Cooking with Wine: Sauces

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Unit 255 Prepare & Cook Basic Hot & Cold Sauces
Advertisements

Section 20.1 Stocks Stocks are the liquids that form the foundation of sauces and soups. Learning how to make stocks can help you create flavorful sauces.
The Mother Sauces.
Unit Objectives Students will be able to:
SAUCE COOKERY Pertemuan 7-8 Matakuliah: V Pengolahan Makanan I Tahun:
The Bones of Cooking. Flavorful liquid Flavorful liquid – Water, seasoned with herbs and spices – Fruit juices – Tomato juices.
Part Four: Stocks, Sauces, and Soups Chapter 16: Sauces.
© Copyright 2011 by the National Restaurant Association Educational Foundation (NRAEF) and published by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter.
Culinary: Sauce. Section Objectives Upon completing this section, you should be able to: Discuss and apply principles of sauce preparation.
© Copyright 2011 by the National Restaurant Association Educational Foundation (NRAEF) and published by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter.
Stocks, Sauces & Soups.
Y.1.U6 Flash Stock/Sauce/Soup.
Stock Ingredients Bones Meat Mirepoix Acid products Scraps/leftovers
Chapter 8 Stocks and Sauces.
Bechamel, Veloute, Espagnole, Tomato and Hollandaise
© Copyright 2011 by the National Restaurant Association Educational Foundation (NRAEF) and published by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter.
Food Preparation Soups, Sauces & Gravies
1 Stocks, Soups, and Sauces. 2 Stocks  Are often called the chef’s building blocks because they form the base for many soups and stocks.
Chapter 20 Stocks and Sauces Intro to Culinary Arts Mrs. Muniz.
© Copyright 2011 by the National Restaurant Association Educational Foundation (NRAEF) and published by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter.
SAUCES COMES FROM THE FRENCH WORD THAT MEANS A RELISH TO MAKE FOOD MORE APPETIZING.
Stocks, Sauces and Soups
Today… You Need: We are going to: Notebook Pen or Pencil
Cooking with Starches: Thickening Agents (Soups, Sauces, Gravies) - CS1(SS) Foster.
© Copyright 2011 by the National Restaurant Association Educational Foundation (NRAEF) and published by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter.
French Cuisine. General Info on France Paris is France’s largest city. Roman Catholic is the main religion. Manufacturing is the leading industry. The.
Stocks and Sauces AARhg&list=PL707A7C D37.
1 Stocks, Soups, and Sauces. 2 Stocks  Are often called the chef’s building blocks because they form the base for many soups and stocks.
Soups and mother sauces
Sauces. Sauce is a liquid with flavor; it is usually thickened by a thickening agent. They are used to season, flavor and to accentuate the flavors on.
SAUCES Do you know the five classical grand sauces of cooking?
SOUPS & SAUCES.
Stock, Sauces and Soups A Major Flavor Ingredients-Bones and Vegetables A Liquid, most often water Mirepoix-25%Celery, 25%Carrots, and 50%Onions Aromatics-Bouquet.
Sauces. Early days The word “sauce” is a French word Sauce: a relish to make food more appetizing A liquid or semi-liquid food devised to make foods.
1 FRMCA Level 1, Chapter 6 Stocks, Sauces, and Soups 2012 Summer Institutes Level 1.
Stocks, Soups, Sauces.
Compiled By: Dr. Shiv Mohan Verma. Stock is a liquid containing the juices of meat, bones or vegetables that have been extracted by long, slow cooking.
Soups and Sauces.
Chapter 6 Stocks, Sauces, and Soups.
Mother Sauces By Kayla Yeo.
Journal What types of sauces can you think of? What is in it?
Chapter 20 Sauces and Stocks
Stocks, Soups, and Sauces
Culinary: Sauce.
Soups, Sauces & Salads.
French Cuisine.
© Copyright 2011 by the National Restaurant Association Educational Foundation (NRAEF) and published by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter.
Strand 8 Students will identify the components of various stocks, soups, and sauces.
Stocks, Sauces, and Soups
Chapter 6 Stocks, Sauces, and Soups.
Sauces.
Stocks, Sauces and Soups
Chapter 6 Stocks, Sauces, and Soups.
Sauces.
Stock, broth, sauces.
Soups.
Unit Objectives Students will be able to:
Stocks.
Soups.
STOCKS, SOUPS AND SAUCES
Chapter 6 Stocks, Sauces, and Soups.
Stocks, Sauces and Soups
Cooking with Wine: Sauces
Chapter 6 Stocks, Sauces, and Soups.
Mama Mia! The Secret is in the Sauce! The Five Mother Sauces
Sauces, Stocks and Soups
Chapter 6 Stocks, Sauces, and Soups.
Foods 2 Unit 6 and 8 Natalie Johnson
Stocks, Sauces, and Soups
Stocks, Sauces and Soups
Presentation transcript:

Cooking with Wine: Sauces UNDERSTANDING MOTHER SAUCES

White stock: A clear, pale liquid made by simmering poultry, or fish bones. Generally a chicken stock. Brown stock: An amber liquid made by first browning/roasting beef, veal, or game bones. Generally a beef stock. Fumet: A highly flavored stock made with fish bones. Court bouillon: An aromatic vegetable broth with wine. Typically used for fish cookery. Stocks

Glace: A reduced stock with a jelly-like consistency, made from brown stock. Remouillage: A weaker second stock made from bones that have already been used in another preparation. It is sometimes used to replace water as the liquid used in a stock. Bouillon: The liquid that results from simmering meats or vegetables; also referred to as broth. Stocks

Five Mother Sauces of French Cuisine Sauce Bechamel Sauce Veloute Sauce Espagnole Sauce Hollandaise Tomato

Five Mother Sauces of French Cuisine Sauce Béchamel: This base sauce is essential in many other classic sauces such as crème sauce, mustard sauce and many cheese sauces such as Mornay. Produced by combining a white roux of butter and flour with heated milk, it is commonly served with white meats, and used as a foundation in many gravies and soups, as well as popular dishes ranging from lasagna, other pastas and pizzas to comfort foods like scalloped potatoes and casseroles. Five Mother Sauces of French Cuisine SAUCE BECHAMEL

Five Mother Sauces of French Cuisine Sauce Velouté: Is formed by thickening a light stock, usually made from chicken, with a white roux. While essentially the least complex to make out of the mother sauces, the sheer number of derivative sauces from this base, with sauce allemande, sauce vin blanc (white wine sauce) and sauce suprême among them, make sauce velouté one of the most important in both classical and modern cuisine. Five Mother Sauces of French Cuisine SAUCE VELOUTE

Five Mother Sauces of French Cuisine Sauce Espagnole: The most basic of brown sauces and the heaviest of the mother sauces, sauce espagnole is made by reducing a broth consisting of a brown roux (made by cooking clarified butter with flour for a longer duration instead of regular whole butter), and veal or beef stock. Once fully reduced, this sauce can then be used to create other savoury sauces and sauce components – such as demi-glace, bordelaise, or even stand alone on other red meats. SAUCE ESPAGNOLE

Five Mother Sauces of French Cuisine Sauce Hollandaise: incorporates lemon juice and clarified butter into egg yolks through whisking at low temperatures. As with the other French mother sauces, it acts as the model for many other sauce recipes. A good hollandaise can be paired with most common items, ranging from eggs to both red and white meats, and even vegetables or baked potatoes. SAUCE HOLLANDAISE

Five Mother Sauces of French Cuisine Sauce Tomato: Prepared by combining rendered pork fat from salt pork belly with a blend of carrots, onions, and tomatoes, a roux and veal (or alternative meat) stock, simmered in a medium-heat oven for two hours. The plethora of ingredients utilized results in the formation of an incredibly versatile sauce that is usually merged with other ingredients to form a range of other sauces including Creole, Spanish and Portuguese sauces. SAUCE TOMATO