W
-
Waffle - Pancake batter cooked in a special hinged
cooking utensil called a "waffle iron"
which cooks both sides at once and gives
waffles their honeycombed syrup-catching
surface. Belgian waffles are often
heaped with fruits and whipped cream.
-
Waggle dance is a golden
honey beer brewed by Ward's
of
Sheffield for
Vaux.
-
Wakami - A dried seaweed. Wakami is soaked in cold
water before it is served. It is often
served with cucumbers, miso, and
vinegar. Also used in soups. Popular in
Japanese cooking.
-
Waldorf Salad:
A salad made with apples, celery, nuts,
whip cream, and mayonnaise on a bed of
lettuce.
-
Wallop is a
fresh, fruity, light
bitter with a hoppy finish,
from the
Whitby brewery, North
Yorkshire.
-
Walnut Oil - This expensive oil is pressed from walnuts and
has a distinctive nutty flavor and
fragrance. Used in salad dressings,
sauces, baked goods, and for sautéing.
-
Ward's mild
is a malty cask
ale brewed by Ward's, a
traditional
Sheffield brewery.
-
Wasabi - A Japanese horseradish that is dried,
powdered, and made into a pale green
paste with a sharp, pungent, extremely
potent flavor. Often mixed with soy
sauce and served as a condiment to
sushi, sashimi, and other Japanese
specialties.
-
Wassail
is a full-bodied draught and bottled
beer from Ballard's,
Sussex.
Wassail is a spiced beverage prepared
from roasted apples,
sugar,
toast,
nutmeg and other spices and
old
ale. During the Anglo-Saxon
and early English period wassail played
an important part on all great festive
occassions, such as
Wassails.
-
Wat Tyler
is a dark brown coloured, hoppy, strong
real
ale from the Itchen Brewery
in
Hampshire.
-
Water Buffalo - A buffalo native to the Old World tropics with
large flattened horns. Also called
"water ox."
-
Water Chestnut - The nut-like kernel of a water plant that
grows in southeast Asia. The flesh is
white, crisp, and juicy and has a bland,
somewhat sweet nutty flavor. Their
crunchy texture makes them popular in
stir-fried dishes.
-
Water Convulvolus - A perennial herb of the arum family. Its thick
leaf stalk is used in salads after it
has been boiled in two or more changes
of water. Also known as "swamp cabbage."
-
Watercress - A member of the mustard family that grows in
running water. Watercress has small,
crisp, green leaves and a pungent flavor
with a slightly bitter peppery flavor.
Use in salads, in cream soups, and to
garnish vegetables.
-
Watermelon - Originally from Africa, this melon has a
sweet, moist red flesh. Asians roast the
seeds, and pickled watermelon rind is
popular in some parts of the world. If
slapping the watermelon returns a
resounding hollow thump, it is ripe.
-
Watermelon - Originally from Africa, this melon has a
sweet, moist red flesh. Asians roast the
seeds, and pickled watermelon rind is
popular in some parts of the world. If
slapping the watermelon returns a
resounding hollow thump, it is ripe.
-
Water-souchy
is a dish of
fish (usually
perch) boiled and served in
its own liquor.
-
Wax Bean - A pale yellow variety of the green bean that
is eaten with its pod. Also called the
"butter bean."
-
Welsh Onion - A species of onion with a bunching, leek-like
interleaved bulb and tubular leaves. It
is a perennial evergreen with a delicate
flavor that can be used by breaking off
leaves as the plant matures. Also called
the "everlasting onion."
-
Welsh Rabbit
is a popular savoury of melted
cheese on a slice of
toast. It is often,
erroneously, referred to as 'rare-bit'.
-
Wheat - There are over 30,000 varieties of this
ubiquitous grain. Cultivated for over
6,000 years, wheat is second only to
rice as a grain staple. Wheat contains
more gluten than other cereals, making
it an excellent choice for bread making.
-
Wheat Bran - The rough outer covering of the wheat kernel.
Wheat bran is low in nutritional value
but high in fiber. Wheat bran is sold
separately and is used to add flavor and
fiber to baked goods.
-
Wheat Cake - A pancake made of wheat flour.
-
Wheat Flour - A flour produced by milling the endosperm
portion of the wheat kernel. "Whole
wheat flour," which is more nutritious,
is made by milling the entire kernel,
including the outer covering, or "bran."
-
Wheat Germ - The tiny nucleus of the endosperm (the inner
part of the wheat kernel without the
outer bran). Wheat germ has a nutty
flavor and is a concentrated source of
oil, vitamins, minerals and protein.
Used to add nutrients to various foods.
-
Wheat Gluten - The protein remaining after wheat flour has
been washed to remove starch. Gluten
helps hold in the gas bubbles produced
by leavening agents. This is why bread
flours contain high levels of gluten and
cake flours contain low levels.
-
Wheat Pilaf - A pilaf made from either the wheat berries
(whole unprocessed kernels) or cracked
wheat (the whole berries broken into
coarse, medium, and fine parts).
-
Wheat, Parboiled - A nutritious staple in the Middle East, made
of wheat kernels that have been steamed,
dried, and crushed. It has a tender,
chewy texture and can be made into a
pilaf. Also called "bulghur."
-
Whelk - A large marine snail that belongs to the
mollusk family. The flavorful foot-like
muscle is rather tough and must be
tenderized by pounding. Look for whelk
in Chinese or Italian markets or
specialty food stores.
-
Whey - The liquid part of milk that remains after the curd is
removed. Most whey is further separated
with the fattier parts used in making
butter. Some whey is used to make "whey
cheese" or "Ricotta cheese."
-
Whiskey -
A liquor produced from the fermented
mash of grains such as barley, corn, and
rye. Popular varieties of whiskey
(spelled "whisky" in Canada and
Scotland) include bourbon, Canadian
whisky, Irish whiskey, rye, and scotch.
-
Whiskey Sour -
An alcoholic beverage made from whiskey,
lemon juice, and a small amount of
sugar. Sours can also be made with
bourbon, gin, or rum, but the whiskey
sour is the most popular.
-
Whisky
is an alcoholic beverage made from
malted
barley.
-
Whistle belly
vengeance is a malty reddish
ale from Summerskills of
South
Devon.
-
White Bean - A rather generic term that refers to any of
several dried beans, including "marrow
beans," "great northern beans," "navy
beans," and "pea beans."
-
White Chocolate - Not a true chocolate at all. It is, rather, a
blend of sugar, cocoa butter, milk
solids, lecithin and vanilla. If a
product does not contain cocoa butter,
it isn't "white chocolate."
-
White dolphin
is a fruity
wheat beer from the
Hoskins &
Oldfield brewery in
Leicester.
-
White Pepper - White peppercorn is somewhat less pungent than
the black variety. After ripening, its
skin is removed and the berry is dried.
White pepper is used in light-colored
sauces and dishes where black speckles
could be unaesthetic.
-
White Rice - Rice that has had the husk, bran, and germ
removed. White rice is sometimes called
"polished rice."
-
White Russian -
An alcoholic beverage made by combining
vodka, Kahlua (or other coffee liqueur),
and cream. A Black Russian is similar,
but contains no cream.
-
White Sauce - A term for light white or blond sauces. In its
simplest form, white sauce is cream or
milk mixed into a white roux (a
combination of butter and flour which
isn't browned). This basic French sauce
is called "béchamel."
-
Whitefish - A high-fat, mild-flavored member of the salmon
family with a firm white flesh. The
whitefish can be poached, baked,
broiled, grilled, pan fried, or stuffed.
Its roe (eggs) can be cooked or made
into caviar by adding salt.
-
White-Flowered Gourd - A common variety of hard-shelled gourd,
also called "bottle gourd" and "Calabash
gourd." This gourd is used in the West
Indies to produce a very popular syrup.
Its shell is often used to create bowls
and other utensils.
-
White-Flowered Gourd - A common variety of hard-shelled gourd,
also called "bottle gourd" and "Calabash
gourd." This gourd is used in the West
Indies to produce a very popular syrup.
Its shell is often used to create bowls
and other utensils.
-
Whiting - A small gray and white saltwater fish
sometimes called the "silver hake." This
low-fat fish, which is related to both
the "cod" and the "hake," has a tender
white fine-textured flesh and a flaky,
delicate flavor.
-
·
"WHITE"
SUGARS
Baker's Special— An extremely
fine-grained sugar with several uses:
• Imparts a delicate texture and high
volume in cake products, by developing a
uniform cell structure. • Retains moisture and improves shelf
life of cakes. • In dry mixes, disperses more evenly
and with less stratification, than
larger-grained white sugars. • Dissolves faster than EFG, especially
in cold beverages like iced tea and bar
drinks.
Bottler’s—Similar to EFG, and
meets all standards of the National Soft
Drink Association, with respect to: • Clarity, color, odor and taste • Ash and sediment content • Comparative absence of floc-forming
substances • Microbiological activity
Coarse — Intermediate grain size
sugar designed for easy handling and
storage in bulk conveying operations.
Compacting — see Tableting
Compressible — see Tableting
Confectioners — see Powdered
Con AA & Con A — Extremely pure,
extra-large grain sugars with the
following attributes:
• Exceptionally white, clear and
brilliant • Very low ash, color, turbidity and
metallic ion contents • Nearly 100% sucrose in purity (99.9+%) Uses for Con AA & A include: • Boiled syrups, boiled-type icings • "Sparkle" topping similar to sanding
sugar, but larger crystal size • Candies (especially mints) and
fondants where clarity whiteness, and
brilliance are desirable • Crystallized syrups • Cordials and liqueurs where absolute
water whiteness is desired. • Cotton candy
Cordial Sugar — see Con AA
Demerara Sugar — Similar to
Turbinado
Drivert® — The finest-grain of
all powdered sugars, used to produce
fondants, icings and frostings with no
trace of grain or grittiness. ® C& H
Sugar Co.
EFG — see Granulated
FG — see Granulated
Fondant & Icing — Very fine-grain
grain sugar (particles 1/100th the size
of regular powdered sugar) that easily
mixes with water and produces smooth,
creamy icings and frostings with high
gloss and little or no grittiness. May
contain small amount of invert or
maltodextrin.
Fruit Granulated — similar to EFG,
and meets all specifications of the
National Canners Association for sugar.
Gelatin — see "Gel Grain"
Gel Grain — Sugar of smaller,
exceptionally uniform grain size (60 to
80 mesh), with few "fines." Used in
gelatins, cookie doughs, cake mixes,
quick-dissolving hot and cold beverage
mixes, and other dry mixes.
Granulated — Table sugar, commonly
called "Fine Granulated" (FG) and "Extra
Fine Granulated" (EFG), depending on the
refiner’s designation.
LCMT Sugar — see Con AA
Liqueur Sugar — see Con AA
Manufacturers — Intermediate-grain,
agglomerate sugar; resists packing and
clumping when dissolved. Usually
available in bulk only, used by bakers,
preservers, freezers, canners and syrup
manufacturers.
Powdered — Finely-ground
granulated sugar to which a small amount
(3%) corn starch has been added to
prevent caking. The fineness to which
the granulated sugar is ground
determines the familiar "X" factor: 14X
is finer than 12X, and so on down
through 10X, 8X, 6X (the most commonly
used) and 4X, the coarsest powdered
sugar.
Raw Sugar — The semi-refined product
of plantation mills processing sugar
cane; sugar extracted from cane juice
without any further refining in which
each crystal is coated with a heavy film
of low purity molasses.
Sanding — Very pure, clear,
large-grained sugar:
• Adds "sparkle" when sprinkled on
candies (gum/jelly goods), cookies,
pies, turnovers. • In boiled syrups and boiled-type
icings, it dissolves uniformly, with
minimal foaming or discoloring.
Superfine — see Bakers Special
Table — see Granulated
Tableting — A directly
compressible, granulated sugar or
agglomerated powder, used to make
tablets and flakes. It consists of
mostly sucrose, with a small amount of
maltodextrin or invert sugar. Tableting
sugar is used by pharmaceutical makers
as an excipient, and by confectioners.
Turbinado — A semi-refined,
off-color sugar containing a higher
percentage of sucrose than raw sugar,
but less than refined sugar.
Unigran® — Pure, uniform,
larger-grained sugar containing few
"fines." Primarily for use in hot drink
dispensing machines. ®Trademark of
California and Hawaiian Sugar Co.
USP — Sugar that meets the
quality and purity standards and
specifications of the United States
Pharmacopoeia (an authoritative book
containing a list and description of
drugs and medicinal products together
with the standards established under law
for their production, dispensation and
use.) NF refers to National Formulary, a
similar book.
Washed Raw — Similar to Turbinado
Sugar
-
Wild Rice - A plant from the same family as rice, but with
a gray and brown grain that is about
twice the length of ordinary rice
grains. Wild rice has a unique, almost
nutty flavor. Used to stuff game or
poultry and served as a side dish.
-
Willie Warmer
is a fruity cask beer produced by
Crouch
Vale brewery,
Essex.
-
Wilmot's
premium is a strong
ale brewed by the
Butcombe brewery near
Bristol.
-
Wiltshire traditional bitter
is a dry, malty, hoppy
bitter produced by the
Gibbs Mews brewery in
Salisbury,
Wiltshire.
-
Wine -
An alcoholic beverage produced through
the fermentation of grape juice. Other
fruit and vegetable juices, such as
dandelion and elderberry are also
occasionally used in winemaking, an art
the goes back at least 12,000 years.
-
Wine is the fermented juice of fruits,
vegetables or flowers. The more
important wines are fermented from
grapes.
-
Winged Bean - A fast-growing, high-protein legume. Also
called the "goa bean." This bean is
entirely edible, including the shoots,
flower, roots, leaves, pods, and seeds.
Tastes somewhat like a cross between the
cranberry bean and the green bean.
-
Winter Radish - A large plant thought to be of Oriental
origin. These plants are grown chiefly
for their pungent peppery root, which
can get up to 2 pounds or more. This
radish is popular in Germany and in the
East. Also called "black radish."
-
Winter Royal is Wethered's famous rich,
fruity brew now brewed by Whitbread at
Castle
Eden, County
Durham.
-
Winter Warmer
is a red-brown seasonal
ale with a rich fruit and
malt flavour and a sweetish
aftertaste, produced by Young's in
London.
-
Witloof Chickory - The largest and most popular variety of
"chicory," a vegetable with long
silvery-white leaves. Used in salads and
as a seasoning.
-
Wobbly Bob
is a robust cask beer from the
Phoenix brewery,
Heywood, near
Manchester.
-
Wolf Fish - A firm, white-fleshed saltwater fish with a
large head, strong jaws, and sharp
canine teeth and molars that can grind
clams, whelks, and other mollusks.
Sometimes sold in the U.S. under the
confusing name of "ocean catfish."
-
Won Ton Skin - Paper-thin round or square sheets of dough
made from flour, eggs, and salt. Used as
wrappers to make "won tons" and egg
rolls. Won tons are small dumplings of
thin dough around a minced mixture of
meat, seafood, and/or vegetables.
-
Worcestershire Sauce - This thin, dark sauce is made from
garlic, soy sauce, tamarind, onion,
molasses, lime, anchovies, vinegar and
seasonings. Used to season meats,
gravies, soups, and vegetables. It was
first bottled in Worcester, England
-
Worthington white shield
is a bottle-conditioned, pale
ale with a delicate, yeasty,
hoppy,
malt flavour. It is now
brewed at Mitchells and Butlers in
Binningham. For years White
Shield was the only widely
available bottled pale ale which
retained a sediment of
yeast. This meant it was a
living beer - a brewery in a bottle. It
developed a complex character and
required careful handling. Bar
staff had to pour the ale
steadily into the
glass without disturbing the
sediment - but some drinkers preferred
their glass cloudy and added the yeast
anyway. It was not just a beer but a
ritual.
-
Wye valley bitter
is a
bitter, hoppy cask bitter
from the
Wye brewery in
Hereford.
-
Wykehams Glory
is a brown coloured, malty real
ale from the Itchen Brewery
in
Hampshire.
|