See Also: immersion foot(medicine)
Souffle au Grand Marnier(recipes)
Frozen Souffle Grand Marnier(recipes)
Goat' s Foot, Hind' s Foot, Pied De Biche - Archery(gambling)
Immersion(medicine)
immersion(dictionary)
immersion(dictionary)
immersion bath(medicine)
Homogeneous immersion(medicine)
immersion of a lens(medicine)

Souffle au Grand Marnier (recipes) and immersion foot (medicine)


Souffle au Grand Marnier (recipes)


Serves 6





2 Tbsp. butter

1 Tbsp. flour

½ cup milk, warm

5 egg yolks beat with 4 Tbsp. sugar

pinch salt

¼ cup Grand Marnier sprinkled on 8 lady fingers

6 egg whites

⅛ tsp. cream of tartar

2 Tbsp. sugar



Use a 1 ½ quart soufflé dish, buttered and sugared. Preheat oven to 375°. Add collar.



Make a roux of the 2 tbsp. butter and the 1 tbsp. flour. Off heat add the warm milk, then eggs & salt.



Beat 6 egg whites with ⅛ tsp. cream of tartar (if in mixer). Just before whites hold a stiff peak, add 2 tbsp. sugar slowly and continue to whip.



Fold the roux and the egg white mixture together carefully. Place ½ of the mixture in the 1 ½ qt. soufflé dish; add the lady fingers sprinkled with the grand Marnier and top with the remaining mixture. Smooth the top.



Place a cookie sheet in the bottom of the oven to partially defuse the heat and add the soufflé on the rock above it. Bake in a 375° oven for 18 minutes. When ready to serve, open top and sprinkle with grand Marnier and serve at once.

immersion foot (medicine)


immersion foot


A condition of the feet produced by prolonged exposure of the feet to water. Exposure for 48 hours or more to warm water causes tropical immersion foot or warm-water immersion foot common in vietnam where troops were exposed to prolonged or repeated wading in paddy fields or streams. Trench foot results from prolonged exposure to cold, without actual freezing. It was common in trench warfare during world war I, when soldiers stood, sometimes for hours, in trenches with a few inches of cold water in them. (andrews' diseases of the skin, 8th ed, p27)