100 Dollar Cake 3 Musketeers Bars A-Ri-Rang À Blanc À l'Africaine À l'Agnès Sorel À l'Aillade À l'Ailleule À l'Albigeoise À l'Albufera À l'Algérienne À l'Alsacienne À l'Ambassadrice À l'Américaine À l'Ancienne À l'Andalouse À l'Anglaise À l'Anglaise -- Paner À l'Anversoise À l'Ardennaise À l'Argenteuil À l'Ariégeoise À l'Arlésienne À l'Armenonville À l'Armoricaine À l'Arrabiata À l'Autrichienne À l'Auvergnate À l'Encre À l'Espagnole Previous | Next | Tractum© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforcedTractum was a Roman flat bread used as a thickener in dishes, rather than as a bread in its own right. It was made from raw dough rolled out into discs, and let dry naturally. It was then crumbled as a thickener into sauces, soups, stews. Had it been cooked first, it couldn't have been used as a thickener. Tractum could also be used whole in dishes: it was often brushed with oil, and used in layers in a dish as you would wide flat pasta noodles. But otherwise, it wasn't meant to be used as a Roman form of pasta. The use of Tractum as a thickener may have evolved into the Medieval practice of using bread crumbs to thicken sauces with.
Also called: Tractum (Roman)
Other entries for:Flat BreadsBammy Bread, Barbari Bread, Bolo de Milho, Casabe Bread, Chapati, Fougasse, Hardangerlefse, Injera, Lagana Bread, Laganum, Lavash Bread, Lefse, Matzo, Numedal Lefse, Oppdal Lefse, Orindes, Pane Carasau, Pappadams, Piadina, Pita, Pupusas, Sangak Bread, Shao Bing, Stottie Bread, Taaftun Bread, Tigelle, Tortillas (Mexican), Tractum Other entries for:BreadBagels, Biscuits, Bread Crumbs, Bread Improvers, French Breads, Kalakukko Bread, Quick Breads, Quignon, Rusks, Sippets, Tartine, Toast, Unleavened Bread |
|

