Hollandaise Sauce: The Making Of . . . .
Hollandaise Sauce: The Making Of . . . .
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Digger

Original Poster:

16,442 posts

217 months

Tuesday 19th January 2016
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Going to try this for the first time today or tomorrow for an attempt at eggs benedict!

As far as the butter is concerned, does it make much of a difference, and is it necessary to clarify the butter ie skimming and draining the fat separate from the milky constituent?

marshalla

15,902 posts

227 months

Tuesday 19th January 2016
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Digger said:
Going to try this for the first time today or tomorrow for an attempt at eggs benedict!

As far as the butter is concerned, does it make much of a difference, and is it necessary to clarify the butter ie skimming and draining the fat separate from the milky constituent?
I never do - and I never follow the "approved" process and mine always seems to turn out OK.

hondafanatic

4,969 posts

227 months

Tuesday 19th January 2016
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I have a weird hatred of Delia Smith...however, have a look at her quick version of hollandaise sauce...so simple and works every time. And less washing up too!!!

http://www.deliaonline.com/recipes/cuisine/europea...

marshalla

15,902 posts

227 months

Tuesday 19th January 2016
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I seem to have re-invented Pomiane's method myself - although I tend to chuck in a lot more butter than he recommends.

Digger

Original Poster:

16,442 posts

217 months

Tuesday 19th January 2016
quotequote all
Thanks guys.

To make it thicker do you do whisk more at the egg stage prior to adding the butter?

fredt

847 posts

173 months

Tuesday 19th January 2016
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No need to complicate things.

1. Mix egg yolk/vinegar/lemon juice/Dijon mustard in a round bottomed bowl (I find it easier in round bottomed then flat). Mix a bit.

2. Melt butter and trickle/drip feed in as you whisk. Unless you are used to whisking by hand you will kill yourself whisking manually, so use a small food processor or electric whisk.

Delicious smile

Edit: More butter makes it thicker. Also I personally wouldn't go down Delia's route and make it foamy, Hollandaise/Bearnaise should for me be thick, creamy and very importantly plentiful! smile

Edited by fredt on Tuesday 19th January 12:53

anonymous-user

80 months

Tuesday 19th January 2016
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Waitrose is your friend.

Small chilled plastic tub near the fresh fish. Nice crust of solidified butter on top.

Microwave for 45 seconds, then stir to incorporate. Then microwave for 20sec at a time until up to temp and fully incorporated.

As good as any I've had in restaurants. Infinitely better than the long life crap in a glass jar.

cornet

1,471 posts

184 months

Tuesday 19th January 2016
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Immersion blender is your friend here :

http://www.seriouseats.com/2013/04/video-foolproof...

944fan

4,962 posts

211 months

Tuesday 19th January 2016
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I always make my own hollandaise and bearnaise sauce using the traditional method. Clarify the butter - I always use high quality french butter. Whisk the yolks with a little cold water over the heat till they start to thicken, slowly pour in the clarified butter and continue to whisk (i take off the hot water at this point). Then mix in the vinegar reduction and lemon juice, season with Cayenne pepper and salt.

Buggered up a few early on but got it down now.

Two tips I have found:

1. Make loads, its much harder to make a small amount
2. Make sure everything is roughly the same temperature. i.e. not eggs straight from the fridge and let the butter cool slightly before using.

Gaz3376

131 posts

135 months

Tuesday 19th January 2016
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can be done using a blender pre heated with boiling water with good results depending on how much heat your blender retains.

Digger

Original Poster:

16,442 posts

217 months

Tuesday 19th January 2016
quotequote all
Greg66 said:
Waitrose is your friend.

Small chilled plastic tub near the fresh fish. Nice crust of solidified butter on top.

Microwave for 45 seconds, then stir to incorporate. Then microwave for 20sec at a time until up to temp and fully incorporated.

As good as any I've had in restaurants. Infinitely better than the long life crap in a glass jar.
Whilst I did indeed stop off at Waitrose earlier for the eggs and butter, my built-in combi oven is certainly not my friend. . . the microwave bit is kaput! smile

anonymous-user

80 months

Tuesday 19th January 2016
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Digger said:
Whilst I did indeed stop off at Waitrose earlier for the eggs and butter, my built-in combi oven is certainly not my friend. . . the microwave bit is kaput! smile
Ah, well that is a problem! You can heat the Waitrose sauce in a pan, but the microwave instructions are a sure fire way to get from fridge to perfect hollandaise in the time it takes to heat a pan of water, poach an egg, grill lightly some prosciutto and toast a muffin. Guaranteed!

Eta: being something of a heathen, I have now moved on to Eggs Royale (or Pacific, as I found they are called in BC) with thinly sliced ripe avocado between the salmon and the egg. Om nomnom...

Edited by anonymous-user on Tuesday 19th January 22:23

Digger

Original Poster:

16,442 posts

217 months

Friday 22nd January 2016
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Fairly happy with my first attempt except slightly too runny, so will try with extra butter next time. Also slightly bland so will also concoct a vinegar/wine/onion reduction as well.

This is perhaps my favourite video I've seen so far, although I now have a hankering to get an n2o siphon! biggrin

http://youtu.be/jHOhYkwDSAY

Edited by Digger on Friday 22 January 08:30

omniflow

3,673 posts

177 months

Friday 22nd January 2016
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I have a pan, stirrer and heater combination made by Tefal that I bought about 25 years ago. It's designed to make Hollandaise and similar sauces. A bit like this one

http://www.amazon.co.uk/electronic-Tefal-Saucier-s...

It's brilliant, and making a proper Hollandaise requires very little effort if you use this.

2 points:

you need to use a reduction to get the base flavour - I use Delia's, and also lemon juice and salt.
If the sauce is too thin, you need to "cook" it for longer. With the Tefal gadget this is a doddle, but at this stage you could overcook it and it would curdle.

944fan

4,962 posts

211 months

Monday 7th March 2016
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Made the wife eggs Benedict for Mother's day. I follow Gordon Ramsay's method for making the hollandaise which is fairly traditional. I have had no problems with it splitting since using his way. I find using really good butter makes a difference. I use beurre d'isigny

Its such a faff making it though. I could eat everyday if it wasn't such a ballache. I guess making a batch and keeping it isn't going to work?

This and bearnaise sauce. lick Its like freebasing with butter and egg yolk

dazco

4,281 posts

215 months

Monday 7th March 2016
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The thermomix does this kind of thing rather well

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_g6_96N-6kk

whollie

472 posts

213 months

Sunday 13th March 2016
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Pro version: 2 eggs to half a block of butter, 3 eggs to a full block.

Melt butter in saucepan. NOT microwave.

Put egg yolks in a measuring jug, glass preferably. Add a dash of lemon juice and salt.

Stick blender.

Pour melted butter down stick of blender incredibly slowly, lifting the blender up and down (a mashing potato motion I guess)

You can speed up the pouring as you get towards the bottom of the pan (but preferably don't add the solids)

Stir. Taste. Add more salt and lemon to taste and a splash of water if it's too thick.

I've used this for years, it's really quick and simple. If it splits add a tiny splash of water and blend like fk; you might be able to rescue it. This blend will thicken on standing (in a restaurant kitchen perhaps...) so just add water when you need to serve if you make in advance. Pop some cling film over the surface and it won't form a skin.