Cheese Souffle’ Suissesse w/wine

Cliff, thanks!

That was an early thought. Along those lines, a consideration was the Zind-Humbrecht Pinot Gris 'Vendange Tardive' « Clos Jebsal », Alsace. It has not been ruled out.

I don't know much about Weißburgunder...or Weißburgunder producers.

. . . . . Pete
 
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
Cheese Souffle’ Suissesse w/wine

Cheese is "Le" in French. Idem for soufflé. Could someone explain why Suissesse? You'd be a lot safer with suisse (which is both m. and f.), no?
 
The Zind-Humbrecht Pinot Gris 'Vendange Tardive' « Clos Jebsal », Alsace was never my choice...only an idea offered up by one person.

Based on input here, I'll campaign against that option.

Thanks again!

. . . . Pete
 
Just out of curiosity, why is that for cheese itself, something off-dry would be considered more than appropriate, but for cheese in souffle form that changes? I'm sure that some of it depends on the cheese in question, but I wouldn't hesitate to serve a racier Moscato with a lot of 'Swiss' type cheeses.
 
On the assumption that this is the twice-baked souffle mentioned some time ago in the NYT -- I've forgotten the name of the chef who re-re-renovated it from Escoffier -- this is likely more structure than ooze.
 
Michel Roux of la Gavroche? (Or his father and uncle, more accurately. )

I am with Prof Lipton. Gruyere & savagnin. Ouillee or sous voile.
 
Back
Top