Canapé

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Canapé
Canape tray.jpg
Tray of canapés
Origin
Place of origin France
Details
Course served Hors d'oeuvre
Main ingredient(s) Base: one of crackers, bread, toast or puff pastry
Topping: savoury butters, spreads, or pastes
Variations Amuse-bouche, vol-au-vent

A canapé is a type of hors d’œuvre (“outside the (main) work”), a small, prepared and usually decorative food, held in the fingers and often eaten in one bite.

Name

The name comes from the French word for “couch or sofa”,[1] drawing on the analogy that the garnish sits atop the bread as people do a couch.[2]

Details

Because they are often served during cocktail hours, it is often desired that a canapé be either salty or spicy, in order to encourage guests to drink more. A canapé may also be referred to as finger food, although not all finger foods are canapés. Crackers or small slices of bread or toast or puff pastry, cut into various shapes, serve as the base for savory butters or pastes, often topped with a “canopy” of savory foods as meat, cheese, fish, caviar, foie gras, purées or relish.

Traditionally, canapés are built on stale bread (although other foods may be used as a base), cut in thin slices and then shaped with a cutter or knife. Shapes might include circles, rings, squares, strips or triangles. These pieces of bread are then prepared by deep frying, sautéing, or toasting. The foods are sometimes highly processed and decoratively applied (e.g., piped) to the base with a pastry bag. Decorative garnishes are then applied. The canapés are usually served on a canapé salver and eaten from small canapé plates. The technical composition of a canapé consists of a base (e.g., the bread or pancake), a spread, a main item, and a garnish. The spread is traditionally either a compound butter or a flavored cream cheese. Common garnishes can range from finely chopped vegetables, scallions, and herbs to caviar or truffle oil.

Vol-au-vent

A vol-au-vent (French pronunciation: ​[vɔlovɑ̃], "blown by the wind") is a small, round canapé made of puff pastry.

Amuse-bouche

The French started offering canapés to their guests in the 18th century, and the English adopted the practice at the end of the following century. One modern version of the canapé is the amuse-bouche. Amuse-bouche literally means “mouth amuser”, but is translated more delicately as “palate pleaser”.

See also

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References

  1. James Beard, Hors d'Oeuvres and Canapés (William Morrow & Co., New York, 1943, 1963, 1985), p. xiii.
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links