Maman's Cheese Souffl | Jacques Ppin | Recipe

This is the easiest cheese soufflé ever thanks to a genius (accidental) shortcut from Jacques Pépin's mom.

"When my mother got married," says Jacques, "she was seventeen and my father was twenty-two. She did not know how to cook, but my father liked cheese soufflé, so my mother graciously obliged. She had never made a soufflé before, but a friend told her that it consisted of a white sauce (béchamel), grated cheese, and eggs – a cinch! To the béchamel, that staple of the French home cook, she added her grated Swiss cheese and then cracked and added one egg after another to the mixture, stirred it well, poured it into a gratin dish, and baked it in the oven. Voilà! No one had told her that the eggs should be separated, with the yolks added to the base sauce and the whites whipped to a firm consistency and then gently folded into the mixture. Ignorance is bliss, and in this case it was indeed: the soufflé rose to a golden height and became a family favorite. This is a great recipe that can be assembled hours or even a day ahead, and although it is slightly less airy than a standard soufflé, it is delicious."

Adapted from The Apprentice: My Life In The Kitchen by Jacques Pépin. Copyright © 2015 by Jacques Pépin. Used with permission by Rux Martin/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved.

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