![]() ![]() In the Philippines: broas or broa (Spanish for some more nutritive types of bread, sometimes misspelled as brojas) variants include camachile and lengua de gato.In Flanders and the Netherlands: lange vingers (long fingers).In North Macedonia: biskviti ( бисквити).In Indonesia: kue lidah kucing (cat's tongue cookies).In Hungary: babapiskóta (baby sponge cake).In Greece: savouayiár ( σαβουαγιάρ, a French adaptation of the Italian name).In Germany: Löffelbiskuits (spoon cookies/biscuits).In France: boudoirs or biscuits à la cuillère (spoon cookies/biscuits) or biscuits champagne.In Finland: tiramisukeksit (tiramisù biscuits), savoiardikeksit (savoiardi biscuits), and sokerikakkukeksit (sugar cake biscuits).In the Czech Republic: dlouhé piškoty (long sponge biscuits) or cukrářské piškoty (confectioner's biscuits).In Colombia: lenguas (tongues, after their form).In China: shǒuzhǐ bǐnggān ( 手指饼干, finger biscuits).In Chile: galletas de champaña (champagne biscuits).In Brazil: biscoito champagne (champagne biscuits).However, the first written recipe comes from the French chef Antonin Carême. They were particularly appreciated by the younger members of the court and offered to visitors as an example of the local cuisine. Later, they were given the name savoiardi and recognized as an "official" court biscuit. History Ladyfingers in transparent plastic packagesĪccording to a legend, ladyfingers originated in the late 15th century at the court of the Duchy of Savoy, and were created to mark the occasion of a visit by the King of France. ![]() Plain ladyfingers are commonly given to infants, being soft enough for teething mouths, but easy to grasp and firm enough not to fall apart. They are typically soaked in a sugar syrup or liqueur, or in coffee or espresso for tiramisu. They are a principal ingredient in many dessert recipes, such as trifles and charlottes, and are also used as fruit or chocolate gateau linings, and for the sponge element of tiramisu. Ladyfingers, or in British English sponge fingers (sometimes known by the Italian name savoiardi or by the French name boudoirs ), are low-density, dry, egg-based, sweet sponge cake biscuits roughly shaped like large fingers. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |