Café liégeois

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
Café liégeois
Café Liégeois.jpg
Origin
Place of origin France
Region or state Paris
Details
Course served Dessert
Main ingredient(s) Coffee, coffee ice cream, chantilly cream

Café liégeois is a cold dessert of French origin, made from lightly sweetened coffee, coffee flavour ice cream and chantilly cream.

One should refrigerate a large glass with the required amount of sweetened coffee, and add the ice cream and chantilly just prior to serving. Often crushed roasted coffee beans are put on top of the chantilly as decoration.

History

Contrary to its name, the café liégeois dessert did not originate in or around Liège, Belgium. It was originally known in France as a café viennois (French for "Viennese coffee").[1] Subsequently, during World War I, the Battle of Liège (which lasted much longer than the German army had anticipated it would) caused a delay in German advances on France in 1914, allowing the French to reorganize better. To honor the city of Liège for its resistance, and because the city was shelled with Austrian guns (notably the Skoda 305 mm Model 1911), Paris' cafés started renaming the dessert from viennois to liégeois. In Liège itself, the dessert continued to be known as café viennois for a while.[citation needed]

Preparation

The café liégeois generally consists of two scoops of coffee ice cream and one scoop of vanilla ice cream, together with chantilly cream and coffee. Another version of the Café Liégeois is known as the "Chocolate Liégeois". In this version the coffee ice-cream is replaced by chocolate ice-cream.

See also

References

  1. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

<templatestyles src="Asbox/styles.css"></templatestyles>