Fondues are a group of distinct dishes that can be either savoury or sweet. Cheese fondue, originating in Switzerland, is the original fondue, hence the French term fondue for "melted". Since the 1950s, however, the term fondue has been generalized to a number of other dishes in which a food is dipped or cooked into a communal pot kept hot.[1] Fondue eaten as a communal meal is referred to as a fondue party.

Bushman fondue in Namibia

Konrad Egli, a Swiss restaurateur, is credited for the introduction of fondue bourguignonne at his Chalet Suisse restaurant in 1956. In the mid-1960s, he also invented chocolate fondue as part of a promotion for Toblerone chocolate.[2] A sort of chocolate mousse or chocolate cake had also sometimes been called "chocolate fondue" starting in the 1930s.[3]

Savoury fondues

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Broth

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Fondue Chinoise

Fondue chinoise (lit. "Chinese fondue") is a common name for hot pot, where meat and vegetables are cooked in a shared pot of broth, or pieces of thinly sliced meat are dipped with a fondue fork into boiling broth with salad as side dish.[4] Various sauces and pickled condiments are provided on the side. After all the diners have finished cooking, they eat the now well-flavored broth often combined with thin noodles.[citation needed]

Cheese

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Cheese fondue, commonly simply fondue, is a dish of melted cheese and white wine in which pieces of bread are dipped.

 
Fondue Bourguignonne

Fondue bourguignonne consists of a fondue pot filled with hot oil into which diners dip pieces of meat to cook them. Various dipping sauces are provided on the side. The meat is traditionally beef ("Charolais" beef produced in Burgundy particularly, hence the name "bourguignonne"), horse, venison, ostrich or duck, but others meats are possible.[citation needed]

Another oil fondue, common in Namibia, is the Bushman fondue.[5]

Wine

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"Fondue vigneronne" or "Fondue Bacchus" is like fondue bourguignonne, with wine or vodka rather than oil. Red wine fondue consists of red wine boiled, and seasoned with salt, pepper, garlic, onions and herbs; the white wine version is spiced with cinnamon, chilis, coriander, white pepper and enriched with chicken broth. The guests then dip meat, fish or vegetables in the caquelon and top them with bearnaise, tartar sauce or simply French mustard.[citation needed]

Sweet fondues

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Chocolate

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Chocolate fondue

Slices of fruit, cake or pastry are dipped in a caquelon of melted chocolate, often flavored with rum or kirschwasser. Dessert fondues may also be made with coconut, honey, caramel, or marshmallow. Chocolate fondue usually uses milk chocolate.[citation needed]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Smith, Andrew F. (2007). The Oxford Companion to American Food and Drink. Oxford University Press. p. 195. ISBN 978-0-19-988576-3. One was the fondue, which had originated in Switzerland as an egg-and-cheese casserole into which bread was often dipped. During the 1950s fondue morphed into a way of making dips, and fondue pots became a major selling item in America. In 1952 some fondue recipes replaced the cheese with oil, and chunks of skewered meats were cooked and dipped into sauces. By 1964 fruit was being dipped into heated chocolate.
  2. ^ Sylvia Lovegren, Fashionable Food: Seven Decades of Food Fads, pp. 240-2
  3. ^ Barry Popik, The Big Apple blog, "Chocolate Fondue (myth)"
  4. ^ "Fleischfondue richtig genießen : so isst man richtig das Fleischfondue". Blick.
  5. ^ "Das perfekte Dinner: Ein himmlischer Genuss hoch über den Wolken". VOX (in German). 17 June 2016. Retrieved 24 February 2023. ...ein Buschmann-Fondue. Die Gäste haben Spaß am interaktiven Hauptgang und spießen munter Fleisch auf, das sie im Anschluss in das heiße Fett geben. [...a Buschman fondue. The guests have fun with the interactive main course and happily skewer the meat, which they then put in the hot fat.]
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