• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

JudicialPeach logo

  • Breakfast
  • Appetizers
  • Soup
  • Breads
  • Sides
  • Salad
  • Dinner
  • Dessert
  • About Us
  • Conversions
  • Recipe Index
  • Stuff to Try
  • Tips & Techniques

French

Brioche Loaves

June 4, 2009 by Charles 11 Comments

Fresh BriocheFrom a Croque Norvegien to an ABB&M, I’ve been in sandwich mode recently.  Which got me thinking.  Instead of running out and grabbing a new loaf of bread, maybe I could make my own.

I settled on brioche, a butter- and egg-enriched yeast bread, French in origin.  Yet, despite its French origins, the French put their brioche in the viennoiserie basket.  Unlike something in the bread basket, a viennoiserie (meaning “in the Viennese style”) boasts the addition of eggs, butter, milk, cream, or sugar, which gives it a pastry-like character.

Cooling Brioche

Viennoiseries are leavened, often layered, and commonly served in the morning.  Beyond brioche, …

Read More

Filed Under: Breads Tagged With: Baking, Bread, Dough, French, Ina Garten, Yeast

Croque Norvegien

May 31, 2009 by Charles 2 Comments

Croque Monsieur

If you’ve ever been in a Parisian café, you’ve seen Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle at work.  In this environment, waiters move about like errant electrons, brushing past you with little care for their momentum, their movements, or their duties. To a stationary observer, it is impossible to know both the location of a server and the speed at which he is ignoring you.

The croque-monsieur made its debut in 1910, in a café on the Boulevard des Capucines.  The origins of the name are unknown, but I suspect the etymology is quintessentially French.  An exasperated Frenchman …

Read More

Filed Under: Entrees Tagged With: Broiling, Cheese, Fish, French, Ina Garten, Salmon, Sandwich

Banana French Toast

May 9, 2009 by Charles Leave a Comment

I don’t quite know what prompted it, but for an entire summer, my youngest brother had to have French toast before camp.  What might have started as a special breakfast soon became the breakfast.  Every day.  And with time, his demands seemed only to grow.  It had to have the crusts removed.  It needed to be in the shape of a circle.  It had to come with powdered sugar.

Sometimes we’d all have French toast, but more often than not, we were content with cereal.  No matter.  He stuck to his guns.  And Mom faithfully complied, serving up French Toast, then rushing us all off to camp.

0Collage0

On this Mother’s Day, why not…

Read More

Filed Under: Breakfast Tagged With: Banana, Brunch, French, Griddle

Meringues Chantilly

February 22, 2009 by Charles 9 Comments

closeup

Meringues are a royal treat.  Legend has it that Marie Antoinette loved meringue kisses so much, she often made them herself.  So whether you’re making your meringues for the royal family or just your family, this elegant dessert is bound to please.

Meringues are built around sugar and egg whites.  But despite this simplicity, there are a number of techniques to making the perfect meringues.

1) Look at your weather forecast. Heavy humidity …

Read More

Filed Under: Desserts Tagged With: Baking, French, Fruit, Ina Garten

Creme Chantilly

February 16, 2009 by Charles 3 Comments

img_3310

Chantilly, France is a small commune located twenty miles North of Paris.  For nearly 200 years, Chantilly belonged to the Princes of Conde, a younger branch of France’s royal family.  During that period, the region served as an example of the ascendancy of French art, architecture, and taste.  And on the matter of taste, no one exemplified French cooking better than Francois Vatel.

After an apprenticeship as a pastry chef, Vatel began working for Nicolas Fouquet at his Chateau in Vaux-le-Vicomte.  Jealous of Fouquet’s displays of wealth and opulence, King Louis XIV jailed Fouquet in 1661.  Six years later, Vatel moved to Chantilly, where he worked for Louis II de Bourbon, the Prince of Conde at the time.  In 1671, King Louis announced he would be visiting the Prince at his Chateau in Chantilly.  The visit required Vatel to prepare three days of meals for six hundred nobles and several thousand other members of the Sun King’s staff.  Vatel was given fifteen days to prepare, and barely slept for most of them.

On the first day of his Majesty’s visit, unexpected guests arrived, leaving two tables without meat, plungingVatel into a deep depression….

Read More

Filed Under: Desserts Tagged With: French, Quick and Easy, Vanilla

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Go to page 2
  • Go to page 3
  • Go to page 4
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Connect with JudicialPeach

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest

About Us

We are two lawyers, with three young children, who are managing the daily juggle (as best we can!), and striving to put tasty and healthful meals on the table each week. We invite you to read along.

Meet the Members of JudicialPeach

Never Miss a Recipe

Copyright © 2025 JudicialPeach on the Foodie Pro Theme

 

Loading Comments...