Dairy-Free Milks
  • Vegan Desserts: Sumptuous Sweets for Every Season
  •  
     
    VEGAN, VEGETARIAN…WHAT’S THE DIFFERENCE?

    Check out the differences between:

  • Flexitarian
  • Pescatarian
  • Vegan
  • Vegetarian (including lacto-ovo vegetarian, lactovegetarian, ovo-lactovegetarian and pesco-vegetarian)
  •  


    [1] Hot off the presses: The Student Vegan Cookbook. For a personalized copy, head here (all photos © Hannah Kaminsky | Bittersweet Blog).


    [2] Another Kaminsky cookbook, featuring vegan meals ready in 10 minutes or less.


    [3] Ice cream fans will love this book of plant-based frozen desserts.


    [4] With the holidays not far away, this peppermint roulade from Super Vegan Scoops.

     

      

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    Butterscotch Pudding Recipes For National Butterscotch Pudding Day


    [1] Butterscotch pudding topped with vanilla bean pudding, and a garnish of butterscotch sauce, whipped cream and chocolate chips (photo © Bruna Branco | Unsplash).


    [2] Butterscotch pudding with chocolate flecks (photo © Duard van der Westhuizen | iStock Photo).


    [3] Butterscotch pudding topped with pieces of chocolate almond bark (photo © Hannah Kaminsky | Bittersweet Blog).


    [4] Butterscotch pudding topped with toasted coconut and torched meringue (photo © Frontera Grill | Chicago).

     

    September 19th is National Butterscotch Pudding Day. The butterscotch pudding recipes are below, but there would be no such recipes if it were not for butterscotch candy.

    Butterscotch was invented in England, as a hard candy. It is often credited to Samuel Parkinson, a confectioner in Doncaster, a town in Yorkshire, in Northern England. Parkinson began making the candy in 1817, and the brand still exists.

    Other local confectioners followed suit, and the town became famous for its butterscotch candy, known as Doncaster butterscotch.

    An 1848 issue of the “Liverpool Mercury” gave the recipe for “Doncaster butterscotch” as “one pound of butter, one pound of sugar and a quarter of a pound of treacle*, boiled together” [source].

    We don’t know if the Liverpool Mercury meant brown sugar, but the signature flavor of butterscotch comes from brown sugar, not white sugar. (Look at the ingredients of today’s butterscotch and you’ll also find corn syrup†, vanilla or other flavors, and water.)

    To make butterscotch sauce, the butter and brown sugar are mixed with cream. How about some butterscotch sauce with your butterscotch pudding? Check out photo #1.

    > The difference between butterscotch, caramel and toffee.
     
     
    THE HISTORY OF BUTTERSCOTCH PUDDING

    The original English puddings were savory, boiled puddings containing meat. By the latter half of the 18th century, traditional English puddings no longer included meat; they were still boiled or steamed, even baked. The finished product was cake-like (like plum pudding).

    Our creamy American puddings, though very different from what the British call pudding, descend from this tradition of steaming sweet ingredients.

    Here’s more history of pudding.

    American colonists continued the English tradition of baking sweet puddings. The earliest print reference, for chocolate pudding, is 1730. Chocolate custard, a thick creamy cousin, dates to the 19th century. These sweets were enjoyed by wealthy people [source].

    In 1837 in Birmingham, England, chemist Alfred Bird invented custard powder for his wife who couldn’t eat eggs. He began marketing it across the U.K. in 1844.

    Not long afterward the product arrived in the U.S., and Americans began to use it as an alternative to egg thickeners. It wasn’t long before American cooks started to use custard powder and other cornstarch derivatives as thickeners for custard-type desserts.

    > The different types of custard.

    Creamy American puddings evolved from these. We don’t know when butterscotch pudding joined the American pudding lineup (most likely vanilla and chocolate were first). It will take someone with access to cookbooks of the 19th century to do some research.

    From whence came the word “butterscotch?” No one knows for certain, but here are three explanations:

  • “Scotch” means to cut or score. The candy had to be cut into pieces, or “scotched,” before hardening. We vote for this one.
  • “Scotch” may have been derived from the “scorch.” [source]
  • The adjective “Scotch” refers to an association with Scotland. We can discard this theory since the product was invented in England.
  •  
    > The difference between custard and pudding.

     
    BUTTERSCOTCH PUDDING RECIPES

    TIP: When you make butterscotch pudding, you can add a teaspoon of bourbon or Scotch for a sophisticated undertone.

  • Bourbon brings out the caramelized notes of the brown sugar.
  • Scotch can add some smokiness, especially with a peaty style like Laphroaig or Talisker.
  •  

  • Butterscotch Pudding From Scratch
  • Easy Pudding Parfaits
  • Pudding Parfaits 2
  • Pudding Parfaits 3
  • Pudding Party Bar
  • Pudding Pie & Garnishes
  • Richer Butterscotch Pudding
  •  
    Plus, relatives of butterscotch pudding:

  • Butterscotch Panna Cotta
  • Salted Caramel Pudding
  •  
    ________________

    *Treacle is another term for golden syrup, made from partly refined sugar; molasses. Golden syrup is light treacle, a thick, amber-colored syrup. There is also dark treacle, with a stronger flavor. In the U.S. it is known as blackstrap molasses.

    The difference between corn syrup and golden syrup: While both are similar in color, they are very different products. Corn syrup is made from corn(starch), whereas golden syrup is made from sugar. Corn syrup has a very mild flavor, whereas golden syrup has a more pronounced buttery caramel flavor.

    Corn syrup is an invert sugar, which means that it prevents sugar crystals from forming. The process to make corn syrup from cornstarch was invented in 1811 by a German chemist, Gottlieb Kirchhoff.

    Invert sugar syrup, also called invert syrup and invert sugar, is a mixture of two simple sugars (glucose and fructose) that is made by heating sucrose with water.
     
     

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    Red Velvet Cake Recipes For National Red Velvet Cake Day


    [1] Red velvet layer cake. Here’s the recipe (photo © McCormick).

    Red Velvet Stained Glass Bundt Cake
    [2] Red velvet bundt cake in Nordicware’s “Stained Glass” design (photo © Nordicware).

    Red Velvet Pancakes
    [3] Red velvet pancakes. Here’s the recipe (photo © Taste Of Home).


    [5] Red velvet donuts. Here’s the recipe (photo © Farmgirl Gourmet).

     

    September 18th is National Red Velvet Cake Day, and we’ve got a bunch of red velvet cake recipes for you, below. But first, here’s the history of the cake, which grew to immense popularity over the last two decades, after gathering dust in many a recipe box.

    If you want to order a red velvet cake, the best one we’ve had is from Daisy Cakes.

    We used this food holiday as an excuse to order another one.
     
     
    THE HISTORY OF RED VELVET CAKE

    “The history of red velvet is not black and white,” says Deborah Harroun, author of Red Velvet Lover’s Cookbook.

    Stories detail its discovery in the 1870s in Canada and in the 1950s in Pennsylvania. Some give credit to the Deep South, where red velvet cake is topped with cream cheese frosting.

    Southern Living Magazine says it isn’t Southern at all, that it started as Waldorf Astoria cake. The backstory, says the magazine, is that someone got charged a mint for the hotel’s recipe and then shared it for revenge [source].

    Originally made from beets or beet juice and cocoa (and the best recipes still use these ingredients), the cake yields a reddish brown color with a mild chocolate flavor.

    Today’s recipes made with red food coloring can be a florid red. A thick white frosting is traditional (we vote for cream cheese!).

    Today, many recipes use red food color instead of beets, which leaves a rosy red and arresting color but a more bland flavor and texture. A light-textured chocolate layer-type cake with a deep reddish brown color.
     
     
    SHOULD RED VELVET HAVE CHOCOLATE FLAVOR?

    Our first experience with red velvet cake, long before the craze of the last decade, was a type of chocolate cake with red food coloring. Our mom baked a recipe called Red Devil’s Food Cake from the 1950s, where the chocolate cake had a red hue.

    Mom used beets in her Red Devil’s Food Cake. And what a great cake it was! We’ll have to dig up the recipe and publish it.

    But think again, says Deborah Harroun: “The cocoa taste actually appears as just a hint when done correctly. I say that a red velvet cake or cupcakes tastes like butter cake with just a hint of cocoa. It may be a hard flavor to describe, but once you’ve had it, you probably won’t forget it!”

    While many committed bakers deride red velvet for its use of “fake” red food coloring, there are natural ingredients that can be used to achieve the same red hue: cranberries, other red berries, and pomegranates.
     
     
    MORE RED VELVET RECIPES

  • Baileys Red Velvet Irish Cream Liqueur
  • Baked Red Velvet Donuts
  • Green Red Velvet Cupcakes
  • Jumbo Red Velvet Cupcake
  • The Original Red Velvet Cake Recipe
  • Red Velvet Cheesecake
  • Red Velvet Cookies
  • Red Velvet Cupcakes
  • Red Velvet Pancakes
  • Red Velvet Raspberry Truffles
  • Red, White & Blue Cupcakes
  • Red, White & Blue Whoopie Pies
  • Sugar-Free Red Velvet Cheesecake Brownies
  •  
     
    > CAKE GLOSSARY: THE DIFFERENT TYPES OF CAKES
     
     
    > THE HISTORY OF CHEESECAKE

     

     
     

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    Monte Cristo Sandwich Recipe For National Monte Cristo Day

    September 17th is National Monte Cristo Day, celebrating a sandwich that some people consider to be a fancy grilled ham and cheese sandwich on French toast. Actually, it’s the American adaptation of the Croque Monsieur, a French grilled ham and cheese sandwich on French toast. The The Monte Cristo recipe is below. The difference:

  • Croque Monsieur Sandwich is a hot sandwich made with Bayonne ham (French ham) and Gruyère cheese on pain de mie (a white bread with a bit of the sweetness of brioche). The original was topped with béchamel sauce and some grated cheese, then baked in the oven (photo #7).
  • Today, especially in the U.S., a Croque Monsieur can be dipped in a beaten egg with milk and then sautéed in butter. The bread portion becomes French toast.
  • Some cooks still use the old French recipe, but grill the sandwich instead of baking it in the oven, and then put under the broiler. Instead of béchamel, they use a cheese sauce, which in France is called mornay sauce—béchamel turned into cheese sauce with the addition of Gruyère. In the U.S., the cheese of choice is often Cheddar.
  • Croque Madame Sandwich. The Croque Madame (photo #6) wasn’t created for the ladies; it was so-called because it resembles a woman’s hat (photo #9). It’s similar to a Croque Monsieur with a poached or fried egg on top. We don’t know when it was first created, but the name itself dates to around 1960 [source].
  • Monte Cristo Sandwich is a variation made with white bread, ham and Gruyère, although some recipes substitute Gouda or other cheese. It has a sweet-and-savory profile: The sandwich is dipped in a French toast batter (eggs and milk), then pan-fried or deep-fried. It’s served with a side of grape jelly for dipping (or blackberry if you can find it), and often a dusting of powdered sugar (photo #1).
  • Some cooks make a three-layer Monte Cristo, some add turkey. Here’s a copycat recipe of the Disneyland recipe (photo #1) and a copycat of the Bennigan’s recipe, which uses pancake batter (photo #3).
  • Think outside the box. How about using pancakes instead of bread (photo #5)? How about some peanut butter (photo #6). How about some bacon? How about some sliced tomatoes with that ham and cheese?
  •  
    By the way: These sandwiches are best eaten with a fork and knife.

     
    HISTORY OF THE CROQUE MONSIEUR SANDWICH & THE MONTE CRISTO

    The origin of the Croque Monsieur is not known with certainty, but it is believed to have originated in French bistros and cafés as a quick snack. The name means a, roughly, “a bite for a man,” from French words croque (bite) and monsieur (“mister”).

    One of the first known written references is on Parisian menu from 1910. It is cited in volume 2, Within a Budding Grove (published 1918), of Marcel Proust’s epic novel, In Search of Lost Time [source].

    When there is no certainty, there are always apocryphal stories.

  • The radiator. Some French workers left their lunches too close to a radiator. The heat melted the cheese and toasted the bread and the sandwich was born.
  • The lack of baguette. A Parisian chef of a brasserie on the Boulevard des Capucines invented the sandwich one day in 1901, after running out of baguettes for the restaurant’s sandwich of the day. He took a loaf of pain de mie (similar to an American pullman loaf), sliced it, placed ham and cheese between the slices, buttered it and cooked it to crispiness. When a customer asked about the ingredients, the chef pointed to another customer, the butcher, and said “C’est la viande de monsieur” (It’s that man’s meat) [source].
     
    Both the Croque Monsieur and Croque Madame remain popular lunchtime staples in France [source].

    In recent years, different chefs and restaurants have put their own spins on the original Croque Monsieur recipe. See them below

    Decades later came the Monte Cristo sandwich.

    No one knows exactly who created it and named it, but it happened somewhere in California. It was popularized by California cafés in the 1950s, where it first appeared on a menu as The Monte. It became a menu favorite at the Disneyland in Anaheim, California, at the Cafe Orleans in New Orleans Square [source].

    Today it’s on the menu as “Battered & Fried Cheese ‘Monte Cristo’ [served with Brie, Swiss and Mozzarella with Pommes Frites.”

    Some say that “Monte Cristo” is a tribute to the French novel, The Count of Monte Christo by Alexander Dumas. Hmmm. It was originally called the Monte, which can refer to a card game, a mountain, or something else entirely.

    There is a real Montecristo, by the way; a beautiful island in Tuscan Archipelago (west of Tuscany, Italy in the Tyrrhenian Sea, which flows into the Mediterranean.

    Back to the food:

    The traditional Monte Cristo sandwich is made from deli ham and Swiss cheese. The entire sandwich is then lightly dipped in the egg batter used for French Toast, and grilled or deep fried.
     
     
    RECIPE: MONTE CRISTO SANDWICH

    The sandwich is served with a side of jelly for dipping, and often garnished with powdered sugar. We’re not a fan of the latter. It just gets over everything (table and clothes). And who needs sugar on a ham and cheese?

    While we prefer Gruyère cheese, as is used in the Croque Monsieur and Croque Madame, you can substitute Emmental, or America’s approximation of Emmental, a.k.a. Swiss cheese—or whatever you like. We’ve seen everything from Gouda to Provolone.

    TIP: You can hold the sandwich layers with with toothpicks. Add them before battering and frying.

    Ingredients For 4 Sandwiches

  • 8 slices quality white bread or brioche
  • 8 slices ham
  • 8 slices turkey
  • 8 slices Gruyère or substitute
  • 2 eggs
  • 1/2 cup milk or more (depending on how thick you want the batter)
  • Optional for the batter: dash nutmeg
  • Butter for frying
  •  
    For Serving

  • Grape jelly, or blackberry or raspberry jelly or jam, for dipping
  • Powdered sugar for garnish
  •  
    Preparation

    1. WHISK the eggs and milk in a shallow pan. Melt the butter in a large skillet.

    2. LAYER a slice of bread, cheese, ham, another slice of bread spread with mayonnaise, turkey, cheese, and then another slice of bread. Cut or fold the meats and cheese so they are contained within the borders of the bread. Press down so that the layers stick together, and use toothpicks to hold them.

    3. MELT the butter in the skillet. Dip each sandwich in the milk and egg mixture, then transfer to the skillet. Cook until the bread is toasted on both sides and the cheese is melted.

    4. CUT in half. Dust with powdered sugar if desired, and with the jelly/jam in a ramekin on the side.
     
     
    CROQUE VARIATIONS

    Up-and-coming chefs and restaurants can gain attention by putting their own twist on classic dishes. Common variations on the Croque Monsieur, listed in Wikipedia include:

  • Croque Auvergnat*, made with bleu d’Auvergne cheese.
  • Croque Bolognese, which adds Bolognese sauce (tomato sauce with ground meat—also commonly called the Croque Boum-Boum).
  • Croque Gagnet†, made with Gouda cheese and andouille sausage (photo #8).
  • Croque Hawaiian, with a slice of grilled pineapple.
  • Croque Norvégien, made with smoked salmon instead of ham.
  • Croque Poulet, which replaces the ham with grilled chicken.
  • Croque Provençal, which includes a slice of tomato.
  • Croque Señor, which adds salsa.
  • Croque Tartiflette‡, which uses Reblochon cheese and adds sliced potatoes.
  •  
    …and of course, the Croque Madame, previously described.

    That’s a lot of croque for you to consider. You may like to create your own. We often make one with chicken and truffle cheese.
     
     
    > SANDWICH GLOSSARY: THE DIFFERENT TYPES OF SANDWICHES
     
     
    > THE HISTORY OF SANDWICHES

     


    [1] A Monte Cristo with ham, cheese, turkey, powdered sugar and grape jelly. Here’s the recipe (photo © Picky Palate).


    [2] Kikkoman also adds turkey to the ham and cheese, makes it a triple decker, and dips the battered sandwich into crunchy panko bread crumbs. Here’s the recipe (photo © Kikkoman).


    [3] Bennigan’s dips their Monte Cristo in pancake batter. Here’s the recipe (photo © I Am A Homesteader).


    [4] It wouldn’t be a Monte Cristo without the dipping jelly. Here’s another recipe (photo © Taste And Tell Blog).

    Monte Cristo Pancakes
    [5] Krusteaz thinks outside the box and makes a Monte Cristo with pancakes instead of bread (photo © Krusteaz).

    Peanut Butter Monte Cristo Sandwich
    [6] Another variation: a slick of peanut butter on the bread (photo © Peter Pan).


    [7] The original Croque Monsieur was baked in the oven with béchamel sauce and grated Gruyère. Here’s the recipe from Chef Michel Roux (photo © The Good Life France).


    [8] Croque Gagnet, a variation of Croque Monsieur made with Gouda cheese and andouille sausage. Here’s the recipe. See more variations (photo © Cambooza).


    [9] The Croque Madame: a ham and cheese sandwich topped with a fried or poached egg (photo © Adam Bartoszewicz | Unsplash).

     
    ________________

    *Auvergnat is a dialect of Occitan spoken in the region of Auvergne in Central France.

    †We can’t find a reference for Gagnet. It is a surname, and may have been that of the chef or the restaurant.

    ‡Tartiflette is a dish from Savoy in the French Alps and from Aosta Valley. It is made with potatoes, reblochon cheese, lardons and onions.

     
     
      

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