Sauces for Quick Gourmet Cooking
by Alannah Moore
The saying goes
that "The French have a hundred sauces to disguise a few foods
- and the Americans have a hundred foods disguised only by
white sauce!"
It is true that
many great gourmet dishes involve a special sauce, which used
to take hours to prepare. For the quick gourmet chef, there's
a way around this:
1. Hollandaise and
Béarnaise: Both are available in glass jars. You should be
able to find them in your local gourmet shop or supermarket.
2. Madeira,
Armoricaine, Newburg, Supreme, et al: These, too, are
available in jars or frozen, and will transform the humble
hamburger or leftover into a gourmet's dream.
3. Bottled Meat
Sauces: Diable, Robert or Cumberland sauce, Worcestershire,
and a wide range of mustards from Devilled to Bahamian to
Dijon. Wash your hands thoroughly, use a judicious few
tablespoons of whatever you fancy, and rub it thoroughly into
chops and steaks. This replaces the marinades which used to
take hours.
4. Dessert
Sauces: Be cautious about these! There are lotsof edible
varieties - but very few that come up to a gourmet's standard!
. . . as you will see in our gourmet dessert section, there
are innumerable quick tricks with liqueurs and fresh fruit for
presenting gourmet desserts ina minute.(
http://www.easy-gourmet-cooking.com/gourmet-desserts/
)
5. Basting Sauces:
Here you begin to be a gourmet chef, for a basting sauce is
largely invention based on experience as you grow proficient
with recipes. Basting sauces are used with fish, meat and
poultry. Generally, they are melted butter blended with herbs
- or spices - or fruit and fruit peels - with or without a
dash of cooking wine. The precise ingredients depend upon the
final flavor desired: tangy, sultry, or sweetish.
The basting sauce
should be made at the start of the cooking operation, placed
over the lowest possible heat, allowed to sit and grow
acquainted with itself. A quarter pound of butter makes an
adequate basting sauce; half a pound is sometimes better-if
you can bring yourself to it!
The basic
procedure is to combine butter chunks and desired seasonings
or flavorings in a small saucepot (a stainless steel one-cup
measure with a handle is satisfactory), and to obtain the full
savory blend by simmering gently during the first steps of
searing meat or poultry, firming the fish flesh, etc. A
basting sauce is used to moisten and flavor a dish during its
cooking; it is brushed directly onto roasting meat or poultry
with a pastry brush at 10 or 15minute intervals, or poured
over fish and broiled dishes every 5 minutes for quick
cookery.
For long cooking
roasts, when the basting sauce has all been used, a roaster
baster will pick up pan juices for moistening the dish.
6. Wine & Wine
Sauces: "The better the wine, the better the dish" is the
gourmet standard ... although it's not necessary to buy fine
vintage drinking wines for use in the kitchen. If you have
good local wine, do use it for cooking.
Never buy cooking
wine or liquor purely on a price basis; the cheap brands do
not have sufficient alcoholic content to create a flambé dish
- and will not have enough flavor to remain in the sauce.
White wines can be used for any recipes, but red wines can
only be used for dark meats . . .when they will not discolor
the dish.
At table, the only
standard today is flavor, and red or white wines are served
interchangeably. Traditionally, red is for meat and white is
for chicken or fish - but these days, you can do as you
please!
When wine is added
directly to a dish during cooking, lower the heat immediately
or the meat will toughen.
7. Fats and Oils:
For true gourmet cooking, there is no substitute for butter
unless particularly specified. Sweet butter is preferable,
because the amount of salt varies in commercial brands; if
salt butter is used, decrease the amount of salt in a recipe
and check seasoning just before you serve.
Butter is
absolutely essential for sauces and basting, but cannot be
used for frying; at high temperatures, it decomposes
chemically and burns.
For Deep-Fat
Frying, use liquid or hydrogenated oils such as Crisco. These
can be re-used once or twice, if you allow sediment to settle
and decant (pour off) the clear top fat after each frying.
Once frying fat has been used for fish, it cannot be used for
anything else! If you enjoy fried foods, it's wise to have two
fat kettles - one for fish, and one for everything else.
For all Italian,
Spanish or Latin-American dishes, a tablespoon of olive oil
should replace butter in starting the dish.
Lard is excellent
for greasing baking potatoes or pan-frying fish. It cannot be
re-used, but is inexpensive enough to discard and start fresh
next time. Bacon grease is equally good for baking potatoes or
to sauté fish, and can besmeared thickly over chicken breasts
or squab before roasting. Because of its positive flavor, only
tangy herbs will combine with it for added taste.
No gourmet cook
ever uses margarine for anything.
8. Meat Glazes:
For a handsome browned surface to meat or poultry, mix a
tablespoon of commercial gravy coloring with two table spoons
of water. Paint all exposed parts of the poultry or meat
before placing in the oven.
9. Shallots are a
small onion bulb resembling garlic information of cloves, but
very mild in flavor. Typically French, they are not always
available but make all the difference in a sauce if they can
be had. Minced scallions (spring onions) are an acceptable
substitute - and in moments of stress, a tablespoon of grated
white onion will equal 2 minced shallots.
10. Grated orange
and lemon peel are readily available injars; a teaspoon equals
the grated rind of a whole medium-sized fruit.
11. Garlic can be
bought powdered (a quarter teaspoon equals a fresh clove), but
a garlic press will produce a much better flavor from a peeled
garlic clove.
Onion and garlic
juice are also available; use them purely or flavoring, as
many dishes are better with sautéed pieces of onion. Onion
flakes are good for home-cooking, but not sufficient for
gourmet results.
Good luck with
your quick gourmet sauces!
About the author
If you'd
like to prepare wonderful, delicious and stylish dishes that
will delight your family and amaze your friends - without
spending hours struggling in the kitchen with complicated and
potentially disastrous recipes - then our website is for you!
All our recipes can be completed in just 30 minutes and are
fun and easy to prepare.
http://www.Easy-Gourmet-Cooking.com