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Batterie de cuisine

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Exhibit of a batterie de cuisine at the Musée Cernuschi in Paris

The batterie de cuisine (French; literally, kitchen artillery, i.e., kitchenware) is the range of tools and pans used in a kitchen. It includes the knives, frying pans, bakeware and utensils required for cooking and for the making of desserts, pastries and confectionery.[1] It does not include any of the fixed equipment such as cooking ranges, refrigeration equipment, etc.[2]

In French Provincial Cooking (1960), Elizabeth David gives a list of typical items in a batterie de cusine:[3]

French name English
Bain-marie Double-boiler
Balance Scales
Bassin Copper bowl in which to beat egg whites
Bassine à friture Deep fryer
Batte Cutlet bat
Bocal Preserving jar
Bouilloire Kettle
Braisère, Dauière Braising pan
Brise-flamme "Flame-breaker" – mat (originally asbestos) to go over the direct heat of the hob, enabling very slow cooking
Casserole In traditional French usage, a saucepan; in English usage, an earthenware or other dish for slow cooking in the oven
Cercle à flan Flan ring
Chasse-noyau Olive or cherry stoner
Chinois Conical sieve
Cocotte Round or oval pot, especially the small type in which eggs are baked for œufs en cocotte
Couperet Cleaver
Couteau de cuisine Cook's general-purpose knife
Couteau à découper Carving knife
Couteau à désosser Boning knife
Couteau économe Potato peeler
Couteau à filets de sole Filleting knife
Couteau d'office Vegetable or paring knife
Couteau tranche-lard Long slicing knife
Cuiller à bouche Tablespoon
Cuiller à pot Small ladle
Écumoire Skimmer
Entonnoir Funnel
Etamine Tamis cloth for straining consommé etc
Faiselle Basket or earthenware pot with holes for draining soft cheeses
Fouet Whisk
Fusil Steel for sharpening knives
Glacière à sucre Sugar caster
Grille Wire pastry rock, or frying basket
Hachinette Small solid wooden bowl with crescent-shaped chopping knife for chopping small quantities of herbs, shallots, etc
Hachoir Chopping knife, usually crescent-shaped, single, double, or multi-bladed and double-handled
Lardoire Larding needle
Lèchefrite The tin or dish placed underneath food while it is roasting, to catch the juices and fat
Louche Soup ladle or dipper
Mandoline Narrow rectangular wooden or plastic board on which various different cutting blades are fixed for slicing vegetables
Marmite Deep, usually straight-sided pot
Mortier Mortar, used with a pestle
Moule à charlotte Plain metal mould with sloping sides
Moule à dariole Small mould approxi­mately the shape of a castle pud­ding
Moule à douille Ring mould
Moule à pâté Hinged round or oval open mould for pâtés cooked in pastry
Mouli-légumes Vegetable mill
Moulin à café Coffee grinder
Moulin à poivre Pepper mill
Mouvette Wooden spoon
Panier à friture Wire basket for deep frying
Panier à salade Wire salad basket for shaking salad dry after washing
Passoire Sieve, colander
Pilon Pestle
Plafond Shallow rectangular baking or roasting tin or baking sheet
Planche à découper Carving board
Planche à hacher Chopping board
Planche à pâtisserie Pastry board
Plaque à pâtisserie baking sheet
Plaque à rôtir Shallow roasting tin
Plat à gratin Shallow metal or earthenware used for dishes to be gratinéed
Platine Small roasting tin
Poêle à frire Frying-pan
Poêle à crêpes Small shallow frying-pan for pancakes
Poêle à friture Deep-frying pan
Poêle à œufs Small metal or earthenware dish in which eggs are cooked and served
Poêle à omelettes Omelette pan
Poêlon Small earthenware or metal frying or sauté pan with a handle; deeper than an ordinary frying-pan
Poélon à sucre Sugar-boiling pan
Poissonnière Fish kettle
Ramequin Ramekin
Ravier Shallow china dish for hors-d'oeuvre
Rondin Round stew-pan with two handles and a tight-fitting lid. Also called a fait-tout
Rouleau Rolling pin
Saladier Salad bowl
Salamandre Round iron utensil with a long handle, now rare. Also a grill with the heat coming down rather than up.
Sauteuse Heavy and shallow straight-­sided pan with a handle, for shallow frying.
Sautoir Similar to a sauteuse
Soupière Soup tureen
Spatule Spatula or palette knife
Tamis de crin Fine sieve
Terrine Earthenware cooking pot, usually earthenware
Timbale Round mould with straight or slightly sloping sides
Timbale à soufflé Soufflé dish
Tourtière Shallow tart tin, often with removable base
Tranchoir Trencher or wooden carving platter
Vasque Shallow crystal silver or china bowl for the elegant presentation of fruit, sweet dishes etc
Verge Egg whisk

In addition to the above, Alexis Soyer prescribes for a medium-sized domestic kitchen, among other items: baba and sponge-cake moulds, jelly and charlotte moulds, meat saws, pie-moulds for raised pies, pudding-cloths, scissors, spoon drainers, stock-pots, trivets, and a turbot-kettle.[4] In their Mastering the Art of French Cooking (1961), Simone Beck, Louisette Bertholle and Julia Child add these to the list: garlic press, moulinette, bulb baster, cheese grater, poultry shears and rubber spatulas.[5]

References

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  1. ^ "Tefal : avec cette remise inattendue, cette batterie de cuisine a de quoi plaire". www.ouest-france.fr.
  2. ^ "Tout ce que vous pouvez faire avec votre liquide vaisselle mais que vous ignorez !". Marmiton (in French). 29 August 2022.
  3. ^ David, pp. 41–53
  4. ^ Soyer, p. xxiii
  5. ^ Beck, Bertholle and Child, pp. 3–8

Sources

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