Consommé

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Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox foodConsommé (Script error: No such module "IPA". ({{errorTemplate:Main other|Audio file "consommé.ogg" not found}}Template:Category handlerScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:Category handler) is a type of clear soup made from richly flavoured stock or broth that has been clarified, a process that traditionally uses egg whites to remove fat and sediment. A later technique for clarification employs gelatin filtration. Consommés are most commonly made from beef or veal, but chicken, fish and game variants are recognised in French cuisine. They may be served on their own – hot or chilled – or be used as the basis of many soups, sauces and stews.

Etymology and history

In French usage the word dates back to the fourteenth century as the past participle of Script error: No such module "Lang"., meaning consumed, accomplished or finished.[1] By the sixteenth century the word was used as a noun meaning a "finished" soup – a concentrated and clarified meat broth as opposed to a simple stock or broth.[2] The first edition of the Script error: No such module "Lang". (1694) defines it as "Script error: No such module "Lang"." – strong succulent broth of very well-cooked meat.[1] The word is first recorded in English usage in 1815,[3] and in Don Juan (Canto XV, 1824), Lord Byron writes of "The salmi, the consommé, the purée".[3] In French usage each of the three syllables is given approximately equal stress. In Anglophone usage the main stress may be on the first syllable (Canadian and modern British pronunciation), the second (earlier British pronunciation) or the third (American pronunciation); in Australian usage either the first or second syllable may be stressed.[3][4]

Alexis Soyer published his recipe for consommé in his Gastronomic Regenerator (1846): Template:Blockindent

Both Soyer and a later French chef, Auguste Escoffier, use consommé for the basis of many soups, sauces and stews as well as for serving on its own. Soyer includes it in more than a hundred of his recipes, from Script error: No such module "Lang". to Script error: No such module "Lang"..[5] Escoffier gives recipes for consommés of chicken, fish and game ("the necks, breasts, and shoulders of venison and of hare, old wild rabbits, old pheasants, and old partridges may be used").[6] He distinguishes between consommés served at dinners, garnished, in soup plates and those served at suppers: "These, being only served in cups, either hot or cold, do not allow of any garnishing, since they are to be drunk at table. They must therefore be perfect in themselves, delicate, and quite clear".[7]

In Script error: No such module "Lang". (1914) Louis Saulnier gives recipes for more than a hundred variants of consommé, including Script error: No such module "Lang". (oxtail consommé with asparagus tips, diced mushrooms with tarragon and chervil); Cyrano (beef consommé with duck and Parmesan); Script error: No such module "Lang". (mutton consommé with pearl barley); George Sand (fish consommé with crayfish and morels); Mikado (chicken consommé with tomato); Script error: No such module "Lang". (beef consommé with leeks); Rossini (chicken consommé with truffles and foie gras); and Rothschild (game consommé with Sauternes).[8]

File:Bruehe-1.jpg
Beef consommé

In their 1961 book Mastering the Art of French Cooking, Simone Beck, Louisette Bertholle and Julia Child say this about clarifying consommé: Template:Blockindent

Varieties

Double consommé is made to double strength.[2] One method is to double the quantity of meat used in the recipe; another is producing one of normal strength and reducing it to half its volume.[9]

In a 2007 New York Times article[10] Harold McGee set out an alternative method for clarifying broths, originating among chefs of the molecular gastronomy movement: gelatin filtration, relying on some of the properties of a super-saturated solution of gelatin, created by freezing, to remove macroscopic particles that cause cloudiness from a water-based stock. This method is distinct from traditional consommé both in technique and in final product, as gelatin filtration results in a gelatin-free broth, while traditional consommé gives a final product rich in gelatin, with a correspondingly rich mouthfeel. A traditional consommé gels when chilled; a gelatin-filtered consommé does not.[10] Because gelatin-filtered consommés do not require egg-whites they are less wasteful.[11]

What is advertised as beef consommé is available in cans. A proprietary brand on sale in Britain in 2025 contained water, sherry (3%), beef gelatin, yeast extract, salt, sugar, beef extract (0.2%), onion extract, black pepper extract, parsley extract, sunflower oil, mixed peppers, spice extracts (celery, nutmeg, pimento, cinnamon, capsicum) and niacin.[12] In the US a proprietary brand contained "beef stock (water, dried beef stock), gelatin, yeast extract, salt, sugar, natural flavoring, monosodium glutamate, tamari soy sauce (water, soybeans, salt), caramel color, citric acid, carrots, beef stock, soy sauce (water, soybeans, salt, wheat), onions, celery, beef tallow, dried beef, dried carrots, wheat and soy".[13] Beck, Bertholle and Child state that they do not recommend tinned consommé.[14]

References

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Sources

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See also

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  1. a b "Consommé", Script error: No such module "Lang".. Retrieved 19 June 2025
  2. a b Davidson, p. 211
  3. a b c Script error: No such module "template wrapper". Template:OEDsub
  4. "English pronunciation of consommé", Cambridge Dictionary, Cambridge University Press, 2025; "consommé", The Canadian Oxford Dictionary, Oxford University Press, 2004 Template:Subscription; and "consommé", Australian Oxford Dictionary, Oxford University Press, 2004 Template:Subscription
  5. Soyer, recipes 9 to 1359 Script error: No such module "Lang".
  6. Escoffier, pp. 6–7
  7. Escoffier, p. 8
  8. Saulnier, pp. 33–39
  9. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  10. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  11. Curious Cook in the New York Times: Clarifying liquids with gelatinTemplate:Webarchive
  12. "Baxters Chef Selections, Beef Consomme Soup 400g", Sainsburys. Retrieved 19 June 2025
  13. "Campbell's Condensed Beef Consommé Soup, 10.5 oz Can", Walmart. Retrieved 19 June 2025
  14. Beck et al, p. 111