In French cuisine there are five mother sauces, the first of which is Béchamel. To make this sauce you start by melting butter, and once it is completely melted you whisk in an equal volume of flour. Now you have to continue to whisk non-stop for five minutes as you watch the sauce go through several stages. At first it is a very dry and lumpy mess of flour, but after a little less than a minute it begins to smooth out and turn into a creamy, light-colored sauce. Over the course of the next four minutes the color gradually darkens into about a medium-tan color and is very rich and thick in texture while still barely remaining a liquid.
Now here is the important point.
When the time comes to add in the milk to thin down the sauce, you must not stop whisking. I cannot emphasize that point enough. If you stop, even for thirty seconds, the sauce is completely ruined and you have to start over.
In my case I was making a cheddar sauce from the base Béchamel. Gradually adding the milk, as well as some very finely chopped onions and a little paprika, the whole thing simmered for ten minutes. On my first go-around what I had at this point was a nasty off-white sauce with dark brown speckles floating in it. On the second go-around what I had was a beautiful creamy golden brown sauce. That thirty seconds of not whisking made all the difference in the world.
Temper in an egg, and then add the shredded chedder with a little bit of salt and pepper for seasoning, and I was the proud creator of a lovely cheese sauce ready for baking with the pasta.
So remember kids, a sauce is a very important thing and not to be trifled with or it will turn around and bite you on the ass.
Now here is the important point.
When the time comes to add in the milk to thin down the sauce, you must not stop whisking. I cannot emphasize that point enough. If you stop, even for thirty seconds, the sauce is completely ruined and you have to start over.
In my case I was making a cheddar sauce from the base Béchamel. Gradually adding the milk, as well as some very finely chopped onions and a little paprika, the whole thing simmered for ten minutes. On my first go-around what I had at this point was a nasty off-white sauce with dark brown speckles floating in it. On the second go-around what I had was a beautiful creamy golden brown sauce. That thirty seconds of not whisking made all the difference in the world.
Temper in an egg, and then add the shredded chedder with a little bit of salt and pepper for seasoning, and I was the proud creator of a lovely cheese sauce ready for baking with the pasta.
So remember kids, a sauce is a very important thing and not to be trifled with or it will turn around and bite you on the ass.
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Re: Soooooo...
From: (Anonymous)
Nick Stellino recipe
Now that I don't have cable, I get my "Food Network" fix by watching channel 9 for: "Nick Stellino's Family Kitchen", "America's Test Kitchen", "Simply Ming"(for some reason, I've developed quite the crush on Ming Tsai, "Mexico, One Plate at a Time with Rick Bayless"
Basically, my ass is planted on my couch on Saturdays between 3 and 6. There are other cooking shows in there, that I'm just not as excited about, although I watch.
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Re: Nick Stellino recipe
If you ever feel the need for a Food Network fix, you are more than welcome to stop by. :) If you can deal with 2 kids and 4 cats. :)
From: (Anonymous)
ooh, almost forgot,,,
Maybe because I love the italian cuisine so much, he and Nick Stellino get me drooling. Their *cooking* I'm talking about!