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Haute Cuisine - Yahoo Recipe Search
Food.comThis haute cuisine sauce makes everyday steaks or roasts into something a little more elegant. Serve atop grilled steaks, hamburger steaks, roasted beef or venisonFood.comNot really Oat Cuisine - Haute Cuisine - but I could not resist the title! These cheesy and nutty oat flapjacks are very tasty and easy to make; a savoury take on the usual sweet flapjack recipe which normally contains syrup, honey, sugar and fruit. Great for lunch box snacks as well as picnics or as an accompaniment to soups, stews and chili. Try to use a good quality mature Cheddar cheese for that essential "cheesy" zing! I have stated porridge oats, however these flapjacks are also wonderful when made with jumbo oats - which are a bit more expensive. To achieve a "full" flavour, it is essential to use both type of nuts; the peanuts give the flapjacks the savoury and almost salty flavour, whilst the pecans or walnuts give a subtle taste, texture and nutty "bite" to these little cheese, nut and oat bars! If you like your food with a bit of a kick, you can add some cayenne pepper, as I often do!Food.comI've always come back from France with food snobbery ... which has to pass quickly when I'm confronted by everyday reality!! At a perfectly ordinary restaurant in Paris (we could not afford haute cuisine!) I had a fish terrine in three colours, very delicate, with a pale orangey seafood sauce which was sublime. The French do not waste food, and it was clear that the basis of the sauce was stock/broth made from shrimp or crab or lobster shells. This was my take on it, back home. I shelled the prawns to get my stock base, and lightly fried the shrimps/prawns and served it over fettucine. It was delicious. As you can see, the ingredients are quite simple, healthy and low-fat. The recipe is about the sauce, really, and MY PHOTO IS OF THE TERRINE we had in Paris: NOTE THE SAUCE.