Group: I have a question. I want to try a British recipe for pasta with bacon and peas. It calls for an ingredient that I'm not familiar with.
"Double Cream" I'm not sure if that's heavy whipping cream, creme fraiche or something else.
Does anyone know what a British chef would mean by "double creme?"
Thanks in advance.
Jonathan
British Recipe Terminology
British Recipe Terminology
"He has all of the virtues I dislike and none of the vices I admire." Winston Churchill
Re: British Recipe Terminology
This probably answers it all in one place: http://www.ochef.com/843.htm
- bam bam
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Re: British Recipe Terminology
My recipe calls for a stone of Channel Island Milk.
Re: British Recipe Terminology
I found that very interesting, thanks for the link.Admin wrote:This probably answers it all in one place: http://www.ochef.com/843.htm
Yvette
Re: British Recipe Terminology
Thanks. I'll try heavy cream. The difference between 40% butterfat and 48% in a pasta dish where I use all of 2 tbs. of it won't make a difference. Thanks again.Admin wrote:This probably answers it all in one place: http://www.ochef.com/843.htm
Jonathan
"He has all of the virtues I dislike and none of the vices I admire." Winston Churchill
Re: British Recipe Terminology
bam bam wrote:My recipe calls for a stone of Channel Island Milk.
That's 14 pounds. It would probably go sour before you could get around to drinking (eating) it all!
Devonshire Cream comes in little jars, about 8 ozs., and has a consistancy thicker than mayo. Anyone know how it relates to "double cream"?

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- edible complex
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Re: British Recipe Terminology
believe their sisters...Schuarta wrote: Devonshire Cream comes in little jars, about 8 ozs., and has a consistancy thicker than mayo. Anyone know how it relates to "double cream"?(That's about 1/28th of a stone.)
http://www.joyofbaking.com/DevonshireCream.html
then there's clotted cream...
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