Making
a sauce at home for your grilled steak or sautéed chicken
breast can turn something good into something better. If you are like
most home cooks, you may shy away from taking on a wild mushroom sauce
or classic Marsala Sauce.
Here are a few sauce making tips that may help you when you are making
your next sauce at home.
1.
Have all your ingredients ready before you actually start cooking.
Professionals call this mise en place (MEEZ ahn plahs). Nothing
complicates sauce making more than trying to do too many things at one
time.
2.
Use the proper sauce pan. Your saucepans should be made of materials
that conduct heat effectively throughout the entire pan. You want it to
have a heavy bottom so your sauces don't burn.
For
sauce making, stay away from non-stick pans. They are great for cooking
omelets, but prevent the essential caramelized "fond" from forming
after browning meat in the pan.
3.
Reducing a sauce means to simmer the sauce until it reaches its desired
thickness. When it is thick enough to coat a spoon it is ready. You
don't want it to boil during this process because it can burn the
sauce, make it foam up, and/or spill over the top of the pan.
"Reducing
by half," means to reduce the amount of liquid in the pan by half. You
don't have to measure it out, just make a rough guess to what half
would look like.
4.
Add a tab or two of unsalted cold butter at the end. This is called
"mounting" and adds flavor, smoothness and additional shine to the
sauce.
5.
Don't walk away from the saucepan. If you don't want to burn the sauce
or have it congeal on you, you want to stay close to the stovetop
keeping your eye on the sauce. That doesn't mean you can't do anything
else to get the meal served, but you want to be close enough to stir or
lower the heat if necessary.
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