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Whats The Difference Between Potato Gratin And Dauphinoise?
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And does anyone have a good easy recipe for either? Thanks!
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Another easy potato dish but lower in Calories (you can even omit or reduce the amount of cheese) is Boulngere.
http:// www.jam ieolive r.com/r ecipes/ vegetab les-rec ipes/bo ulang-r e-potat oes/
I often use a mix of veg and beef stock to add oomph.
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I often use a mix of veg and beef stock to add oomph.
From what I've read and researched the answer seems to be that dauphinoise is layers of cream and potatoes (although some will add cheese but it appears the purists advise that to be incorrect traditionally) and then baked. Au Gratin/potato bakes/and variants, etc. have cheese, eggs and breadcrumbs added.
Where this takes on an ugly conversational twist is when you throw in potatoes dauphine. Dauphine is a fried potato dumpling made with a choux (water, salt, flour, egg, butter mix/paste) and then your mashed potatoes. Interesting that's named a variant of dauphinoise given the ingredients are more in alignment with a gratin.
Where this takes on an ugly conversational twist is when you throw in potatoes dauphine. Dauphine is a fried potato dumpling made with a choux (water, salt, flour, egg, butter mix/paste) and then your mashed potatoes. Interesting that's named a variant of dauphinoise given the ingredients are more in alignment with a gratin.
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