Supreme (cookery)
Supreme can be used in cooking in different terms.
[edit] 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 (in French: suprême de volaille). The same cut is used for duck (suprême de canard), and other birds.
By extension the term has come to mean something from which all skin, bones, and other parts which are not eaten have been removed. The term can, for example, be applied to a skinless fish fillet.
[edit] Fruit
To supreme a citrus fruit is to remove the skin, pith, membranes, and seeds, and to separate its segments. Used as a noun, a supreme can be a wedge of citrus fruit prepared in this way.
[edit] Other cooking uses
Supreme can also be used as a term in cookery in the following ways:
- as a rich white sauce made of chicken stock and cream, a sauce suprême
- a dish dressed with a sauce suprême, e.g. a suprême of barracuda
- a tall sorbet glass
- a dessert served in a supreme
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