![]() | ||
| Cooking Articles • Cookbook Reviews • Cooking Forums • Recipes • Cooking Glossary |
|
Welcome to the ChefTalk Cooking Forums forums. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us. |
| |||||||
| Register | Blogs | Photo Gallery | FAQ | Members List | Search | Today's Posts | Mark Forums Read |
| Recipes Looking for a recipe, or do you just have a great one that you think everyone will enjoy? Share recipes with people from around the world. |
![]() |
| | Thread Tools |
|
#1
| ||||
| ||||
| Hey oh Well, who does not like this sauce? My wife and I both enjoy it very much. I have tweaked the original recipe here and there and hopefully made it healthier for us. Now, I have tried googleing, reading, and casually asking among friends, and I generally do not find the answer I am after. In fact, I have not had an answer yet. So, for those that are newbies I will restate the base recipe for this sauce, and then ask my question. Reduction Vinegar White wine (un-oaked) Peppercorns Bay leaf cyan salt Mix and reduce au sec, add back water to desired volume. Sauce Egg yokes Clarified butter (warm) Finish lemon tobasco Add reduction to yokes and whisk over bain marie until soft peaks form, then off heat and add butter slowly while constantly whisking to form sauce. Finish with lemon and tobasco. No quantities, I don't personally measure anything when I make this sauce. There are standard volumes, and those are easily looked up (but, if I remember correctly it's 2 oz reduction to 6 oz yolk and 1 pound clarified butter). Now, my question is this. Other than this standard recipe, what variations are there to the reduction or the finishing to transform this sauce? What other named sauces are there? I have found only two or so other sauces that are based on this recipe, but otherwise nothing. My personal variations (for which I have no names, and I am unaware of any as well). I use curry powder in my wine/vinagar reductionand serve this curry hollandaise over basmati rice. I have used jalapeno peppers (and chipotle peppers) and red wine in the reduction and made a really spicy dark sauce and served it over jerked pork on rice. I have tryed making a light mustard flavoured sauce for over cooked ham (not with a satisfying amount of success yet).
__________________ Space...the final frontier. These are the voyages of KeeperOfTheGood. His lifetime mission: to explore strange new worlds of flavour, to seek out new life and and ways of cooking it- to boldly grill where no man has grilled before. |
| Sponsored links |
|
#2
| |||
| |||
| Ciao KeeperOfTheGood! huhuh what a ihana name! I´m lost not found, so will you please help me.I realy Dont know how these sites working. Most of the time wonderfull Server do not recocnize me. So I have tryed to contact server but its not available. You are the ounly one where I have contact with, or at least I believed so. Would you friendly tell me WHY I´m reject? If you have ability to do so. With regards Hele |
|
#3
| ||||
| ||||
| working breakfast almost 10 years going thru 6 or 7 liters a day we have come up with a few and there are also a couple named ones i know of Maltese - add orange juice concentrate Choron - add tomato paste Chantilly - fold in whipped cream Bearnaise - everyone knows we've tried adding Sambal Oelek fresh dill cilantro and lime champagne i usually clarify 1 pound of butter for every 3 egg yolks and add 1/2 oz. lemon 1/2 oz water to the yolks(too lazy for reduction) also i use tabasco and worchester and pepper. ever thought of trying any other kinds of eggs?
__________________ Line Cooks are the Heros |
|
#4
| ||||
| ||||
| Hey oh Thanks. The only other egg I have used was for our graduation dinner at school. We did mini-eggs bennedict with little rounds from french bread, proscuto, poached quails egg, hollandaise. Those were very well enjoyed. The only other eggs I have seen sold locally are ducks eggs, and I have yet to try these. Of the named ones you listed I have done: Maltese - add orange juice concentrate (I have used fresh squeesed blood orange juice, and garnish with slices of blood oranges) Choron - add tomato paste (Tried this once, broke nearly every time, didn't care for the taste) Chantilly - fold in whipped cream (A lot of work, and not a lot of flavour difference) Bearnaise - everyone knows (I have yet to try this one )
__________________ Space...the final frontier. These are the voyages of KeeperOfTheGood. His lifetime mission: to explore strange new worlds of flavour, to seek out new life and and ways of cooking it- to boldly grill where no man has grilled before. |
| Sponsored links |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| |
Similar Threads | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Out of Hollandaise... what do you do? (humor) | kuan | Food & Cooking Questions and Discussion | 21 | 11-21-2005 07:29 AM |
| hollandaise problems | cookinscool | Food & Cooking Questions and Discussion | 30 | 07-14-2003 08:20 AM |
| Hollindaise and I | vzank | Food & Cooking Questions and Discussion | 17 | 11-19-2002 03:23 PM |
| How long can you keep hollandaise? | Live_to_cook | Food & Cooking Questions and Discussion | 18 | 01-02-2001 12:10 PM |
| Bearnaise Sauce | PJ | Food & Cooking Questions and Discussion | 6 | 09-07-2000 11:17 AM |