1. LEARNING ENGLISH BY COOKING. CLASSROOM PROJECT and ACTIVITIES

1. LEARNING ENGLISH BY COOKING. CLASSROOM PROJECT and ACTIVITIES

  https://view.genial.ly/62717583cc5de20018845354/guide-guia-pasos-nutricionales Shared by Petrina Moir, teacher trainer. Click on the image...

lunes, 20 de junio de 2022

PAVLOVA in 3 minutes and its history

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nsr2wI_EQJQ

RECIPE IN SHORT:

 1 egg white and 300g powdered sugar/azucar glas mix together by hand and then form small ping pong balls, place on kitchen paper and microwave 30s- 1 minute depending on heat.



Australians say they invented the recipe; New Zealanders say they did. In reality, they’re probably both wrong. Something of a sibling rivalry exists between the two countries, and they love to squabble over who gets credit for anything from Russell Crowe to a racehorse named Phar Lap. One of their longest-running disputes is over the origin of the pavlova, or “pav,” as both sides affectionately call it.

New Zealand in 1926. As the New Zealand story goes, the chef of a Wellington hotel at the time created the billowy dessert in her honor, claiming inspiration from her tutu. Australians, on the other hand, believe the pavlova was invented at a hotel in Perth, and named after the ballerina when one diner declared it to be “light as Pavlova.”

Anna Pavlova was a superstar of her day, adored and admired all over the world. As a result, a lot of chefs named their dishes after her. In France, there were frogs' legs à la Pavlova; in America, Pavlova ice cream.

And even on the other side of the world, the first published “pavlova” recipe had nothing to do with meringue. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, this first mention of a dessert called pavlova appeared in a 1927 cookbook called Davis Dainty Dishes, put out in New Zealand by the Davis Gelatine company. But that recipe is for a multi-layered jelly, so it does little to settle the debate. New Zealanders, however, claim any pavlova recipe is proof enough that they invented pavlova, and that recipes for the meringue pavlova appeared on their little island soon after. Australians counter that: Even if New Zealanders get credit for the name, an Aussie chef is responsible for inventing the true pavlova we know today, they say.

Wood and Utrecht believe the pavlova recipe as we know it may have traveled to Australia and New Zealand on the back of a cornstarch box. Unlike French meringue cookies, pavlova meringue often incorporates cornstarch, which gives it a marshmallow-y interior. So, as such companies are wont to do to this day, an American cornstarch manufacturer put a recipe for a dessert similar to pavlova on its packaging and began exporting to New Zealand.

In the end, neither New Zealand nor Australia can really claim to have birthed the pavlova: They didn’t invent the recipe, and they weren’t even the first to name a dessert after the dancer (Wood and Utrecht found a recipe for "strawberries Pavlova" dating from 1911). But one of them was probably the first to put the name to that recipe, and both of them deserve the credit for keeping this dessert alive and well while all the other dishes named Pavlova didn’t make it past the era when a ballerina was the biggest star in the world.

Source: https://food52.com/blog/16810-the-dessert-australians-and-new-zealanders-are-squabbling-over#:~:text=The%20pavlova%20is%20named%20after,claiming%20inspiration%20from%20her%20tutu.


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