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Doughs
barquette Pronunciation: bar-KEHT Notes: This is a small round or oval pastry shell that's usually topped with sweet or savory fillings. Substitutes: patty shell OR croustade OR tart shell
bread dough Notes: You can make this yourself, or buy ready-made dough in the frozen foods sections of your supermarket. In addition to baking them into bread, you can use them to make breadsticks, pizza dough, buns, rolls, and bagels.
filo (dough) See phyllo.
filo pastry leaves See phyllo.
gnocchi = potato gnocchi Pronunciation: NYOK-kee or NOHK-ee Notes: These Italian dumplings made from potatoes and other ingredients. They're used much like pasta, either in soups or with sauces. Substitutes: gnochetti pasta OR orecchiette
kataifi See kadaif.
knafeh See kadaif.
konafa See kadaif.
konafah See kadaif.
matzo ball = matzoh ball = knaidel Notes: Matzo balls are dumplings made from matzo meal, chicken fat, and eggs. They're often cooked in water, and then served in chicken soup. You can easily make them from scratch, or buy them in cans. The plural of knaidel is spelled either knaidlech, knaidlach, or kneidlach.
masa = masa dough = fresh masa Pronunciation: MAH-suh Notes: This is a dough made from ground hominy that's widely used in Mexico to make tortillas and tamales. There are two kinds: The softer masa molida is used to make tortillas, while the coarser and thicker masa preparada is for tamales. Hispanic markets often sell ready-made masa in the refrigerated section, but you can easily make your own if you have masa flour. To make your own: Beat 1 cup lard until fluffy, then mix in 3 cups masa flour, 2 teaspoons salt, and 2 cups water. mush See polenta.
pate feuilletee See puff pastry.
patty shell = pastry shell Notes: These are small cups made of puff pastry that are meant to hold individual portions of savory fillings. Look for them in bakeries or among the frozen foods in supermarkets. Substitutes: barquette OR polenta (cut into rounds and fried)
pie pastry = pâte brisée = pate brisee = short pastry = pie crust dough Notes: This pie dough is easy enough to make at home, or you can find it ready-made among the frozen foods of most supermarkets.
phyllo pastry leaves See phyllo.
poi Pronunciation: POY Notes: Hawaiians make this out of taro root, which is cooked, pounded into a paste, and then sometimes fermented. It's somewhat bland, and usually served as an accompaniment to other foods, much like mainlanders serve mashed potatoes.
polenta = mush Pronunciation: puh-LEN-tah Notes: This Italian specialty is made of cornmeal that's been cooked into a thick mush. The mush is either served hot, much as Americans would serve mashed potatoes, or it's cooled, sliced, and then fried, grilled, or baked. It's easy to make at home, or you can get tubes of ready-made polenta in the refrigerated section of many supermarkets.
seitan = fu = kofu = wheat meat Pronunciation: SAY-tan Notes: This is a vegetarian meat substitute that's rich in protein, low in fat, and chewy enough to pass for steak or chicken. It's made by mixing gluten flour or wheat flour with water, kneading it, washing away the starch with water, and then cooking the rubbery gluten that remains in a flavored broth. The seitan can then be sliced or shaped however you like and then fried, steamed, baked, or added to stews. Look for packages or tubs of it in the refrigerated sections of Asian markets and health food stores. You can also buy it in the form of meat-flavored sausage, salami, and deli cuts. Store seitan in the refrigerator for up to ten days, or for up to six months in the freezer. Substitutes: textured soy protein OR grilled eggplant OR tempeh OR portobello mushrooms OR atsu-age OR deep-fried tofu strudel dough Pronunciation: STREW-dull Notes: This is used by German and Austrian cooks to make strudels, delicate pastries filled with sweet or savory fillings. The dough is made up of many layers, each rolled into a tissue-thin, almost transparent sheet. German cooks make strudels with it by stretching the dough and wrapping it around a filling, and then baking it. It's hard to find, but your best bet is a German market. Substitutes: phyllo (Similar, but lower in fat.)
tart shell = pastry tart shell
yufka = bourek dough = bourek sheets Notes: This is the Middle Eastern and North African version of phyllo dough, with leaves that are slightly thicker and sometimes round. It's used to make savory pastries. Substitutes: phyllo OR spring roll wrappers
Copyright © 1996-2005 Lori Alden