Thicken That Sauce!

Thicken That Sauce!

With most sauces and nearly all types of gravy you will need to use a thickening agent at some stage. This may be one of any number of things.

The most commonly used are starches of some kind, because they all have the quality of swelling up in any liquid to which they are introduced. But it’s important to note that they also tend to behave differently.

Arrowroot, for example, has an interesting property. It tends to clarify any liquid into which it is introduced.

This is great for fruit sauces but may not be quite so effective with meat based gravy. It gives it an artificial appearance in my view, although you may quite like it and if you do, use it.

Starch compounds such as arrowroot, corn starch and potato flour need to be mixed with a cold liquid before being added to anything hot. They should be added a little at a time and allowed to cook for a while after each batch.

This needs to be done at the end of the preparation, because the thickening effect doesn’t always last that well. Kept on the heat, liquids thickened by starch tended to thin out again after a time.

Using flour

Don’t worry that flour will make your gravy lumpy! Providing there is a fat present, flour will behave itself, and even if it doesn’t it will still whisk into the gravy or sauce.

The best way to use it is either as a roux, or as a beurre manié. These are basically the same thing but used in a slightly different way.

Both are a mixture of half flour and half butter (or other fat if you prefer) and both produce the same result – they thicken liquids.

To make a roux

Put an ounce of butter in a small saucepan and bring it to cooking heat, then add an ounce of plain flour and cook it while stirring. The length of cooking time will depend entirely on the colour you wish to achieve.

The flour will darken with prolonged cooking, giving you a browner sauce as a result.

Once your mix is the colour you wanted to be, take the pan off the heat and add half a pint of stock while whisking vigorously.

Please forget everything you have ever read about this process. The stock does not have to be cold, or hot, or added a little at a time. Just slosh it all in and whisk away. Then return the pan to the heat and bring it to the boil.

The resulting gravy will need to be cooked for at least a further two minutes; otherwise it will tend to have a raw finish, thanks to some uncooked starch. Just leave it on a low heat, but cover it to prevent a skin forming.

Even if one does form, you can usually whisk it back in and if not, strain it before serving.

Beurre Manié

Named for the chef who invented it, no one really knows how or why this works, but it does and it’s very effective if you need to thicken a large quantity of liquid, or one that already has food cooking in it.

Using the same measurements as for the roux, the trick is to slightly soften the butter and mix it with the flour. You then drop little nuggets of this mixture into the liquid to be thickened and bring it to the boil while stirring.

As the flour cooks, so it will blend into the liquid and thicken it.

Sweet sauces

Much depends on the base of your sauce in the first place and whether you intend it to be hot or cold. Fruit juices, for example, can be reduced while adding liquid glucose. This will produce a shiny sauce that is very stable when cold.

By stable, I mean that it won’t separate and it won’t move around the plate much, which is advantageous if you are trying to produce a particular effect.

Hot sauces are usually thickened with cornstarch or arrowroot. The latter will be clear while cornstarch produces a generally cloudy effect. Both need to be added with caution. Overdoing it can produce a sauce which is practically inedible.

The golden rule is to add a little at a time, and if the mixture becomes too thick add some more liquid.

Egg yolks, gelatine and even cream can all be used as thickening agents. Eggs, for example, are used as the base for all types of custard, including things like lemon meringue pie.

Once again you need to experiment and see what suits you. A sauce which is very runny when hot, may nevertheless become thick and clingy as it cools down.
Toffee sauce is a good example of this. It’s simply a reduction of sugar and water into which cream is stirred just as it starts to go brown. Left to cool it will look like, behave like, and taste a lot better than bottled caramel topping.

Vanilla sauce is somewhat similar. I make mine from three egg yolks whisked with 2 ounces of sugar, onto which I pour 250 millilitres of hot cream. This is then cooked to the required consistency, without boiling, and a few drops of vanilla essence added.

For special events I use a vanilla pod instead of the essence. A classic example of egg yolks being used as a thickening agent.

Be inventive

As time goes by and you become more experienced, you will find yourself developing your own techniques.

Try to think outside the box. For example, why not thicken a sauce for lamb with red currant jelly? Or even a mixture of mint sauce and gelatine (yes, that really does work).

Remember, whatever you are trying to do only you know whether or not you have achieved it. So the consistency of the sauce you serve is exactly how it should be as far as your guests are concerned. Don’t make yourself feel a failure by apologizing for it.

If it looks good, tastes good and complements the food it is served with you have done your job brilliantly. Who cares if it’s a bit thin, or you can cut it with a knife? There will be people who like it eitherway and both ways.

The secret is not to let on. Cook it with flair – serve it with panache.

author:Michael Sheridan

This site is hosted by (click on the graphic for more information)sauce

Return from sauce to Home Page

The elements of barbecue

The elements of barbecue

There is little agreement in the world of barbecue. Here we run through some of the overriding categories that unite them, like seasonings and applications of heat (all barbecue is seasoned and heated, right? Plus a few recipes.

There may be intense debate over what barbecue truly is, but there are some basic facts that most would agree on: barbecue is not the same as grilling, it requires smoke to properly flavour and colour the food; barbecued foods are cooked at low temperatures for long periods in order to develop the best flavour and tender texture.

Beyond that, controversy reigns. Some believe that pork is the only real barbecue, but beef, mutton and even goat (kid) are traditional choices for others. Some argue in favor of a thick, tomato-based sauce, others for a thin, vinegar-based sauce with no tomatoes at all. Some prefer hickory for fuel, while others tend toward pecan, maple or oak.

Barbecue evolved as a way to make tough, well-exercised meats very tender. But the exact type of meat that is associated with an area has a great deal to do with local availability. Seafood doesn’t need long, slow cooking to become tender, but in areas where seafood is widely available, it is used for barbecue. Throughout the South, with the exception of Texas, you are more likely to find pork than beef.

Hardwoods—including oak, hickory, pecan, maple, beech, butternut and ash—are common choices for barbecue. Mesquite, grapevine, citrus wood and apple or pear are also used. Some cooks blend woods, especially when using strongly flavoured woods such as mesquite. Softwoods should never be used.

The presence of a smoke ring is a sign that foods have been smoked, rather than merely grilled or roasted and brushed with a sauce. The smoke ring is reddish in colour and may be about 8 to 12 millimetres deep, extending from the exterior toward the centre.

SEASONINGS

Rubs: A mixture of spices, salt and sugar. Dry rubs contain no moisture and are applied in a layer and left on the meat for several hours (even days) before the meat is cooked. Wet rubs contain enough moisture to hold the ingredients together as a paste.

Marinades & brines: Liquid mixtures used to season meats before they are cooked. Marinades typically contain an oil, an acid (such as vinegar) and various spices and seasonings. A brine is a mixture of salt and water, though it may also contain acids and spices. Brines may be used to submerge foods, or they may be injected directly into the meat. The primary purpose of both marinades and brines is to add flavour to the meat.

Basting sauces: Also known as mops or sops, these are applied to barbecued foods as they cook. The basting sauce may be the same marinade or brine used to season the meat, or a separate preparation. These sauces do not contain sugar, since the sugar tends to brown and burn too soon.

Barbecue sauces: Used in some regions as a finishing sauce or glaze. Some barbecue styles call for the sauce to be served as a condiment, if it is served at all. Ingredients range from the vinegar and seasoning mixtures favoured in the Carolinas to the tomato-based sauces of Kansas and Texas. Mustard-based sauces and mayonnaise-based sauces (known as white barbecue sauce) are also used.

APPLYING HEAT & SMOKE

Indirect heat: The fire is maintained in a separate chamber and the heat and smoke are vented into a closed portion of the barbecue. The fire is maintained between 225° and 250°F (107° to 121°C).

Direct heat: The food cooks directly over the coals in a closed barbecue. This style cooks meat at 300° to 350°F (149° to 176°C), and is often used for smaller and more tender cuts that cook more quickly.

BARBECUE MARINADE

10 oz. vegetable oil
5 oz. cider vinegar
1 oz. Worcestershire sauce
1 tbsp. brown sugar
2 tsp. dry mustard
1 tsp. Tabasco sauce
1 tsp. garlic powder
1 tsp. onion powder
1/4 oz. garlic, minced

1. Combine all the ingredients.
2. Add the food; refrigerate.
Yield: 1 pint

BARBECUE SAUCE

2 garlic cloves, minced to a paste
10 oz. orange juice concentrate
8 oz. white beef stock
6 oz. ketchup
4 oz. Heinz “57″ sauce
1/2 tsp. celery seeds
4 oz. Worcestershire sauce
6 oz. red onion, minced
2 oz. oil or clarified butter
1/2 tsp. chervil, chopped
Salt and pepper to taste

1. Heat oil or butter in 5-quart saucepot. Add onions and sauté until tender.
2. Add garlic and sauté 1 minute.
3. Add remaining ingredients and simmer over low heat for 15 minutes.
4. Add salt and pepper if necessary.
Yield: 3 cups

BARBECUE SPICE MIX

1/2 oz. paprika
1/2 oz. chili powder
1/2 oz. salt
2 tsp. cumin, ground
2 tsp. sugar
1 tsp. dry mustard
1 tsp. ground pepper
1 tsp. dried thyme
1 tsp. dried oregano
1 tsp. curry powder
1/2 tsp. cayenne

1. Combine all spices and mix well.
2. Store in sealed container.
Yield: about 2 ounces