The Chef They Called King : Care^misms
Care^me has been credited with these innovations in French cuisine:
* Croquembouche, a pyramidal display of cream puffs stuck together with caramel.
* Vol-au-vent, a shell of puff pastry filled with meat (especially chicken) mixed with sauce; usually small and served as an appetizer.
* Piped meringue ornaments.
* Large standing meringue desserts.
* Various dishes named for such patrons as Talleyrand and the Russian-Georgian Princess Bagration.
* Perfecting puff pastry and souffles.
* Perfecting the basic sauces of French cuisine (the original 1935 edition of Larousse Gastronomique quoted a number of Care^me’s sauce recipes verbatim, though usually with a notation that this was the old recipe).
* New designs of certain utensils such as pastry molds (Care^me believed the usual ones of his day were so high the tip of the pastry wouldn’t cook thoroughly) and saucepans for pouring sugar.
* Various details of a chef’s uniform, including the shape of the toque.
* While influencing the court cookery of all the countries he worked in, he also introduced a number of dishes to France, including sauces from Italy and Portugal, borscht and coulibiac from Russia, and kugelhopf (or couglauffe, as he spelled it) from Germany.
More to Read
Eat your way across L.A.
Get our weekly Tasting Notes newsletter for reviews, news and more.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.