释义 |
noun ˈsuːf(ə)lˈsufəl Medicine A low murmuring or blowing sound heard through a stethoscope. 〔医〕(用听诊器听到的)杂音;吹气音 Example sentencesExamples - If you are hearing a rapid pulsating noise with the stethoscope it is probably the "placental souffle" which is the sound of the blood pulsating through the placenta, and not the fetal heart.
OriginLate 19th century: from French, from souffler 'to blow', from Latin sufflare. noun ˈsuːfleɪsuˈfleɪ 1A light, spongy baked dish made typically by adding flavoured egg yolks to stiffly beaten egg whites. Example sentencesExamples - I kneeled to peer at them through the oven window and watched as they began to bronze and puff like miniature soufflés.
- I finally got the soufflé in the oven and started on the chocolate tart, only to realize that we didn't have cocoa.
- Eggs have so much potential - a soufflé, cakes, crème brûlée, salmon mousse - or just a good, open omelette filled with seasonal vegetables.
- It takes no special skill to breathe, nor does it take any special talent to make a soufflé.
- You do know your chef is known not only for his soufflés, but for his excellence in creating dessert masterpieces, don't you?
- I scooped up a spoonful: the soufflé was airy, eggy, and sweet, with a thin crust of sugar where it met the ramekin's edge.
- Never mind soufflé, meringue or mayonnaise, most Britons are left looking like culinary oafs by the simple oeuf.
- I attempt to redress the balance with these little chocolate puddings - fluffy outside and molten within, a cross between a soufflé and a sponge pudding.
- Beneath its delicate, crackling exterior, the ricotta was warm, meltingly soft and cloudlike, some ethereal intermediate between soufflé and softly scrambled egg.
- In the 17th century, cooks discovered that beating egg whites in copper bowls gave body and volume to exciting new foams which they could set as meringues and soufflés.
- It could barely have been better: the soufflé was light and moist, and perfectly complemented by a rich, creamy sauce given an edge by the confit.
- Even seven-and-a-half minutes is long enough to kill a soufflé.
- How I look is the last thing on my mind as I'm trying to cook a soufflé or a dessert in 20 minutes.
- Bake soufflés for 12-15 minutes.
- Continue with the soufflés by whisking the egg whites until soft peaks form.
- There is always a soufflé on the a la carte and the lunch menu.
- When their time comes, he and Edwina have got the soufflés just right, but the tatins are so over-caramelised they're like charcoal.
- Get married, own a business, have children, run a marathon, care for a dying relative, bake a perfect soufflé, practice yoga.
- We all go a little bit silly over soufflés, but the trick to a great one is not magic, it's science.
- Not only do they thicken and enrich sauces, bind stuffings, lighten and expand on whisking to create soufflés and meringues, they can also be cooked in a variety of ways to serve as a meal in their own right.
- 1.1 Any of various light sweet or savoury dishes made with beaten egg whites.
Example sentencesExamples - The soufflé of Parmesan cheese served on a bed of creamy spinach for €7.35 won out in the end.
- The girls, suitably stuffed and speechless, decided to share a dessert, a hot jaffa soufflé with chocolate sauce and chocolate orange ice cream.
- For dessert Abi and I both had the dark chocolate soufflé with apricot sorbet.
- The savoury assault over, it was time to contemplate pudding: a raspberry soufflé which came with a little glass of something resembling a posh milkshake with raspberry sauce at the bottom.
- The rice pudding deserves to follow the chicken hash, however, and the chocolate soufflé isn't worth the wait.
- There's a respectable cheese tray for dessert, and two varieties of soufflé (banana-pecan and citrus Grand Marnier) served in little cast-iron pots.
- The hot cinder toffee soufflé with treacle sauce will make sweet-tooths swoon.
- The best of the classic items was the crème caramel; the worst, unaccountably, was the chocolate soufflé.
- Order the pint-size chocolate soufflé, spiked with hazelnut-flavored crème anglaise.
- The finished product was a mouth-watering menu with a starter of pan seared sea scallops followed by crusted beef tournedos and finally raspberry soufflé.
- Fiona started with the spinach soufflé, goat's cheese sauce and confit tomato.
- Ten dollars will buy you a decent pistachio soufflé, and there's also a deliciously gingery variety of spice cake on the menu, with caramel-roasted apples and Calvados ice cream.
- He's even conjured up a fluffy passion-fruit soufflé, which you can bomb with a ball of freshly made coconut sorbet.
- Pudding was arguably the highlight of our meal, with Vicky's rhubarb crumble soufflé with crème fraîche sorbet a genuine triumph and one of the best desserts I've tried in ages.
- My first thought was to go very basic, and make either a cheese or a chocolate soufflé.
- The best dessert by far is the ‘fallen chocolate soufflé,’ but don't bother traveling all the way downtown to sample it.
- Desserts included the usual suspects of sorbet, ice-cream, creme brulée and lemon soufflé, but the real star of the show was the chocolate fondue, which was available for two, three or six people.
- If you want to set someone special up in the kitchen to conjure up anything as simple as a scrambled eggs to a zucchini soufflé, this place is a good bet.
- As for the prune and Armagnac soufflé, were it any lighter it would float up to the ceiling.
- There was a fine little twice-baked Stilton soufflé with winter squash and a tricksy cumin foam, and there was a foam, too, on the artichoke soup, on which there also floated a small and perfectly presented poached egg.
OriginFrench, literally 'blown', past participle of souffler (see souffle). nounˈso͞ofəlˈsufəl Medicine A low murmuring or blowing sound heard through a stethoscope. 〔医〕(用听诊器听到的)杂音;吹气音 Example sentencesExamples - If you are hearing a rapid pulsating noise with the stethoscope it is probably the "placental souffle" which is the sound of the blood pulsating through the placenta, and not the fetal heart.
OriginLate 19th century: from French, from souffler ‘to blow’, from Latin sufflare. nounsuˈfleɪso͞oˈflā 1A light, spongy baked dish made typically by adding flavored egg yolks to stiffly beaten egg whites. Example sentencesExamples - Eggs have so much potential - a soufflé, cakes, crème brûlée, salmon mousse - or just a good, open omelette filled with seasonal vegetables.
- I attempt to redress the balance with these little chocolate puddings - fluffy outside and molten within, a cross between a soufflé and a sponge pudding.
- I finally got the soufflé in the oven and started on the chocolate tart, only to realize that we didn't have cocoa.
- Not only do they thicken and enrich sauces, bind stuffings, lighten and expand on whisking to create soufflés and meringues, they can also be cooked in a variety of ways to serve as a meal in their own right.
- Beneath its delicate, crackling exterior, the ricotta was warm, meltingly soft and cloudlike, some ethereal intermediate between soufflé and softly scrambled egg.
- Even seven-and-a-half minutes is long enough to kill a soufflé.
- I scooped up a spoonful: the soufflé was airy, eggy, and sweet, with a thin crust of sugar where it met the ramekin's edge.
- Continue with the soufflés by whisking the egg whites until soft peaks form.
- It could barely have been better: the soufflé was light and moist, and perfectly complemented by a rich, creamy sauce given an edge by the confit.
- There is always a soufflé on the a la carte and the lunch menu.
- Bake soufflés for 12-15 minutes.
- How I look is the last thing on my mind as I'm trying to cook a soufflé or a dessert in 20 minutes.
- Never mind soufflé, meringue or mayonnaise, most Britons are left looking like culinary oafs by the simple oeuf.
- You do know your chef is known not only for his soufflés, but for his excellence in creating dessert masterpieces, don't you?
- In the 17th century, cooks discovered that beating egg whites in copper bowls gave body and volume to exciting new foams which they could set as meringues and soufflés.
- When their time comes, he and Edwina have got the soufflés just right, but the tatins are so over-caramelised they're like charcoal.
- I kneeled to peer at them through the oven window and watched as they began to bronze and puff like miniature soufflés.
- Get married, own a business, have children, run a marathon, care for a dying relative, bake a perfect soufflé, practice yoga.
- It takes no special skill to breathe, nor does it take any special talent to make a soufflé.
- We all go a little bit silly over soufflés, but the trick to a great one is not magic, it's science.
- 1.1 Any of various light dishes made with beaten egg whites.
Example sentencesExamples - Desserts included the usual suspects of sorbet, ice-cream, creme brulée and lemon soufflé, but the real star of the show was the chocolate fondue, which was available for two, three or six people.
- There's a respectable cheese tray for dessert, and two varieties of soufflé (banana-pecan and citrus Grand Marnier) served in little cast-iron pots.
- There was a fine little twice-baked Stilton soufflé with winter squash and a tricksy cumin foam, and there was a foam, too, on the artichoke soup, on which there also floated a small and perfectly presented poached egg.
- Ten dollars will buy you a decent pistachio soufflé, and there's also a deliciously gingery variety of spice cake on the menu, with caramel-roasted apples and Calvados ice cream.
- The finished product was a mouth-watering menu with a starter of pan seared sea scallops followed by crusted beef tournedos and finally raspberry soufflé.
- The soufflé of Parmesan cheese served on a bed of creamy spinach for €7.35 won out in the end.
- The best of the classic items was the crème caramel; the worst, unaccountably, was the chocolate soufflé.
- The girls, suitably stuffed and speechless, decided to share a dessert, a hot jaffa soufflé with chocolate sauce and chocolate orange ice cream.
- The rice pudding deserves to follow the chicken hash, however, and the chocolate soufflé isn't worth the wait.
- The savoury assault over, it was time to contemplate pudding: a raspberry soufflé which came with a little glass of something resembling a posh milkshake with raspberry sauce at the bottom.
- As for the prune and Armagnac soufflé, were it any lighter it would float up to the ceiling.
- For dessert Abi and I both had the dark chocolate soufflé with apricot sorbet.
- The hot cinder toffee soufflé with treacle sauce will make sweet-tooths swoon.
- My first thought was to go very basic, and make either a cheese or a chocolate soufflé.
- If you want to set someone special up in the kitchen to conjure up anything as simple as a scrambled eggs to a zucchini soufflé, this place is a good bet.
- Fiona started with the spinach soufflé, goat's cheese sauce and confit tomato.
- The best dessert by far is the ‘fallen chocolate soufflé,’ but don't bother traveling all the way downtown to sample it.
- Pudding was arguably the highlight of our meal, with Vicky's rhubarb crumble soufflé with crème fraîche sorbet a genuine triumph and one of the best desserts I've tried in ages.
- Order the pint-size chocolate soufflé, spiked with hazelnut-flavored crème anglaise.
- He's even conjured up a fluffy passion-fruit soufflé, which you can bomb with a ball of freshly made coconut sorbet.
OriginFrench, literally ‘blown’, past participle of souffler (see souffle). |