Cheese Souffle

The word soufflรฉ used to strike terror in the heart of cooks far and wide. I never got that memo, though, and one of the first things I ever baked was a chocolate soufflรฉ when I was less than sixteen years old, from my motherโs copy of The Settlement Cookbook, the 1951 edition. The ingredient list is pretty concise; looking at the book now, there are two chocolate soufflรฉ recipes in it โ one with four ingredients and the other with six.
The author explains how to put the soufflรฉs together with only four or five concise sentences. There are no mixing bowl or baking dish sizes given, and chocolate is just listed as โchocolate.โ Thereโs no mention of whether itโs bittersweet, semisweet, or unsweetened chocolate. (There are also no substitutions for any ingredients offered, and storage instructions werenโt included, presumably because people just figured that out for themselves.) Itโs fascinating how times have changed in terms of how recipes are written today.
Back in those days, we didnโt have a soufflรฉ mold in our suburban American kitchen. We had an assortment of Pyrex glass baking dishes and measuring cups. Somehow, my little brain (at the time, which hopefully has grown since then) had figured out that a straight-sided dish might be best for a soufflรฉ, so I used a Pyrex measuring cup to bake the soufflรฉ in, guessing at the size I should use. My thirteen-year-old head mustโve either been spinning, or I just used whatever was available without giving it a second thought. My guess is that it was the latter. In spite of all the vagarities that wouldnโt pass muster today, it came out really well.
Even though I now have a collection of French soufflรฉ molds Iโve picked up at flea markets, these days I prefer to use an oven-proof shallow baking dish when I make a soufflรฉ. Why? Because I like the ratio of crust-to-filling better in a wider dish, and the soufflรฉ also tends to bake more evenly, and is easier to serve as well.
(FYI: My recipe for a Chocolate Soufflรฉ baked in a gratin-style baking dish, is in my book LโAppart and I have a recipe for Individual Double-Chocolate Soufflรฉs, baked in ramekins, in The Great Book of Chocolate.)
If you want to use a soufflรฉ mold, or a Pyrex measuring cup, for this, you can. Youโll just need to toggle the baking time a bit, using visual and tactile clues to check for doneness. Soufflรฉs arenโt as fussy as you think but when the top starts to brown, give it a very gentle jiggle; if it moves a lot and seems liquidy, itโs probably not done. If it moves mostly in the center, but the area a few inches close to the rim of the dish is relatively firm, itโs probably done.
But everyone is different. Some people like soufflรฉs very runny and underbaked. I worked a waiter like that, who insisted that customers preferred them that way. In reality, though, I suspect he liked them that way more than the customers. (Or, he liked asserting himself over me.)

Either way, soufflรฉs arenโt hard to make and the only skill required is knowing that you should gently, but with purpose, fold the egg whites into the base. You donโt want to stir the heck out of them so they lose their volume. A few thin, visible streaks of egg whites are better than an overfolded mixture. (Less than what is shown above.) When baked, you wonโt notice those.
Cheese soufflรฉ makes a wonderful lunch or dinner with nothing more than a green salad to go alongside. I like to add a handful of aromatic herbs, which, like the cheese, will change the flavor depending on which you use. Here I used chives, but tarragon and chervil are also favorites that I sometimes add.
Cheese Souffle
- 4 tablespoons (60g) unsalted butter, cubed, plus additional softened butter for preparing the baking dish
- grated Parmesan cheese
- 5 tablespoons (45g) flour
- 1 3/4 cups (430ml) whole milk, warmed
- 1/4 teaspoon kosher or coarse sea salt
- freshly-ground black pepper
- pinch of grated nutmeg
- bigger pinch of cayenne pepper
- 5 large egg yolks
- 6 large egg whites, at room temperature
- 8 ounces (225g) Comtรฉ, Gruyรจre, or another favorite cheese, coarsely shredded, (see headnote)
- 1/4 cup (12g) minced chives
- Butter a 1 1/2-2-quart (2l) baking dish generously. Dust the bottom and sides with Parmesan cheese.
- To make the soufflรฉ base, Melt the butter in a medium saucepan. Stir in the flour and bring to a low boil. Cook until the mixture has thickened a bit, 1 to 2 minutes. Turn off the heat, whisk in the warm milk and turn the heat to medium-high and bring to a boil, whisking frequently. Once the mixture comes to a boil, cook for 1 minute, whisking constantly.
- Remove from heat and whisk in the salt, a generous amount of freshly ground pepper, nutmeg, and cayenne. Whisk in the egg yolks vigorously, one at a time. Scrape the mixture into a medium to large bowl and let cool a bit until only slightly warm.
- To make the soufflรฉ, preheat the oven to 400ยบF (200ยบC.) Reserve a handful of the cheese, and stir the rest of the cheese and chives into the soufflรฉ base. In a large, clean bowl, or in the stand mixer with the whip attachment, whisk the egg whites with a pinch of salt until they hold their shape but are still moist and creamy. Don't overbeat them.
- Fold one-quarter of the beaten egg whites into the soufflรฉ base thoroughly, then fold the remaining egg whites in just until there are no (or few) visible streaks of egg whites. Scrape the mixture into the prepared baking dish, gently smooth the top, and strew the reserved handful of cheese over the top.
- Bake the soufflรฉ on the middle rack of the oven for 20 minutes, without opening the oven door. Depending on how you like your soufflรฉs, if you like them on the soft, somewhat runny side, it's probably done. If you like them firmer, usually 25 minutes (total) is the right baking time. The best way to check it to touch the center at the 20 minute mark. If the soufflรฉ still jiggles and moves freely in the center when you touch it, it's done, if you like softly-cooked soufflรฉs. If not, put it back in the oven for another 5 minutes.
















