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soffritto

[soh-free-toh, sawf-freet-taw]

noun

  1. Also called battutoItalian Cooking.,  a base for stews and soups, consisting of hot oil, butter, or fat in which a chopped onion or crushed garlic clove has been browned, often with the addition of chopped parsley, celery, and carrot.

  2. (in Spanish, Latin American, and Caribbean cooking) sofrito.



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Word History and Origins

Origin of soffritto1

First recorded in 1910–15; from Italian, past participle of soffriggere; suf-, fry 1
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Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Mirepoix that you’ve cooked down into a jammy little soffritto.

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The Italian methodology always sounds beautiful and is an excellent roadmap: soffritto, tostare, sfumatura, brodo/cottura and mantecura.

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She then cooks the soffritto for a long time—almost 40 minutes to build flavor and have the texture of the vegetables almost disappear in the dish—and I decided I'd give congrí another try.

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Add the onion, carrot and celery — the soffritto — and cook slowly over medium-low heat, stirring frequently enough so the soffritto doesn’t brown — until the onion is soft, translucent and pale gold, about 15 minutes.

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It was the sole recipe in which the soffritto wasn’t finely chopped, so the vegetables didn’t melt into the sauce as they did with the others.

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