Batterie de cuisine

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
[edit]- ^ "Tefal : avec cette remise inattendue, cette batterie de cuisine a de quoi plaire". www.ouest-france.fr.
- ^ "Tout ce que vous pouvez faire avec votre liquide vaisselle mais que vous ignorez !". Marmiton (in French). 29 August 2022.
- ^ David, pp. 41–53
- ^ Soyer, p. xxiii
- ^ Beck, Bertholle and Child, pp. 3–8
Sources
[edit]- Beck, Simone; Louisette Bertholle; Julia Child (2012) [1961]. Mastering the Art of French Cooking, Volume One. London: Particular. ISBN 978-0-241-95339-6.
- David, Elizabeth (2008) [1960]. French Provincial Cooking. London: Folio Society. OCLC 809349711.
- Soyer, Alexis (1846). The Gastronomic Regenerator. London: Simpkin, Marshall & Co. OCLC 1156372451.
External links
[edit]- Batterie de Cuisine. CooksInfo.com. Published 02/22/2007. Updated 12/05/2010. Web. Retrieved 11/18/2012.
- Batterie de Cuisine Archived 2012-11-18 at the Wayback Machine. Rebecca Franklin, About.com. Web. Retrieved 11/18/2012.