Attelets
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Attelets
An Attelet is an inedible garnish for dishes.
It consists of a thin metal skewer, usually silver or gold plated, pointy at one end for sticking into food, and at the other end having a decorative top. Themes for the decoration include hunting, fishing, a coat of arms, etc.
You stick an Attelet into food so that the top would show and look decorative.
Though the small device is considered a garnish in itself, often, small edible garnishes were skewered with them and then pinned to the larger food item. For fish, you might skewer a piece of lemon, a small piece of vegetable, a crayfish, a small shrimp. For meat, perhaps a cock's comb, a truffle, quenelles, mushrooms, etc.
The French chef Marie-Antoine Carême used Attelets a good deal in his presentation.
The word "Attelet" later came to be used, incorrectly, to mean food on a skewer.
Cooking Tips for Attelets
Language Notes
A â in French usually indicates that an S has been dropped in the word along the way.
Also called:
Atelet; Hatelet
See Also:
Marie-Antoine Carême, Skewers
Other entries for: Meat Cooking Tools
Attelets, Mallets, Rotisserie, Skewers, Spit, Turkey Lacers, Vertical Chicken Roaster
Other entries for: Cooking Tools
Cans, Cookware, Graters, Griddles, Kitchen Tongs, Knives, Rolling Pins, Spatulas, Steamers, Thermometers, Treen, Whisks
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