MAYONNAISE


Meaning of MAYONNAISE in English

cold sauce originating in French cuisine, an emulsion of raw egg yolks and vegetable oil. As the yolks are continuously beaten, oil is added little by little until a thick cream results. Plain mayonnaise is flavoured with lemon juice, mustard, or vinegar. This rich, somewhat bland sauce serves as the base of dozens of variations such as mayonnaise verte (with pured green herbs), sauce rmoulade (with anchovies, pickles, and capers), sauce aoli (a Provenal mayonnaise flavoured with a great deal of garlic), and salad dressings such as Thousand Island and Russian dressings. The term mayonnaise is also used to denote cold dishes and salads that are dressed with this sauce, as egg mayonnaise or lobster mayonnaise. The etymology of the word mayonnaise is uncertain. It may be a corruption of moyeunaise, moyeu being an old French word denoting the yolk of an egg. The French chef Antonin Carme thought that it derived from the verb manier, meaning to stir. Another possibility is that it was named after the victory of the Duke de Richielieu at Mahon in Minorca in 1757.

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.