Chicken fricassée

Fricassee or fricassée /ˈfrɪkəs/[1] is a stew made with pieces of meat that have been browned in butter then served in a sauce flavored with the cooking stock.[2] Fricassee is usually made with chicken, veal or rabbit, with variations limited only by what ingredients the cook has at hand.[3]

Etymology

Fricassee is first attested in English in the mid-16th century. It is a word of French origin, although the exact etymology is unclear. It is theorized to be a compound of the French frire (to fry) and casser or quasser (to break in pieces).[4]

History

A meatball and mushroom fricassee served with rice

By the general description of frying and then braising in liquid, there are recipes for fricassee as far back as the earliest version of the medieval French cookbook Le Viandier, circa 1300. In 1490, it was first referred to specifically as "friquassée" in the print edition of Le Viandier.[5]

The 16th-century cookery book The Good Huswifes Jewell contains "For fricasies of a lambes head and purtenance."[6]

The perfect English cooke contains instructions to prepare a "Fregacy of Lamb or Veal." Jean-Baptiste Tavernier describes "a lusty Fricassie" in his late 17th-century Travels through Turkey to Persia.[7]

English fricassees were usually thickened with egg yolks, while Italian fricassea used a mixture of lemon and egg yolks. By the 18th century, egg yolks had started to be replaced by flour in English and American cuisines. In Martha Washington's recipe for chicken fricassee, the chicken was stewed in gravy; then a sauce was made with cream and egg yolks.[8]

The early 19th-century cookery book A New System of Domestic Cookery by Maria Rundell says white sauce can be used for fricassee of "Fowls, Rabbits, White Meat Fish, of Vegetables." Broth made with chicken necks or feet or used to boil meats, or similar is simmered with herbs and lemon peel, then thickened with cream (or egg yolk), flour, and butter to make into a sauce.

Technique

Simone Beck, Louisette Bertholle and Julia Child in their Mastering the Art of French Cooking describe it as "halfway between a sauté and a stew" in that a sauté has no liquid added, while a stew includes liquid from the beginning. In a fricassee, cut-up meat is first sauteed (but not browned), then liquid is added, and it is simmered to finish cooking.[9] Cookbook author James Peterson notes that some modernized versions of the recipe call for the meat to be thoroughly browned before braising, but the classical version requires that both meat and vegetables remain with no caramelization.[10]

Types

Beef

In the early 19th-century cookery book A New System of Domestic Cookery by Maria Rundell, a fricassee of cold roast beef is made with very thinly sliced beef cooked in butter and broth with parsley and onion, the sauce thickened with egg yolks, wine, and vinegar. Fricassee of cold roast beef was among the recipes published in the popular women's magazine Godey's Lady Book during the American Civil War.[11]

Chicken and other poultry

Chicken fricassee has been described as "a standard old-fashioned American dish."[12] It was one of Abraham Lincoln's favorite dishes.[13] It's the typical "comfort food" of Cajun cuisine.[14]

A 1734 American recipe by Mrs. John Burroughs calls for birds seasoned with nutmeg, parsley, onion, and mace, dredged in flour and browned in butter, then stewed in the pan with gravy, egg yolks, wine, and nutmeg to make a sauce with the consistency of thickened cream.[15] A 19th-century recipe from California for Fricasa de pollos a la española (Spanish-style chicken fricasse) was prepared by frying chickens in lard with chopped onion, shallots, garlic, and mushrooms. Tomato juice is added with olives, fresh herbs, and olive oil to make a thick stew.[16]

One of the more popular dishes in the Spanish Caribbean is fricasé de pollo (chicken fricassee). It was brought to the islands by settlers from the south of France and Spain. Unlike French-style fricassee, it has a tomato-based sauce, usually with red wine.[17]

Rabbit

Hannah Glasse's rabbit fricassee is made with small pieces of breaded rabbit fried in butter and served with red wine gravy.[18]

In Jewish cuisine

Jewish fricassee is nearly always made from poultry (most commonly goose or chicken), generally from offal and other chicken scraps, and sometimes includes meatballs. In Ashkenazi Jewish cuisine, it is called gehakte hindl (chopped chicken) and may include gizzards, chicken neck, wing tips, and feet. Sephardic cooks may refer to the dish as armin de poyo or (in Morocco) fricassada. Whereas non-Jewish cooks used dairy fat (such as butter) or lard to cook their fricassee, Jews used schmaltz (in the Ashkenazi lands) or olive oil (in the Sephardic world) as a cooking fat, due to the prohibition on mixing meat and dairy products. Fricassee should result in a thick, saucy gravy. The dish is served alongside rice, noodles, barley farfel, or dumplings.[19]

See also

References

  1. "Audio pronunciation of 'fricassee'". Merriam Webster. Archived from the original on 5 October 2011. Retrieved 10 September 2013.
  2. "fricassee | Lexico.com (Oxford Dictionary)". Lexico Dictionaries | English. Archived from the original on September 18, 2020. Retrieved 2022-02-01.
  3. The Complete Idiot's Guide to Comfort Food. Penguin. 2007. p. 108. ISBN 9781592576333.
  4. "fricassee". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 8 October 2012.
  5. Hess, Karen (1996). Martha Washington's Booke of Cookery. Columbia University Press. p. 41. ISBN 978-0-23104-931-3.
  6. Dawson, Thomas (1996). The Good Housewife's Jewel (2018 ed.). Sheffield, UK: Equinox. p. 51. ISBN 978-1870962124.
  7. "fricassee". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  8. Fowler, Damon (2009). Classical Southern Cooking. Gibbs Smiths. p. 157. ISBN 9781423613510.
  9. Child, Julia; Beck, Simone; Bertholle, Louisette (1969). Mastering the Art of French Cooking. Alfred A. Knopf. p. 258.
  10. Peterson, James (2008). Sauces: Classical and Contemporary Sauce Making (3 ed.). Wiley. ISBN 978-0-470-19496-6, p. 275.
  11. Spaulding, Lily May (2014). Civil War Recipes: Receipts from the Pages of Godey's Lady's Book. University Press of Kentucky.
  12. Fisher, Mary Frances Kennedy; Fussell, Betty (2005). Masters of American Cookery: M.F.K. Fisher, James Andrew Beard, Raymond Craig Claiborne, Julia McWilliams Child. University of Nebraska Press. p. 228. ISBN 9780803269200.
  13. Rysavy, Francois (1972). A Treasury of White House Cooking. New York: Putnam. p. 250. ISBN 978-0-39910-939-3.
  14. "Vermilionville Chicken Fricassee". Lafayette Travel.
  15. "A 'frikasie,'" attributed to Mrs. John Burroughs, 1734, in Lucile Stimson Harvey, Food Facts for the Home-maker, 1920, p. 63
  16. El cocinero español by Encarnación Pinedo, 1898
  17. "pollofricase". El Boricua. Retrieved 4 October 2016.
  18. Spencer, Colin (2003). British Food: An Extraordinary Thousand Years of History. Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231131100.
  19. Marks, Gil (2010). The Encyclopedia of Jewish Food. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. pp. 297–208. ISBN 9780470391303.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.