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Making Incredible Sauces at Home
by: Reluctant Gourmet
My 5 Step Method for Preparing Professional Quality Brown Sauces
As a home cook, one of the hardest things for me to accomplish
when first starting out was making a rich velvety brown sauce to
serve on steak, lamb, veal, pork, or even chicken. I could put together
a pretty good pan sauce using the dripping after sautéing
or roasting a piece of meat but it never quite had that incredible
intensity that I experience when dining out at a great restaurant.
It wasnt until I spent some time reading about sauce making
and speaking with a few chef friends that I learned it isnt
so much the how to but the ingredients that
make the difference. Using my 5-step method to making a great brown
sauce is easy if you have all the necessary ingredients and I will
give you some great resources for find them.
What is a Sauce?
According to Food Lovers Companion, a sauce is a thickened,
flavored liquid designed to accompany food in order to enhance and
bring out its flavor. Now that can cover a lot of territory.
It goes on to say, In the days before refrigeration, however,
sauces were more often used to smother the taste of foods that had
begun to go bad. Im sure we have all had experiences
that have proven this true even in the days of refrigeration
Think
back to your high school cafeteria.
But in the 19th century, the French created an intricate process
for making sauces that is still being taught in cooking schools
all over the world. This process involves numerous steps and if
you have the time, I highly recommend James Peterson's, "Sauces"
and Raymond Sokolov's "The Saucier's Apprentice". They
are entirely devoted to just this subject.
Why is it so difficult to make great sauces at home?
As Chef Alton Brown says in his cookbook, Im Just Here For
The Food, By and large, most home cooks dont do sauce
and
thats too bad. Traditional sauces are indeed scary.
The process just to prepare the key ingredients that go into a
sauce takes a lot of time. It starts by making a stock with roasted
beef and/or veal bones, reducing them for at least 12 hours, continuously
skimming the pot,straining the liquid to remove the bones, reducing
some more, adding a roux (a mixture of flour and water used as a
thickening agent) and you now have a nice brown sauce or sauce espagnole.
A professional chef will then reduce this brown sauce further to
make a demi glace, the mother of all sauces. These guys spend a
lot of time in cooking school learning how to do this and take great
pride in the sauces they can make with it. These stock reductions
are the foundation to hundreds of classic sauces being served in
fine restaurants.
Why cant I just use a bouillon cube?
Unless you want to ruin an expensive cut of meat by covering it
with a salty, corn syrup reduction, I would stay away from bouillon
cubes or any of those cheap packets of instant sauces you see in
your local supermarket. Just look at the ingredients to see if whats
inside is real or simply processed. You cant build a sound
house without a strong foundation. The same is true when making
sauces.
Whats a home cook to do?
Since making a great sauce at home depends of finding a good stock
reduction or demi glace, I would like to offer you the following
resources.
Make it yourself. A great experience but one most of us will not
take on.
Make friends with the chef at your favorite upper end restaurant
and see if he or she will share some of their brown gold with you.
Be prepared to beg or pay through the nose to get them to part with
this stuff. Not likely, but worth a try.
Hire a personal chef to make it for you. You may end up having
to subscribe to years worth of dinners, which isnt all that
bad, but you will have your demi.
Buy it a high-end gourmet store. If you really search hard, you
may be able to find stock reductions in the refrigerator section
of some really high end stores. You wont get much, but you
dont need a lot and it wont be cheap.
Williams-Sonoma is now selling their own stock reductions. I have
not had that much experience with them but they usually sell high
quality items.
Find demi glace and stock reductions that are used in high-end
restaurants and are available to home cooks. More Than Gourmet makes
the best products I know of that fit that description. You can learn
all about these products at http://www.gatewaygourmet.com/
My Quick & Easy 5 Step Method
Quick Look
Sauté a shallot in butter
Deglaze pan with wine
Add demi glace
Reduce
Season with salt & pepper
More Details
Sauté a chopped shallot or small onion in one ounce of butter
(1/4 stick) for 1-2 minutes until translucent.
Deglaze with 1/2-cup red wine and reduce to an essence (approximately
one tablespoon of remaining liquid). Be sure to remove the pan from
the heat before deglazing.
Add 8 ounces of demi-glace.
Reduce the sauce until it is thick enough to coat a spoon.
Season with freshly ground pepper to taste.
One last item that is optional but often used by professional chefs
is a pat of butter. It adds a bit more flavor and shine to the finished
sauce.
Alternatives
At this point you have a delicious sauce that you can serve or
use as a base and layer in more flavors by adding additional ingredients
including fresh herbs and spices, fruits, chutneys, relish, or cream.
If you are adding mushrooms or other ingredients that need to cook
a bit, add them to the pan right after you add the wine and let
them cook while the wine is reducing.
About The Author
G. Stephen Jones created the Reluctant Gourmet back in 1997 as a
hobby to assist other novice cooks who may find the art of cooking
a little daunting. As an ex-Wall Street broker and Stay-at-Home
Dad, I try to explore cooking from a different perspective. Visit
http://www.reluctantgourmet.com/
for more tips, tools, techniques, recipes and my new eCookbook,
Chicken Marsala Perfected.
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