Search
Recommended Sites
Related Links

 





   

Informative Articles

7-Color Cuisine: Guiding Principles
Learning from Nature Today's fast-paced lifestyle has robbed us of the time we need to care for the most basic human need: sustaining life by feeding ourselves well. We eat more than enough calories, but the quality of what we eat is so poor...

Easy summer salads, lighter foods for a brighter summer
Easy summer salads, lighter foods for a brighter summer Easy summer salads do not need dozens of hard to get ingredients or heavy bottled sauces. Go light and use a few good quality vegetables, well combined with a little well-chosen meat, fish, or...

Garlic the ins and outs of Buying, Slicing and Dicing
Buying Garlic * Buy firm, dry bulbs with papery skin. * Avoid wet, soft bulbs. * Avoid bulbs with green shoots coming out. Storing Garlic * Store in a cool dry location. * Store in a paper bag. * Keep away from foods that may pick up...

Planning Dinner
Cooking dinner is part of most of our lives. Some of us enjoy it while others do it out of necessity. Whether we enjoy cooking or not, for most of us, deciding what to make for dinner can be the hardest part of preparing the meal. When I was a...

Use Spices To Cook Like A Connoisseur On A Paupers Budget!
Don't have the money to make delectable dishes? Or just don't know the secrets of flavoring with spices and herbs, and making food stretch? The former is never right no matter what your income is. If you have the money to buy...

 
A Christmas with Trifle

This Christmas, I'm going to make trifle for desert. After all, what is Christmas without trifle? I'm sure, even the pickiest of diners who shun cross-cultural eating would find a soft culinary spot for trifle in their hearts and palates if they could hear Charles Dickens vouch for it.

I first tasted trifle, a couple of decades ago, not in England where it has originated but in Long Island, NY, in a restaurant called Steak Pub of Fort Salonga, where every Friday evening, we used to go for dinner, especially for trifle and the free house wine. Our friends and neighbors who dined there for the same reason would drop by our table to discuss the kind of trifle the chef was surprising us with that the evening. To us, trifle and food was all about sharing, same as the neighborly gossip. In that restaurant, desert was picked by the customer from the desert bar, giving him or her an educational access to the desert chef.

Trifle, as a word, is the offspring of the French word trufle, meaning something trite or whimsical. As a desert, trifle put down its roots inside the 1700s cooking arts when biscuits, liquor, and custard were combined. In the United States, this new delicacy found great popularity with the plantation owners in the south.

Through the last three centuries, trifle has soaked its way into literature through the writers' tongues, after Oliver Wendell Holmes called it, "That most wonderful object of domestic art," Dickens put it among his 'glorious food's, and J. K. Rowling mentioned it in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone.

Trifle not only delights the palate but also enchants the senses, especially the eyes, for it is an artistic desert arranged in layers, placed in trifle bowl for effect, and refrigerated for several hours before serving. A trifle bowl is a very large, see-through glass bowl from which every delicious layer of trifle beckons its admirers.

Trifle's layers are: a sponge cake or even ladies fingers soaked in brandy, whisky, or sherry; jelly or jam; custard; fresh fruit or berries in season; and huge mounds of whipped cream topped with cherries, sprinkles, or nuts. Although whatever composes the trifle can be made from a mix or sometimes leftover cakes and puddings can be used, a true-to -form trifle gourmet would like his trifle to be made from scratch. After the trifle's layers are arranged, refrigeration for several hours is essential for the flavors to penetrate into each layer.

There are quite a few kinds of trifle: chocolate trifle, coronation trifle, quick trifle, Black Forest trifle, and the good old-fashioned trifle English mums make as an alternate Christmas desert to the plum pudding. My trifle shall not take the celebrity route, neither, tastewise, will it come close to Emeril's deserts or Creole Christmas Trifle, but it will make an impact on Santa when he comes down our chimney. I'm sure of that.







About the author:

Joy Cagil is an author on a site for Creative Writing (http://www.Writing.Com/) Her training is in foreign languages and linguistics. Her culinary skills are self-taught. Her portfolio can be found at