marcwitham wrote:I am actually looking for ASPIC. Not gelatin.
Here is the wiki article on aspic:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AspicAspic is different from gelatin. Gelatin is unflavored where as aspic is by definition flavored, generally with chicken or beef.
There's a good reason we're not allowed to use Wikipedia as a resource when writing textbooks. It's either not quite reliable or not really complete.
For all intents and purposes, aspic is gelatin. Originally, it was a meat-flavored substance, because boiling animals is where you get gelatin. Over time, the word "aspic" came to apply to any flavored dishes that used gelatin.
Here's a history that is a bit more complete than the one in Wikipedia (to quote myself):
http://www.hungrymag.com/2008/10/27/all-about-aspic/I think the closest you'd come to finding an "aspic" that is still rather like the original would be to buy consommé. Not powdered, but meat flavored and loaded with gelatin. Other than that, every aspic I've ever encountered (other than that which naturally occurs when I boil some critter for soup) is just made from gelatin with flavoring of some sort added -- from tomato juice to broth to flavor concentrates.
There may be some restaurant supply store that produces pre-flavored gelatin, and I hope you'll let us know if you find it. But you are in no way compromising a recipe by using gelatin and adding hot broth.