yes
For such a simple and elegant dessert, the history of chocolate mousse is actually very sparse. Any information that I found indicated only that chocolate mousse (Mousse; French, lit. "Foam, lather") originated in France sometime during the 1850's. A particular city was not specified.
The French made the chocolate mousse and all the other types of mousses.
Onion Soup Coq au Vin - This is chicken in red wine. Mousse au Chocolat - Chocolate Mousse.
Its like chocolate mousse without the chocolate and with cheese.
It is origin from France, I believed. Mousse, a French word meaning foam, is a form of dessert typically made from egg and cream, usually in combination with other flavors, most commonly chocolate or fruit. Once only a specialty of French restaurants, chocolate mousse entered into American and English home cuisine in the 1960s. The first written record of chocolate mousse in the United States comes from a Food Exposition held at Madison Square Garden in New York City in 1892. A "Housekeeper's Column" in the Boston Daily Globe of 1897 published one of the first recipes for chocolate mousse. This recipe produced a pudding-like dish very different from today's stiffer, but still fluffy, mousse. Mousse became as we know it with the introduction of egg whites, separated from the yolks. When white chocolate became the chocolate choice in the 80s, food companies scrambled to devise new ways of using it in tandem with their own products. After chef Michel Fitoussi created a white chocolate mousse in New York City in 1977, people couldn't get enough. Mousse was perhaps the most popular of the white chocolate desserts.
Crème brûlée, which means burnt cream. SO GOOD! France is where 'Chocolate mousse' (Mousse au chocolat) originated.
Yes you can use chocolate mousse to top a pie.
Figis Chocolate Mousse Cake has 150 calories.
Rich and chocolatey, with a silky texture.
i think you mean mousse, and because its amazing!
A decadent chocolate mousse frosting can be made by combining melted chocolate, whipped cream, and a touch of sugar. Chill the mixture until it thickens, then spread it on your cake for a rich and creamy finish.
I cannot give you a substitute for that, but I say find another chocolate mint mousse recipe that does not have chocolate extract. I think a regular chocolate mousse recipes & with the addition of mint extract would do the trick. Try all recipes dot com for a basic chocolate mousse recipe.