Casseroles
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Casserole is a word used to refer to a baked, savoury dish, and to the ovenproof cooking vessel that it is baked in.
The cooking vessel itself is usually made of glass, cast iron, enamelled cast iron, or earthenware. Casseroles come in varying sizes and shapes, round or square or oblong. They have deep sides and close-fitting covers. There will be handles on the sides of the Casserole dish, as well as a handle on the cover. Most casserole dishes are meant to double as serving dishes at the table or sideboard, with something under them to protect the surface they are on from the heat.
The ingredients in a Casserole recipe are usually bound with some kind of sauce. Often, the ingredients are leftovers, or quick to assemble items. There will often be toppings such as crumbs, tomato slices or cheese for visual appeal.
Casserole-style recipes are popular because food baking in the oven doesn't need a lot of constant watching, and if someone is late to dinner, it's easy to hold the meal a bit longer without it getting ruined.
In America, Tuna Casserole might be the most popular Casserole, followed closely by Green Bean Casserole at Thanksgiving.
One French equivalent dish of an Anglo-Saxon Casserole might be a Cassoulet, such as "Castelnaudary Cassoulet", which is made in a pottery vessel called a "cassole."
History Notes for Casseroles
In the classical French cooking definition "Casserole", it was a dish was made with cooked rice. You'd make a ring or hollowed-mound of cooked rice, and bake that on its own a bit to stiffen it, then put ingredients inside and bake further. This influenced the more general Victorian definition of Casserole as a rice dish.
Gradually, particularly because of American influence at the start of the 1900s onwards, Casserole came to mean anything cooked in a casserole dish.
Starting with Campbell's in the 1940s promoting Casserole recipes for its creamed soups, Casseroles largely came to be an assembly of pre-made items. In the 1900s, the height of popularity was in the 1950s and 1960s; by the 1970s, cooks who were starting to learn about antipasti and quiche came to look down on the humble Casserole.
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