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A vertical rotisserie cooking Dner kebab
A vertical rotisserie cooking Dner kebab

For the fantasy sports game, see Rotisserie sports.

Rotisserie is a style of roasting where meat is skewered on a spit - a long solid rod used to hold food while it is being cooked over a fire in a fireplace or over a campfire, or roasted in an oven. This method is generally used for cooking large joints of meat or entire animals, such as pigs, turkeys, goats or historically, entire cattle. The rotation cooks the meat evenly in its own juices and allows easy access for continuous basting if desired.

In medieval and early modern kitchens, the spit was the preferred way of cooking meat in a large household. A servant, preferably a boy, sat near the spit turning the metal rod slowly and cooking the food; he was known as the "spit boy" or "spit jack". Mechanical turnspits ("roasting jacks") were later invented, first moved by dog-powered treadmill, and then by steam power and mechanical clockwork mechanisms. Spits are now usually driven by electric motors.

Rotisserie can also refer to a mechanical device used for rotisserie cooking, or to a restaurant specializing in spit-roasted meat and chicken. The word comes from French where it first appeared in Paris shops around 1450. Additionally, in restaurants employing the Escoffierian brigade de cuisine, the rotisseur is the chef responsible for all spit-roasted, oven roasted, grilled and in some cases fried foods.

Horizontal rotisserie

This style of rotisserie mounts the spit horizontally. They are often used to cook whole chickens or roasts of various meats including beef and pork. The design may include a single spit mounted over an open broiler or grill, a single spit mounted within an otherwise-conventional oven, or many spits mounted within a large industrial oven. The latter are commonly used to mass produce roasted meats for sale to consumers.

Chicken cooking on a horizontal rotisserie

In this style of rotisserie, balance is important. If the object to be cooked is far out of balance, it will impose a heavy load on the drive mechanism or cause the mechanism to fail to turn. Loose chicken legs or wings can also cause the mechanism to jam. For these two reasons, some skewering skill is required.

Spitted fowl are rotated by a handcrank and basted with a long-handled spoon in this illustration from the Romance of Alexander, Bruges, 1338-44 (Bodleian Library)

High-end consumer ovens commonly come with a rotisserie (or allow the installation of a rotisserie as an option). In these cases, the motor drive mechanism is usually concealed within the oven. The rotisserie is used by removing the normal cooking racks; a special carrier may be needed to provide one or both bearing points for the spit.

Supermarket commonly mass produce rotisserie chickens using a vertical rotiserie that has metal bars to hold the chicken in place through the weakest part of the breast (also which hardly affects the meat itself from the impaling but still holds the chicken firmly in place) and the densest part of the chicken located just below the drumstick of the chicken.

Vertical rotisserie

The other common style of rotisserie is the vertical rotisserie; here, the heat is applied directly from the side or, less-commonly, convected up from below. In this style of rotisserie, balance of the load is less important than with a horizontal rotisserie.

Some dishes that are commonly cooked on a vertical rotisserie include:

Dner kebab from Turkey

Gyros, from Greece

Shawarma, from the Middle East and the Arab World

Taco al pastor, from Mexico

vde

Cooking techniques

Dry

Conduction

Dry roasting Grilling (la Plancha) Hot salt frying Hot sand frying Searing

Convection

Baking Grill-roasting Grill-baking Roasting (modern) Smoking

Radiation

Charbroiling Broiling Grilling (gridiron) Toasting Roasting (traditional) Rotisserie

Wet

High heat

Blanching Boiling Decoction Parboiling

Low heat

Coddling Creaming Infusion Poaching Simmering Slow cooker Steeping Stewing

Indirect heat

Bain-marie Double boiling Double steaming Steaming Sous-vide

Fat-based

High heat

Browning Blackening Frying (Deep frying Pan frying Stir frying (bao) Shallow frying) Sauting

Low heat

Caramelizing Gentle frying Sweating

Mixed Medium

Barbecuing Braising Griddling Stir frying (chao)

Device-based

Clay pot cooking Earth oven Microwaving Pressure cooking Pressure frying Roman oven/Tandoor Vacuum flask/Haybox cooking

Non-heat

Pickling Souring Fermentation Curing

See also

Food preparation Food preservation Food safety

See also

Skewer

Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (August 2007)

This food-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

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Categories: Spit-cooked foods | Cooking techniques | Food stubsHidden categories: Articles lacking sources from August 2007 | All articles lacking sources

by: gaga




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