Mar 17, 2006 09:52
18 yrs ago
1 viewer *
French term

Tamis chinois

French to English Marketing Cooking / Culinary kitchenware
I know it's not a Chinese sieve!

Discussion

Tony M Mar 17, 2006:
But they are also sometimes made of wire mesh, thus resembling a conventional round-type sieve.
Tony M Mar 17, 2006:
A chinois is often made of sheet meatl with fine holes in it (in this respect it might be thought of as resembling a strainer or colander); this makes them strong, so you can press your soup through them.
Tony M Mar 17, 2006:
An 'égouttoir' is a colander or strainer; intended to keep back the wanted item, and let the water (etc.) flow away; whereas a sieve is used to let pass the wanted item (powder, liquid etc.) and retain the unwanted items (lumps, etc.)
Anna Quail Mar 17, 2006:
and strainer (both conical) http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0000BVEII/qid=1142...
And compare with photos of a (tamis) chinois.
Anna Quail Mar 17, 2006:
IMO a sieve is used more for flour than for liquids. See the difference between sieve: http://www.legendcookshop.co.uk/erol.html#9504x0&&http:%2F%2...

Proposed translations

+3
5 mins
Selected

strainer

We either speak of a tamis or a chinois. I've rarely heard of a tamis chinois.

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Note added at 10 mins (2006-03-17 10:03:46 GMT)
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conical strainer to be more precise

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Note added at 29 mins (2006-03-17 10:22:30 GMT)
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conical strainer to be more precise
Peer comment(s):

agree MoiraB : yes, conical strainer or sieve used for straining soups and sauces to produce a very smooth texture. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinoise_(utensil)
16 mins
thank you for the link
agree Anna Quail : Conical strainer yes. See http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0000BVEII/qid=1142... and http://www.meilleurduchef.com/cgi/mdc/l/fr/boutique/produits...
18 mins
thank you for the links, I should have added some
agree IC --
30 mins
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4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer. Comment: "Selected automatically based on peer agreement."
+2
38 mins

china cap (strainer)

Is another term that is used.
Peer comment(s):

agree Anna Quail : True, and it would avoid the problem sieve/strainer:-) See https://www.surfasonline.com/productlines/28.cfm And to answer Daniel's question about "égouttoir" - you can say strainer, but in the UK we say "colander".
10 mins
Thanks!
agree emiledgar : Yes, we call it a China Hat to distinguish it from other strainers/colanders (colander; a word we also use here in the USA)
2 hrs
thanks emiledgar!
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+2
22 mins

conical sieve

if it's for a UK readership, I'd go with sieve.

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Note added at 13 hrs (2006-03-17 22:59:18 GMT)
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I think "wiremesh" should definitely be specified - I remember recipes specifying the use of cheesecloth to strain liquids.
Note from asker:
thanks - it is - and I'm definitely a sieve man not a strainer man... but at the risk of showing my culinary ignorance, what then is an egoutoir?
it seems there is something called a chinese wiremesh strainer, according to one culinary glossary. Any idea what that might be? And where do colanders fit into this complex culinary conundrum?
Peer comment(s):

neutral Anna Quail : Sieve is finer than strainer. You use a sieve for flour. (I'm not saying sieve is necessarily wrong in this context - just that what is known as a chinois in France is not as finely meshed as a sieve, as I understand it.
12 mins
After answering the second one of these questions I went to look in the "Dictionnaire Visuel" and found "flour sifter-tamis" and "passeoire-strainer" but no chinois. Perhaps we should tell them to put it in...
agree IC --
12 mins
Thank you!
agree Tony M : A 'chinois' is a sieve specifically intended for straining liquids, and hence, designed to encourgae them to flow neatly in the correct place
4 hrs
Of course - thus the shape
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