Brown Sauces: Sauce Espagnole, Demi-Glace - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 26
About This Presentation
Title:

Brown Sauces: Sauce Espagnole, Demi-Glace

Description:

Sauce Espagnole, Demi-Glace & Jus Li This is the Espagnole sauce, having reached the limit of perfection... -Escoffier, (referring to demi-glace) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:749
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 27
Provided by: facultyMc91
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Brown Sauces: Sauce Espagnole, Demi-Glace


1
Brown SaucesSauce Espagnole, Demi-Glace Jus
Lié
  • This is the Espagnole sauce, having reached the
    limit of perfection...-Escoffier, (referring to
    demi-glace)

2
Sauce Espagnole
  • Generally not used directly but refined into a
    demi-glace or other sauce
  • Developed from a French brown sauce by adding
    Spanish tomatoesthe early 1600s
  • Brown Sauce, made by reducing brown stock with a
    dark roux and tomato product
  • Tomatoes are optional but do deepen the stocks
    color

3
Making Sauce Espagnole
  • Make a 1 of Brown Roux
  • Caramelize 2 Mirepoix or Pinçage (Roasted or
    Sautéed Mirepoix)
  • Roast the ½ Tomato Product
  • Add the Roux, Mirepoix, Tomato Bouquet Garni to
    5-Qts. Veal/Beef Stock in a Stockpot and
    Simmer 1-2 hrs
  • Skim Frequently
  • Reduce to Sauce Consistency
  • Strain

4
Mirepoix vs. Pinçage
  • Mirepoix
  • Pinçage
  • 2x Onion, 1x Carrot 1x Celery
  • Sweetness from onion and carrot
  • Herbaceous notes from celery
  • Light and vegetal
  • Luke
  • Mirepoix plus
  • Tomato product
  • Caramelized by roasting or sauté
  • More assertive flavors
  • Used in brown sauces and stocks
  • Vader

5
Demi-Glace
  • 50 Sauce Espagnole 50 Brown Stock, Reduced by
    50
  • May be used as a finishing sauce or (more
    commonly) as a base for other sauces
  • Alternate Liaisons
  • Arrowroot
  • Cornstarch
  • Potato Starch
  • A natural demi-glace or glace de viande is
    thickened by reduction only (no roux)
  • Natural Demi-Glace reduced by 80
  • Glace de Viande reduced 90-95

6
Reduction vs. Thickening with a Liaison
  • Reduction is usually preferred for taste and
    consistency
  • Reduction equals a lower yield thus higher cost
  • A roux or other liaison increases yield
  • Liaisons may adversely affect flavor, texture or
    add additional calories and fat.

7
Sauce Consistency
  • Thin Consistency
  • Sauce or Nappé Consistency

Notice the coating on the spoon
8
Making Demi-Glace (Classic)
  • Combine 1 quart of Espagnole with 1 quart Brown
    Stock
  • Simmer, Skim and Reduce by 50 -90
  • Mushroom Stems may be added during simmering
  • Finish with a splash of Madeira, Port or Sherry
    (optional)

9
Making Demi-Glace (Modern v.1)
  • Roast Veal Breast (Ribs) with Mirepoix
  • Dégraisser, Deglaze and add all to stock pot
  • Cover with cold water
  • Simmer 5-12 hours. Depouillage.
  • Reduce, season and strain

10
Making Demi-Glace (Modern v.2)
  • Reduce Brown (Veal) Stock by ¾ or sauce
    consistency
  • Requires a stock with abundant gelatin
  • aka., Glace de Veau, Glace de Viande

11
Jus Lié, Fond Lié or Jus de Veau Lié
  • Alternative to a Demi-Glacelighter and easier
  • Commonly Used in Restaurants as Demi
  • Brown Stock Reduced with a Pinçage (Caramelized
    Mirepoix and Tomato Product)
  • Sometimes thickened with cornstarch or arrowroot
  • Or, thickened by reduction onlyrequires an
    abundance of gelatin

12
Whats Gravy?
  • Starch-thickened and de-fatted natural juice from
    a roastaka, jus lié
  • In England, just a jus, not thickened
  • In New England, a thick tomato sauce as in
    Sunday Gravy
  • Some Types
  • Red-Eye gravy, made from ham drippings and
    deglazed with coffee (Southern)
  • Sawmill gravy, a white gravyessentially a
    béchamel seasoned by the meat in the frying
    processas in chicken-fried steak or a sausage
    gravy (Southern)
  • Onion Gravy
  • Giblet Gravy, the only reason to eat turkey!

13
Sauce TomateTomato Concassée Tomato Coulis
  • French Tomato Sauces are usually a secondary
    component
  • Classic Italian or Spanish Tomato Sauce are base
    sauces flavored around a mirepoix or soffrito
  • Tomato Concassée
  • Concasser to crush, break, or grind
  • Peeled and Seeded and Chopped
  • Raw or Barely Cooked
  • Best for In-Season-Ripe Tomatoes
  • Cooked
  • Slowly simmered for 5-10 minutes THENstrain to
    remove excess liquid (As opposed to cooking all
    the down and destroying texture and delicacy.)
  • Tomato Coulis
  • Smooth purée strained of seeds and peel
  • Raw or Cooked

14
Tomato Sauces
  • French
  • Italian
  • Classically thickened with a roux
  • Uses a white stock, veal or chicken
  • Uses pork bones or other pork products
  • No Roux
  • Simmered with few ingredients
  • Oregano Basil are commonly added

15
Improving the Flavor of Tomato Sauces
  • Use the best, ripest, fresh tomatoes.
  • Or a good canned tomatoie, San Marzano
  • Avoid overcooking the tomatoes
  • The better the tomato the less need for other
    ingredients
  • Herbs, meats, stock, etc.
  • Use roasting as a means to concentrate tomato
    flavor and add caramelization flavors
  • Balance both sweetness and acidity with sugar and
    vinegar or add a gastrique
  • Gastrique caramelized sugar deglazed with
    vinegar used to flavor tomato or savory sauces

16
Canned Tomato Products
  • Tomato Puree
  • Briefly cooked tomatoes and strained resulting in
    a thick liquid
  • Tomato Sauce
  • Thinner than puree and may have seasonings and
    flavorings
  • Tomato Paste (Tomato Concentrate)
  • Tomatoes that have been cooked several hours,
    strained and reduced to thick concentrate.
    Generally fairly sweet.
  • Whole or Diced
  • Peeled, seeded and whole or diced. Uncooked.
  • Crushed
  • Unregulated descriptionmay have seeds or peels
    and varying percentages of tomato

17
Canned Tomato Products cont.
  • Sweetness (ripeness) varies
  • Salt is added to bring out the sweetness
  • Citric Acid
  • Preserves and corrects acidity
  • Calcium Chloride
  • Maintains a firm texture
  • too much equals metallic taste and "rubbery"
    texture
  • Color is NOT necessarily a good indicator of
    tomato taste. Taste is.

18
Quick Cooking vs. Slow Cooking Tomato Sauces
  • Marinara
  • Ragu
  • Quick (20 Minutes)
  • Fresh Tomato Taste
  • Lacks Complexity
  • Long Cooking (Hours)
  • Complex Flavors
  • Usually Includes Meat and a Soffritto

Originally, a slow-simmered tomato sauce from
Naples. Italian-American Marinara is generally a
quick, fresh tomato sauce or, salsa al pomodoro
19
Making a Basic Tomato Sauce
Finely Dice Onion and Émincé Garlic
20
Making a Basic Tomato Sauce
Puree and Tomatoes through a Food Mill or
Passatutto (Removes skin seeds.)
21
Making a Basic Tomato Sauce
Sweat Onions and then Garlic
22
Making a Basic Tomato Sauce
Add the Tomato Paste and Sauté (Turns a shade
darker)
23
Making a Basic Tomato Sauce
Add the Tomato Puree and Season
24
Making a Basic Tomato Sauce
Simmer 30-45 minutes. Finish with fresh basil
and splash of olive oil. Check seasoning for
sugar, salt, acid pepper.
25
Next Weeks Midterm (Discuss)
  • Cauliflower Soup
  • Each student makes 1 quart using only
  • cauliflower, WATER, butter, onion, shallot,
    garlic, thyme, bay leaf and cream.
  • Chicken Soup with Matzo Balls and Vegetables
  • Each student makes 1 quart
  • From week ones recipes
  • Clam Chowder
  • Each student makes 1 quart
  • Use a clam broth to make a clam veloute
  • Ingredients are limited to clams, clam juice,
    potatoes, butter, cream. Salt and pepper.

26
Todays Lab
  • Espagnole
  • Classic Demi Glace
  • Demi Glace (Modern)
  • Tomato Sauce, French
  • Coulis De Tomates À La Provençale (Tomato Sauce
    with Mediterranean Flavors)
  • Chicken Provencale (Poulet à la provençale)
  • Miso Soup and Dashi
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com