Supreme (cookery)

The term supreme (also spelled suprême)[1] used in cooking and culinary arts refers to the best part of the food, and it has different meanings depending upon the food type.

Chicken

In cookery, the term supreme (or suprême) is used to describe a breast of chicken with the wing bone attached, generally referred to as Chicken Supreme[1] (in French: suprême de volaille). The same cut is used for duck (suprême de canard), and other birds.

The pieces of chicken can be cooked in chicken stock and added into a white sauce, which is made from corn-flour. The rice is cooked in slightly salted water, either in a pan on the oven hotplate or in a plastic bowl within a microwave until soft to the touch. Once both are cooked, the chicken is placed into the middle of a dinner plate and the rice is added around the outside of the chicken to form a circle. This method can be adapted for any rice based dish.

Fruit

Canned mandarin oranges that have been supremed in their processing

To supreme a citrus fruit is to remove the skin, pith, membranes, and seeds, and to separate its segments.[2][3] Used as a noun, a supreme can be a wedge of citrus fruit prepared in this way.

Sauce

Suprême sauce (sauce suprême) is a rich white sauce[4] made of chicken stock and cream, a sauce suprême.[1][5] This sauce is often served with chicken dishes.[1]

A dish dressed with a sauce suprême is another manner of the term "supreme" is used (e.g. a suprême of barracuda)

Other cooking uses

Supreme can also be used as a term in cookery in the following ways:

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Chabers 21st Century Dictionary. Allied Publishers. p. 1421.
  2. Going Raw. p. 72.
  3. American Cookery. p. 249.
  4. Meyer, Adolphe (1903). The Post-graduate Cookery Book. Caterer Publishing Company. p. 59.
  5. Choice Cookery. pp. 23–24. Retrieved 11 October 2014.
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