Baked Alaska (also known as glace au four, omelette à la norvégienne, Norwegian omelette and
omelette surprise) is a dessert made of ice cream (ideally straight from the freezer)
placed in a pie dish lined with slices of sponge cake or Christmas pudding and topped with meringue. The entire dessert is
then placed in an extremely hot oven just long enough to firm the meringue. The meringue is an effective insulator, and in the
short cooking time needed, it prevents the heat from getting through to the ice cream.
Development and invention
The notion of cooking a dessert with ice cream as its core ingredient within an insulated covering seems to have originated
with the Chinese, who used pastry for the casing.[1] It was introduced to Europe in the mid-nineteenth century when a Chinese delegation
visited Paris. The use of meringue was then introduced in 1804 by the American physicist Benjamin Thompson. He investigated the heat resistance of
beaten egg whites; the results demonstrated that while pastry would conduct the heat to the ice cream, beaten egg whites would do
so to a lesser extent. The dish was named omelette surprise or omelette à la norvégienne; the Norwegian epithet was
used as a consequence of its arctic appearance and cold centre. This title transformed into
"Baked Alaska" in 1876 when Delmonico's
Restaurant in New York City named it in honour of the newly acquired territory
of Alaska. It was popularised worldwide by the chef Jean Giroix in 1895 at the Hotel de Paris in Monte
Carlo. The dessert was once a popular choice for dinner parties, especially throughout the 1960s, but its popularity has waned in recent years.
Variations
A variation called Bombe Alaska calls for some dark rum to be splashed over the Baked Alaska.
Lights are then turned down and the whole dessert is flambéd while being served.
Another version calls for raspberry filling to be substituted for the ice cream, or even for the filling to be added along
with the ice cream.
The process was simplified in 1974 by Jacqueline Halliday Diaz who invented a baking pan for Baked Alaska that forms a
fillable hollow.
In 1969, the recently invented microwave oven enabled Hungarian physicist and
"molecular gastronomist" Nicholas Kurti to
produce a "reverse Baked Alaska", aka Frozen Florida (hot on the inside and cold on the outside).
Other
The Baked Alaska is also featured in the PC game The Sims 2 as a prominent dessert.
However, it resembles the Bombe Alaska, as the dessert is flambéd, with the chance of dropping it
and setting the kitchen on fire.
Baked Alaska is featured in the hit song "Indian Summer" by the legendary American twee pop band Beat Happening.
References
- "Baked Alaska" An A-Z of Food and Drink. Ed. John Ayto. Oxford University Press, 2002. Oxford Reference Online. Oxford
University Press. Miami University, Ohio. 20 February 2006
See also
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