LIGHT HOLLANDAISE
A quick and easy Hollandaise sauce
Few small things seem to impress dinner guests more than a good
Hollandaise sauce. Perhaps this is because the guests think it is
difficult to execute. This recipe disproves that notion; it makes it
simple to produce a consistently good Hollandaise sauce.
Use it over asparagus, to dip artichokes, with steak and rice, or for
anything you can imagine. The original recipe comes from
Julia Child & Company.
Ingredients
(1 1/2 cups)
- 50 ml fresh lemon juice
- 50 ml water
- 2.5 ml salt
- 3 eggs
- 200 g unsalted butter
Procedure
-
Melt the butter in a small saucepan. It should be warm, but not bubbling
hot.
-
Combine the lemon juice and water in a small sauce pan. Bring to a simmer,
adding the salt.
-
Meanwhile, place one egg and the yolks of the other two in a smallish
saucepan. Vigorously beat the egg and yolks with a wire whip for a minute
or so, until they are pale and thick.
-
Set the yolk mixture over moderately low heat and whisk in the hot lemon
juice by driblets. Continue whisking, not too fast, but reaching all over
the bottom and corners of the pan, until you have a foamy warm mass.
Remove from heat just as you see a wisp of steam rising. (Do not overheat
or you will coagulate the egg yolks.)
-
Immediately start beating in the warm butter by driblets, to make a thick,
creamy, light yellow sauce.
-
Taste carefully for seasoning, adding salt, pepper, and more lemon juice
to taste.
Notes
This sauce is really so easy to make, you should leave it to the last
minute. It doesn't keep terribly well. Any egg yolk and butter sauce can
be kept only warm, not hot, or it will curdle.
Also remember that sauces with egg yolks are prime breeding grounds for
sick-making bacteria.
Copper or stainless steel saucepans are best, as they transmit and hold
heat better than anything else. I often make this solely in CorningWare
pots, and find that sometimes the sauce will not set after removing from
heat and adding the butter. In this case, return the mixture to very low
heat, whisking vigorously until the sauce achieves the desired thickness.
Too much heat will either curdle the egg yolks or cause the butter to
separate from the mixture.
Rating
Difficulty:
easy to moderate.
Time:
5 minutes.
Precision:
approximate measurement OK.
Contributor
Chris Kent
DEC Western Research Laboratory, Palo Alto, California, USA
kent@decwrl.dec.com decwrl!kent
Recipe last modified: 17 May 87
Original header
Path: decwrl!recipes
From: kent@decwrl.dec.com (Chris Kent)
Newsgroups: alt.gourmand
Subject: RECIPE: Hollandaise sauce
Message-ID: <10904@decwrl.DEC.COM>
Date: 17 Jul 87 06:07:14 GMT
Sender: recipes@decwrl.DEC.COM
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Organization: DEC Western Research, Palo Alto, CA, USA
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