Pared is the same as pealed.
So 3 pared strips of Orange would be three peelings with a peeler
Simple as that
Yes, but they will then taste of orange.
Orange zest is thin strips of the outside peel of an orange and is also called grated orange rind in some recipes. Grating the zest makes fine pieces and is good for cooking in recipes.
It means lemon zest and orange zest. And zeal is someone when they are dertimerred to do something.
Orange zest is made from orange peel. When you grate the rind of the orange, do not grate all the way to the white, you just want to grate the orange surface. Voila!! You have fresh orange zest. The zest of an orange is the very outter layer of the orange peel...just the orange part, not the white part. The easiest way to remove the zest without getting the bitter white part is to use an orange zester or a micro rasp (looks similar to a wood file). If you don't have an orange zester you can use the smallest holes on a box grater or cut the zest off with a paring knife. If using a paring knife, chop the peel as small as possible...now you have orange zest.
If you washed the orange peel well before grating the zest, sure it is - enjoy!
Zest has two definitions. Zest can be the intense enthusiasm , excitement, glee, energy. Her zest for protecting feral cats earned her several awards. Zest is also the outer layer of an orange, lemon or lime peel . To collect it, scrape the fruit with a grater, but not too deeply. The recipe called for the zest of an orange to be sprinkled on.
Orange zest refers to the grated peel of an orange, whereas the juice of the orange is taken from the liquid in the orange's inner flesh. Replacing zest with juice in a recipe may water the recipe down and cause undesirable changes in flavor and consistency. A better substitution may be the zest of another citrus, or a small amount of orange extract.
Aside from the obvious difference that they are different fruits; it's all about the flavour. If you want an orange flavour in your muffins use orange zest. Want lemon flavour? Use lemon zest.
Zest is what you call the aromatic part of a fruit's peeling. You get zest by grating the peel into very fine pieces that can be dusted into your recipe.
Rind
Technically, no. But in culinary terms rind refers only to the orange bit - not the white pith. Peel is a term that is usually reserved for 'candied peel' where more of the pith is left on and then cut up and candied in sugar syrup.
YES