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The soup and sauce book

Chapter 127: Sauces
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About This Book

A practical domestic guide presents recipes and techniques for preparing stocks, clear and thick soups, purées, bisques, fish soups, broths for invalids and an assortment of hot and cold sauces. It emphasizes stock as the foundation, careful simmering, clarity and fat removal, and offers instructions on utensils, straining and clarifying with egg, proportions and seasoning, and economical variations. Recipes are plain, non-exotic and adaptable, organized by stock types and soup categories, with notes on serving quantities and simple experiments to modify ingredients and consistency.

Sauces

There is, of course, no end to sauces, and in a book of this size it is impossible to do justice to their variety. Enough are, however, I hope, given in the pages that follow for ordinary needs.

It is of the highest importance in making sauces that the materials used should be of the best. Fresh butter and the finest olive oil should be used.

When adding the yolks of eggs to sauces it is best to do so in a bain marie (i.e. to stand the sauce-pan in which the sauce is being made, inside a larger one full of boiling water), as they must never be allowed to boil, and a quick fire easily burns them.

For thickening sauces, etc., see remarks on soup on p. 12.