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Flamiche () is a savoury , originating in north-west . It dates to medieval times and originally was a kind of , but in its modern version is a tart made with and cream.


Etymology
Two possible derivations have been advanced for the word flamiche: either that it comes from flamme, 'flame', as the dish was traditionally cooked in a wood-burning oven, or that it is a corruption of vlamiche – (the dish being native to north-west France, close to the border with Flanders).Thiéry, Maurice. "La Flamiche", Le Journal des confiseurs, pâtissiers, glaciers, fabricants de chocolats, biscuits, fruits confits, confitures, conserves, etc, 1 September 1910, pp. 278–278


History
The term dates from medieval times. 's Chronicles, dating from the 14th century, mention people eating "a little in the manner of a flamiche or to comfort their stomachs".Froissart, p. 15 In his Dictionarie of the French and English Tongues (1611), applies the term to "a cake made of butter, cheese, flower, and yolkes of egges".

The 18th-century scholar Legrand d'Aussy described the flamiche as it was made in his time: "It is a kind of made with baker's dough. It is rolled out with a rolling pin and put in the oven while the wood is burning. As soon as it has been thoroughly heated, it is taken out of the oven and spread with butter. It is eaten as soon as it comes out of the oven". Quoted in Montagné, p. 414 In his Encyclopédie méthodique (1782) Jacques Lacombe describes a flamiche as "A kind of pastry made with salty fatty cheese, butter, eggs, flour & seasoning. The dough is cut into thick pieces of two fingers, and baked in the oven".Lacombe, p. 94


Modern version
As late as the 1880s there is no mention of in the definition in the Dictionnaire de la langue française: "Name, in some provinces, of a pastry made of cheese, butter and eggs",Littré, p. 1690 but in 1910 a French journal described a flamiche as "a flour dough, buttered inside with leeks cut into small pieces", originating in Péronne, Somme. In Larousse Gastronomique (1938), Prosper Montagné wrote, "Nowadays the name flamiche is given to a kind of leek tart made in and ." In 1998, wrote of "La Flamiche aux Poireaux: a buttery leek pie – a famed speciality of cookery".Hopkinson, p. 169 Montagné does not specify the type of pastry to be used; Hopkinson uses ; suggests a crumbly shortcrust;David, p. 189 uses a yeast dough similar to that used in .Willan, p. 279 Clarissa Dickson Wright specifies a dough, and although her recipe contains leeks, she comments that flamiche "can be filled with whatever you like".Paterson and Dickson Wright, p. 122


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