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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Overview  



1.1  Etymology  





1.2  History  







2 Varieties  





3 Gallery  





4 See also  





5 Notes  





6 References  



6.1  Sources  







7 External links  














Quiche






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Quiche
A typical quiche
TypeTart
Place of origin France
Main ingredientsPastry case filled with egg and cheese, meat, seafood, or vegetables
  •   Media: Quiche
  • Quiche (/ˈkʃ/ KEESH) is a French tart consisting of a pastry crust filled with savoury custard and pieces of cheese, meat, seafoodorvegetables. A well-known variant is quiche lorraine, which includes lardonsorbacon. Quiche may be served hot, warm or cold.

    Overview[edit]

    Etymology[edit]

    The word is first attested in French in 1805, and in 1605 in Lorrain patois. The first English usage — "quiche lorraine" — was recorded in 1925. The further etymology is uncertain, but it may be related to the German Kuchen meaning "cake" or "tart".[1]

    History[edit]

    round tart with yellow filling and bacon bits on the top
    Quiche lorraine

    Quiche is a French dish originating from the eastern part of the country. It may derive from an older preparation called féouse[2] typical in the city of Nancy in the 16th century. The early versions of quiche were made of bread dough but today shortcrust and puff pastry are used.[3] In 1586, They were served at a dinner for Charles III, Duke of Lorraine.[4] Before that, recipes for eggs and cream baked in pastry containing meat, fish and fruit are referred to as Crustardes of flesh and Crustade in the 14th-century The Forme of Cury.[5] Since the Middle Ages, there have been local preparations in Central Europe, from the east of FrancetoAustria, that resemble quiche.[6]

    The American writer and cookery teacher James Peterson recorded first encountering quiche in the late 1960s and being "convinced it was the most sophisticated and delicious thing [he had] ever tasted". He wrote that, by the 1980s, American quiches had begun to include ingredients he found "bizarre and unpleasant", such as broccoli,[n 1] and that he regarded Bruce Feirstein's satirical book Real Men Don't Eat Quiche (1982) as the "final humiliation" of the dish, such that "[a] rugged and honest country dish had become a symbol of effete snobbery".[7]

    Varieties[edit]

    A quiche usually has a pastry crust and a filling of eggs with milk or cream or both. It may be made with vegetables, meat or seafood, and be served hot, warm or cold.[8][9] Types of quiches include:

    Name Main ingredients Ref
    Quiche au Camembert Camembert cheese, cream, eggs [10]
    Quiche aux champignons Mushrooms, cream, eggs [11]
    Quiche aux endives Chicory, cream, eggs, cheese [12]
    Quiche aux épinards Spinach, cream, eggs [11]
    Quiche au fromage de Gruyère Gruyère cheese, cream, eggs, bacon [13]
    Quiche aux fromage blanc Cream cheese, cream, eggs, bacon [14]
    Quiche aux fruits de mer Shrimp, crab or lobster, cream, eggs [15]
    Quiche aux oignons Onions, cream, eggs, cheese [16]
    Quiche aux poireaux Leeks, cream, eggs, cheese [12]
    Quiche au Roquefort Roquefort cheese, cream, eggs [10]
    Quiche comtoise Comté cheese, cream, eggs, smoked bacon [17]
    Quiche lorraine Cream, eggs, bacon[n 2] [13]
    Quiche niçoise, à la tomate Anchovies, olives, tomatoes, eggs, Parmesan cheese [10]

    In her French Country Cooking (1951), Elizabeth David gives a recipe for a quiche aux pommes de terre, in which the case is made not from shortcrust pastry but from mashed potato, flour and butter; the filling is cream, Gruyère and garlic.[18]

    Gallery[edit]

    Picture of a round, open tart with dark filling
    Salmon and spinach quiche
    slice of quiche with light brown filling
    Leek and mushroom quiche
    Slices of a quiche with a green and yellow fillings
    Spinach quiche
    Three small individual quiches with mushrooms and pale custard filling
    Individual quiches

    See also[edit]

    Notes[edit]

    1. ^ Peterson's noting his aversion to broccoli echoed earlier remarks by former President George H. W. Bush, who too notably did not like the vegetable.
  • ^ Some recipes add cheese, but the traditional Lorrainian version does not.[14]
  • References[edit]

    1. ^ "quiche". Oxford English Dictionary. OUP. 2015. Retrieved 4 February 2016.
      - "Quiche", Centre Nationale de Ressources Textuelles et Lexicales. Accessed 12 February 2015. This source also notes the first reference to 1805, in J.-J. Lionnois, Hist. des villes vieille et neuve de Nancy..., Nancy, t. 1, p. 80
  • ^ Hamlyn (2 August 2018). New Larousse Gastronomique. Octopus. ISBN 978-0-600-63587-1.
  • ^ Damien Pignolet (13 June 2019). "How to make a goat's cheese and herb quiche". Gourmet Traveller.
  • ^ Renauld, Jules Auteur du texte (1875). Les hostelains et taverniers de Nancy : essai sur les moeurs épulaires de la Lorraine / par Jules Renauld,...
  • ^ Hieatt, Constance; Butler, Sharon (1985). Curye on Inglysch: English culinary manuscripts of the fourteenth century (including the forme of cury. SS. Vol. 8. London: EETS.
  • ^ Germershausen, Christian Friedrich (1782). Die Hausmutter in allen ihren Geschäfften (in German). Junius.
  • ^ Peterson, p. 153
  • ^ David (2008), pp. 18 and 187
  • ^ Beck et al, p. 153
  • ^ a b c Beck et al, p. 155
  • ^ a b Beck et al, p. 160
  • ^ a b Beck et al, p. 159
  • ^ a b Beck et al, p. 154
  • ^ a b David (2008), p. 187
  • ^ Beck et al, p. 156
  • ^ Beck et al, p. 157
  • ^ Montagné, p. 430
  • ^ David (1999), p. 285
  • Sources[edit]

    External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Quiche&oldid=1234805266"

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