Naan - a white flour Indian
flat bread. It is one of the most loved Indian
breads. A trip to an Indian restaurant usually
involves the ordering of some kind of Naan.
It is traditionally made in a brick and clay
tandoor oven. Traditionally served as an accompaniment
with an Indian curry, Naan's can also be used
to wrap seasoned grilled meats, seafood, or
vegetables. A naan should be served hot and
eaten immediately or else it tends to get chewy.
Nabo - [Spanish] turnip.
Nachos - [Spanish] tortilla
chips that are topped with cheese, chiles, etc.,
then heated until the cheese melts; originated
in El Paso, Texas.
Nage - An aromatic broth
in which crustaceans are cooked. The shellfish
is then served with this broth. The most notable
of these dishes is lobster la nage.
Nam Pla - See "Fish Sauce."
Nantua - A name given to
dishes containing crayfish. This includes crayfish
tails and sauces made with a crayfish fumet.
Napa cabbage - Sometimes
called Chinese celery cabbage. Found in many
supermarkets and Oriental markets.
Naranja agria - [Spanish]
sour orange.
Naranja dulce - [Spanish]
sweet orange.
Naranjas - [Spanish] oranges.
Natilla - [Spanish] custard
dessert; similar to floating island, with stiffly
beaten egg whites layered on top of an egg custard;
often accompanied with fresh or poached fruits.
Navarin - French stew made
with mutton or lamb and onions, turnips, potatoes,
and herbs.
Nesselrode - A mixture of
candied fruit, nuts and cherries used in desserts.
Nasturtium - See "Indian
cress."
Navarin - A stew of browned
lamb.
Nectarine - A smooth-skinned
variety of the peach family.
Negro - [Spanish] black.
Neapolitan - [Italian] Ice
creams and sweet cakes in layers of different
colors and flavors.
Nesselrode - A dessert or
sauce with rum and fruit flavor, often with
chestnuts.
Neufchatel - [French] A
soft unripened cheese originally from Neufchatel-en-Bray,
France. It has a fat content of 44 to 48%. Also
available as low-fat cream cheese in the U.S.
New Mexican chiles - Formerly
known as Anaheim chiles; long green chiles grown
in New Mexico; poblanos may be substituted.
New Mexico red chiles -
A fresh chile; mild to medium hot; keeps its
same name in both dried and fresh forms; mild
chile with an earthy flavor, slightly tart with
a hint of dried cherry; seen often strung in
ristras for drying; used in pipi�ns, salsas
and barbecue sauces.
Newburg - Served with a
hot cream sauce containing sherry and pieces
of lobster.
Nicoise, Nigoise - [French]
foods cooked in the style of Nice. These dishes
may include garlic, Nicoise olives, anchovies,
tomatoes, and green beans. Salad Nicoise is
the most famous of all these dishes, consisting
of potatoes, olives, green beans, and vinaigrette
dressing. Also, a garnish of garlic, tomatoes,
capers and lemon.
Nicoise and Gaeta Olives
- Small black olives from the south of France
and from Italy. They have a pure olive taste
and come packed with their pits. Green Nicoise
olives come already pitted. Their flavor is
more tart than the black olives.
Nixtamal - [Spanish] hominy;
lime-slaked corn; used to make posole or ground
into masa, or dough, to make tortillas.
Noci - [Italian] nuts.
Nogada - [Spanish] walnut
sauce.
Noisette - A small round
steak, made of lamb or beef tenderloin.
Noisette Butter - Whole
butter which has been cooked until it reaches
a rich, nutty brown color and aroma.
Noix - [French] nut.
Noodles - Flat ribbon pasta
made from flour, water and egg, then dried and
rehydrated during boiling in water.
Noodles - Chinese
Cellophane Noodles - Also known as slippery
noodles or bean threads, these noodles are made
from the starch of mung beans, a.k.a. "sprouts"
to most of us. Dried they're translucent, but
softened in hot water and cooked they become
gelatinous and transparent. Although they don't
have much taste on their own they do have a
knack for picking up the flavors other ingredients
they're mingled amongst. To cook: soften in
hot water for 15 minutes, then boil or stir
fry for 1 minute. Or deep-fry briefly in hot
oil until puffed and lightly golden and use
to garnish anything from quirky Asian-inspired
appetizers to salads.
Egg Noodles
- Well-stocked Asian markets usually offer a
selection of dried and fresh egg noodles, both
thin and thick. Although they are often neon
yellow, some of the dried varieties are made
without eggs. If you can't find Chinese egg
noodles, substitute fresh or dried Italian pasta.
To cook egg noodles boil fresh noodles for 2
1/2 to 4 minutes or dried noodles 4 1/2 to 5
minutes.
Wheat-Flour Noodles
- Made with wheat flour and water, this is the
oldest noodle form found in China. Still made
by hand in fine restaurants around the world,
they are created from a soft dough, resulting
in a silky texture. They do vary in thickness
and may be round or flat. The thinnest are used
in refined soups, whereas the thicker varieties
stand up to heartier soups and casseroles. Although
these noodles come in shrimp-, chicken- and
crab-flavored varieties the quality can vary
dramatically along with their flavor. To cook
wheat-flour noodles boil fresh noodles for 2
1/2 to 4 minutes or dried ones for 4 1/2 to
5 minutes.
Noodles - Korean
Buckwheat Noodles - One of the most popular
varieties of noodles among the Koreans are the
brownish noodles known as "naengmyon" which
are sold dried. They are made with buckwheat
flour and potato starch and are slightly chewier
than soba noodles. To prepare buckwheat noodles
boil for 3 to 3 1/2 minutes. Naengmyon are mostly
used in soups.
Sweet Potato Noodles
- "Tangmyon" or sweet potato noodles are similar
to cellophane noodles, and they are often made
with mung bean starch. Like cellophane noodles,
they become translucent once cooked and will
absorb the flavors of the foods they are cooked
with. Used in stir fry dishes, to cook simply
soften noodles in hot water for 10 minutes then
stir-fry for 45 seconds to 1 minute.
Noodles - Japanese
Soba Noodles - The brownish buckwheat soba noodles
from Japan are becoming more popular as their
beguiling nutty flavor and nutritional value
engage the attention of Western cooks. Rich
in protein and fiber, they are most commonly
served cold with a dipping sauce or hot in soups.
Soba noodles are extraordinarily versatile and
lend themselves to salads and stir-fried dishes
as well. You can find soba noodles flavored
with green tea, lemon zest, or black sesame
seeds. For the best-quality check out the Japanese
brands. To cook boil fresh noodles 1 to 1 1/2
minutes or dried ones 4 to 4 1/2 minutes.*
Udon Noodles
- Fat, slippery white noodles found bobbing
about in soups or casseroles, udon noodles are
made from a wheat-flour-and-water dough and
may be round, square, or flat in shape. In most
recipes, udon noodles are interchangeable with
soba noodles and Chinese wheat-flour-and-water
noodles. Boil the fresh variety for 2 to 2 1/2
minutes and the dried anywhere from 4 to 4 1/2
minutes.*
Ramen Noodles
- Most of us recognize ramen noodle from the
dried, curly variety found in those inexpensive
instant noodle soup packages. Made with an egg-based
dough, ramen are usually served with meat and
vegetables in a flavorsome broth. Because fresh
ramen is not always easy to find, fresh or dried
Chinese egg noodles or Italian pasta make an
adequate substitute.*
Somen Noodles
- The most delicate of all the Japanese noodles,
somen are often distinguished by their elegant
packaging. Made from a wheat-flour dough with
a touch of oil added, like soba noodles they
are often served cool with a dipping sauce,
but don't forget they also make a light and
delicate garnish for hot soups. To cook somen
noodles just boil for 2 1/2 to 3 minutes.
Nopal (nopales) - [Spanish]
paddles (leaves) of the prickly pear (nopal)
cactus; they are firm and crunchy; the smaller
the paddle, the more tender; nopales have a
flavor similar to green beans and can be eaten
raw or cooked; sliced green beans can be substituted.
Nopalitos - [Spanish] cactus
paddles cut into strips or dices; usually refers
to the canned and pickled cactus.
Nori - Thin dry sheets of
seaweed used in Japanese cooking. It is mainly
used to wrap sushi and as garnish for other
cold presentations. See "Seaweed sheets, dried."
Normande - A cream sauce
containing fish essence, mushrooms and egg yolks.
Norte, norteno - [Spanish]
north; of the north.
Nougat - A candy made from
sugar and honey mixed with nuts. This mixture
is then formed into slabs and sliced.
Nougatine - A darker candy,
made of caramel syrup and nuts. This is rolled
into thin sheets and formed into cups or bowls
to serve as a vessel for other candy or fruit.
Nouilles - [French] noodles.
Nudeln - [German] noodles.
Nuevo - [Spanish] new.
Nuez moscada - [Spanish]
nutmeg.
Nut Pastes
Almond Paste
- a blend of ground, blanched almonds cooked
with sugar to make a creamy, firm paste. It
is used as an ingredient in cakes, cookies,
ice cream, pastries tarts. (It is the secret
ingredient in rainbow and pignoli cookies, macaroons,
kranskage, Danish pastries and Swedish mazarins.)
And almond paste can be used to make marzipan,
a sweet almond confection. [see below] Quality
almond paste usually contains more than 50%
almonds and the balance is sugar.
Marzipan
- a sweet confection made from ground blanched
almonds and sugar, some of which is liquid sugar
to make a soft pliable paste. While there are
no hard-and-fast rules, Marzipan typically contains
more than 60% sugar some of which is liquid
sugar. Marzipan is like edible modeling clay.
It can be sculpted into fanciful shapes, rolled
to decorate cakes or coated in chocolate to
make a candy center.
It has been enjoyed in
Europe since the Middle Ages. It is believed
that when the Crusaders opened up trade routes
to the Near East, they brought the taste for
this Arab sweet back to Europe. There, almond
paste and nougat candies made their way into
the Mediterranean pastry and candy traditions,
as well as in Germany, the British Isles, and
Scandinavia.
Hazelnut paste
or hazelnut praline - roasted hazelnuts
cooked with sugar then ground to make a smooth
sweet paste used to flavor butter cream icings,
puddings, ice cream, chocolates and fudge. Praline
paste is usually made with hazelnuts although
it can also be made with almonds.
Lekvar
- a Hungarian-style fruit puree, usually made
from dried plums or apricots cooked with sugar
to make a smooth, thick fruit filling. Lekvar
is used in hamantaschen, Danish pastries, and
sweet yeast breads.
courtesy Love’n Bake.com
Nuoc Mam - See "Fish Sauce."
Nusskuchen - [German] Nutcake.
Nutella - A commercial brand
of gianduja. This is a creamy paste of chocolate
and hazelnuts treasured in Italy. This is used
in candy making, for flavored milk drinks, and
when thinned out, spread on bread as a quick
snack.
Nutmeg - Oval-shaped, brown,
wrinkly seed of the nutmeg tree. In its grated
for is primarily utilized in sweet and savory
dishes including cakes, custards, souffles,
meatballs and soups.