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The original French editions of Le guide culinaire listed Hollandaise as a daughter sauce rather than a grande sauce. [29] Mayonnaise , placed in the chapter on cold sauces, was described in a paragraph as a mother sauce for cold sauces, and compared to Espagnole and Velouté.
Butter, flour, milk. Variations. Mornay sauce, cardinal sauce, Nantua sauce, Breton sauce, suprême sauce, soubise sauce. Cookbook: Béchamel sauce. Media: Béchamel sauce. Béchamel sauce (/ ˌbeɪʃəˈmɛl /, French: [beʃamɛl]) is one of the mother sauces of French cuisine. This sauce is made from a white roux (butter and flour) and milk ...
Espagnole sauce (French pronunciation: [ɛspaɲɔl] ⓘ) is a basic brown sauce, and is one of the mother sauces of classic French cooking. In the early 19th century the chef Antonin Carême included it in his list of the basic sauces of French cooking. In the early 20th century Auguste Escoffier named it as one of the five sauces at the core ...
In the 19th century, Marie-Antoine Carême anointed Béchamel, Velouté, Espagnole, and tomato sauce as the building blocks for all other sauces in his work L'Art de la Cuisine Française au Dix ...
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Velouté sauce. A velouté sauce (French pronunciation: [vəluˈte]) is a savory sauce that is made from a roux and a light stock. It is one of the "mother sauces" of French cuisine listed by chef Auguste Escoffier in the early twentieth century, along with espagnole, tomato, béchamel, and mayonnaise or hollandaise. Velouté is French for ...
In particular, he codified the recipes for the five mother sauces. Referred to by the French press as roi des cuisiniers et cuisinier des rois ("king of chefs and chef of kings" [1] —also previously said of Carême), Escoffier was a preeminent figure in London and Paris during the 1890s and the early part of the 20th century.
Mayonnaise is a French cuisine appellation that seems to have appeared for the first time in 1806. The hypotheses invoked over time as to the origin (s) of mayonnaise have been numerous and contradictory. Most hypotheses do however agree on the geographical origin of the sauce, Mahón, in Menorca, Spain. [6][7][8] Other theories have been ...