Béchamel Sauce
White Sauce
Béchamel Sauce, also known as white sauce, is a basic sauce which is used as the base for other sauces, such as mornay sauce and cheese sauce. The basic sauce is made by stirring milk gradually into a flour-butter roux. The thickness of the final sauce depends on the proportion of milk and roux.
The sauce is named for Louis XIV's steward, Louis de Béchamel, who is sometimes attributed with having invented it.
The following recipe is taken from The Cook's Decameron: A Study In Taste, Containing Over Two Hundred Recipes For Italian Dishes. This is part of a project that puts out-of-copyright texts into the public domain. This recipe reflects the cooking at the turn of the last century.
Ingredients
- butter,
- ham,
- veal,
- carrots,
- shallot,
- celery,
- bay leaf,
- cloves,
- thyme,
- peppercorns,
- potato flour,
- cream,
- fowl stock
Directions
Prepare a mirepoix by mixing two ounces of butter, trimmings of lean veal and ham, a carrot, a shallot, a little celery, all cut into dice, a bay leaf, two cloves, four peppercorns, and a little thyme.
Put this on a moderate fire so as not to let it colour, and when all the moisture is absorbed add a tablespoonful of potato flour.
Mix well, and gradually add equal quantities of cream and fowl stock, and stir till it boils.
Then let it simmer gently. Stir occasionally, and if it gets too thick, add more cream and white stock.
After two hours pass it twice slowly through a tamis so as to get the sauce very smooth.
Credits
: This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the
Wikipedia article
"Bechamel Sauce"
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