Carrots cut into batons.
Welcome to the summary page for FabulousFusionFood's Cook's Guide entry for Baton along with all the trcipes employing Baton presented on this site, with 23 recipes in total.
This is a continuation of an entire series of pages that will, I hope, allow my visitors to better navigate this site. As well as displaying recipes by name, country and region of origin I am now planning a whole series of pages where recipes can be located by meal type and main ingredient. This page gives a listing of all the Baton recipes added to this site.
These recipes, all contain Baton as a major wild food ingredient.
Like a Julienne, in culinary terms, a baton is a way of cutting vegetables. In this case the vegetables are cut into a long, thin rectangle shape. This type of cut vegetable is ideal for steaming or sautéeing as the vegetables cook quickly and evenly and do not lose their 'crunch'. This is also the classic shape for raw vegetables in the classic French crudité selection. This is because the baton shape is an excellent one for dipping.
A baton is also a style of French bread which is flatter and has squarer ends that the classic flute or baguette. It is also the the shape in which cassava paste is formed for serving is shaped in the former French colonies of West Africa (baton de manioc).
This is a continuation of an entire series of pages that will, I hope, allow my visitors to better navigate this site. As well as displaying recipes by name, country and region of origin I am now planning a whole series of pages where recipes can be located by meal type and main ingredient. This page gives a listing of all the Baton recipes added to this site.
These recipes, all contain Baton as a major wild food ingredient.
Like a Julienne, in culinary terms, a baton is a way of cutting vegetables. In this case the vegetables are cut into a long, thin rectangle shape. This type of cut vegetable is ideal for steaming or sautéeing as the vegetables cook quickly and evenly and do not lose their 'crunch'. This is also the classic shape for raw vegetables in the classic French crudité selection. This is because the baton shape is an excellent one for dipping.
A baton is also a style of French bread which is flatter and has squarer ends that the classic flute or baguette. It is also the the shape in which cassava paste is formed for serving is shaped in the former French colonies of West Africa (baton de manioc).
The alphabetical list of all Baton recipes on this site follows, (limited to 100 recipes per page). There are 23 recipes in total:
Page 1 of 1
| Bâton de Manioc (Cassava Sticks) Origin: Central Africa | FuFu Origin: Nigeria | Spicy Tofu Origin: China |
| Bâton de Manioc Camerounaise (Cameroonian-style Cassava Sticks) Origin: Cameroon | Mangsher Brown Stew (Mutton Brown Stew) Origin: Anglo-Indian | Tapenade Origin: Spain |
| Brine-pickled Radish Pods Origin: American | Moongre ki Subzi (Radish Pod and Potato Sauté) Origin: India | Tofu and Vegetable Stir-fry Origin: Australia |
| Cocos Islands Acar Origin: Cocos Islands | Muland Saangi Ambat (Radish Pod Gravy) Origin: India | Tzatziki Origin: Greece |
| Couscous de Fonio au Poulet (Fonio Couscous with Chicken) Origin: Togo | Pickled Radish Pods Origin: British | Yam FuFu Origin: West Africa |
| Crispy Miso Mackerel and Chinese-style Noodles Origin: Fusion | Placali Origin: Cote dIvoire | Yam FuFu Origin: Ghana |
| FuFu Origin: West Africa | Seengre ke Satha Tori Kari (Courgette Curry with Radish Pods) Origin: India | Yam FuFu Origin: Nigeria |
| FuFu Origin: Ghana | Semolina and Ground Rice FuFu Origin: West Africa |
Page 1 of 1