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Allemande sauce or sauce parisienne is a sauce in French cuisine based on a light-colored velouté sauce (typically veal; chicken and shellfish veloutés can also be used), but thickened with egg yolks and heavy cream, and seasoned with lemon juice.
Grey Polish sauce (Polish: Szary sos polski) – Consists of roux and beef, fish, or vegetable stock seasoned with wine or lemon juice. Additions include caramel, raisins, almonds, chopped onions, grated gingerbread or double cream. Hunter's sauce (Polish: sos myśliwski) – Tomato puree, onions, mushrooms, fried bacon and pickled cucumbers.
Sauce velouté often is served on poultry or seafood dishes and is also used as the base for other sauces. Sauces derived from a velouté sauce include: Albufera sauce: with addition of meat glaze, or glace de viande; Allemande sauce: by adding a few drops of lemon juice, egg yolks, and cream; Aurore: tomato purée
Sauce A either white or brown sauce that is eaten with potatoes. Berliner Weisse: Beer A cloudy, sour beer of around 3% alcohol by volume. It is a regional variation on the white beer style from Northern Germany, dating back to at least the 16th century. Buletten: Main course or snack A kind of meatball in Berlin. Currywurst: Snack
Hollandaise sauce (/ h ɒ l ə n ˈ d eɪ z / or / ˈ h ɒ l ə n d eɪ z /; French: [ɔlɑ̃dɛz], from French sauce hollandaise meaning “Dutch sauce”) [1] is a mixture of egg yolk, melted butter, and lemon juice (or a white wine or vinegar reduction).
A simple sauce makes all the difference. The creamy herb sauce spooned over the top of these chicken cutlets starts with a blend of two cups broth to one cup white wine. Get Ree's Ranch Chicken ...
Subrics are usually accompanied with a white sauce such as béchamel or allemande sauce. They are usually served as an hors-d’œuvre, amuse-bouch, or a side for various dishes. They can also be made sweet and served as a dessert. The recipes for subric first appeared in the 19th century in French chef Urbain Dubois' La Cuisine classique. [1]
Sauce allemande, which is a variant of velouté made with egg yolks, [7] is replaced by sauce tomate. [8] Another basic sauce mentioned in the Guide culinaire is sauce mayonnaise, which Escoffier wrote was a mother sauce akin to the espagnole and velouté due to its many derivative sauces. [8]