08-11-2008, 10:49 AM
Shadow Wrote:ABSOLUTELY RIGHT !!
:biggrin:
Custard is a served as either a topping for cakes and pies (usually crumbles and things you have to eat with a spoon), or if it's thickened and hardened ("Confectioner's Custard") as a filling for certain cakes - Custard Slices (a variation of Mille-Feuille, aka the "Cream Slice"), Custard Horns, even Egg Custard ...
Custard rools.
... and lush ? It's just a slang word meaning really tasty .
xx
!?!?! Shadow !?!?!
Custard is that desserty thing that the British pour onto almost everything sweet, lol... in fact we call this Crème Anglaise (so you see there must be a connection) However, I'd like to point out that whilst French people would hardly be caught buying it in a carton or can (you can get cartons of it now) they would be appalled by the Bird's powder version of it from which eggs are almost if not totally exempt. Custard ought to be made with egg yolks, milk, sugar and some corn flour, maybe vanilla essence... but in France Crème Anglaise is a more subtle dish from which corn flour is normally missing but it's hard for this dish not to curdle in the pan if not caught on time and retrieved from the hob (one of the reasons for putting corn flour in, I guess).