Culinary term for non-flavor defining ingredients
In a strongly flavoured soup/stew, curry, or sauce, or salad, you sometimes add other ingredients (eg mixed vegetables) that do not strongly influence the flavor of the end result, but are chosen for color/looks, nutrition, texture or bulk. The flavor/character of the dish itself gets defined/dominated by the spices, aromatics, broths used. They can be, within limits, replaced to make a variation of the same dish.
Is there a proper term to describe that class of ingredients in a recipe?
"Toppings" seems to be specific to salad and pizza, AND sometimes refers to something that defines the flavor/character a lot.
"bulk ingredients" is ambigous, could also refer to how they were procured.
"main ingredients" seems ambigous too.
"mixins" sounds too informal.
"garnish" appears specific to things added to the mostly-cooked dish.
Best Answer
I am going to go with ... Drumroll please ... Fillers
credit to my girlfriend who helped me figure out the word I was looking for.
Examples like you stated...starchy root veg in beef stews or the rice in black beans and rice.
Though ingredients used to add color I would really call a garnish even if it's not placed on top of the finished product.
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Answer 2
I don't know of a specific formal term, but I'd use 'bulk' as both the noun and the verb ("bulk out the stew it out with potatoes", "the meatballs are bulked out with breadcrumbs")
A quick Google for 'Bulk Out' reveals several dictionaries defining it exactly in this sense.
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