Hollandaise

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YUM! Why have I never made Hollandaise sauce before? It is so easy! While this newfound knowledge is certainly not good for my waistline, it is most definitely a culinary milestone for me.

As I have mentioned earlier, I watched a lot of cooking shows in Ireland, and one of them, Economy Gastronomy, inspired me to make an easy Hollandaise sauce at home. The recipe, which utilizes the food processor to make the sauce, is at the end of the post and can also be found here.

egg yolk

Hollandaise ingredients

It could not have been easier, egg yolks, mustard, and lemon whizzed up in the food processor mixed with hot melted butter.

Hollandaise sauce

The Hollandaise was creamy, rich, and lemony. I immediately ate about 10 pieces of raw asparagus dipped in it.

While the Hollandaise was the star of the show, I of course needed a meal to put it on. I roasted six potatoes at 420 until they were golden and cooked through.

potatoes for roasting

I gently steamed some asparagus.

asparagus

And used the recipe from Economy Gastronomy to poach up some salmon steaks.

salmon steaks

A simple bath of white wine and water with bay leaves provided the perfect place to poach two beautiful salmon steaks.

salmon steaks poaching

Everything came together perfectly. It was quite the gourmet meal for a girl who stayed out until almost 2 am Sunday!

salmon, asparagus, and potatoes with Hollandaise

Do you have a culinary milestone to share? Or is there something that seems too daunting for you to make at home?

Ingredients

For the poaching liquor:

  • 250ml white wine
  • 2 onions (about 400g), peeled and diced finely
  • 3 bay leaves
  • 500ml water (or fish stock if you have any)
  • Salt and pepper, to taste

For the hollandaise:

  • 150g salted butter
  • 2 egg yolks
  • 1/2 tablespoon Dijon mustard
  • Juice of 1/2 lemon
  • 4 salmon fillets
  • 700g Jersey Royals or new potatoes
  • A few sprigs of mint
  • 12 spears English asparagus, woody ends snapped off

Method

  1. Put all the ingredients for the poaching liquor in a wide saucepan or roasting tray. Keep the liquor over a low heat for 20 mins to infuse, but make sure it stays below the boil – don’t let it start simmering and reduce away.
  2. Scrub your Jerseys and put them in a pan of cold water with some salt and the mint sprigs. Bring to a simmer for 20-25 mins.
  3. Once the spuds are on, lay the salmon fillets in the poaching liquor, skin side down, keeping the heat very low. Season and cover, and after 10 mins lay the asparagus spears in the liquid too, put the lid back on and cook for a final 5 mins.
  4. While the salmon is poaching, melt the butter for the hollandaise, and whizz the yolks, mustard and lemon juice in the food processor for a couple of mins until light and fluffy. Once the butter has melted, bring it to a rapid boil, then immediately drip-feed it into the whirring food processor. As soon as it’s all incorporated, tip the sauce into a bowl and season with salt to taste and some freshly ground black pepper. (There’s a visual argument for white pepper here, but the flavour is different.)
  5. All that remains is to gently lift the salmon on to a suitably pretty serving dish – good idea to use a couple of fish slices to lift it, and move decisively. Keep and freeze the poaching liquor for future use. Don’t strain it, but pick out the bay leaves. Tumble the spuds on to the plate and finish with some jaunty lemon and the finest English spears of the season.

Economy Gastronomy is on BBC2 on Wednesdays from the 5th August at8pm. The book to accompany the series ‘Economy Gastronomy’ by AllegraMcEvedy and Paul Merrett is available now published by Penguin Books,£20.

By Allegra McEvedy and Paul Merrett

Tags: asparagus, cooking, dinner, Hollandaise, Hollandaise sauce, poached salmon, potatoes, roasted potatoes, salmon, white wine

Hello from Arizona! I hope you are all having a great weekend. Today’s post is a guest post from Raija, one of my dearest friends and one of my favorite people to eat and drink with! I hope you enjoy her post on mouthwatering Hollandaise sauce. Have a good day!

Hollandaise is a sauce that seems very fancy — the key to Eggs Benedict, a sauce for asparagus, and the basis for Bernaise Sauce, so luscious over a good steak (which uses tarragon vinegar, or white wine, tarragon and vinegar instead of lemon juice for the acid).  But its really not too difficult to make, and you can do it without a double boiler pretty effectively (or at least I’ve had luck!).  I looked up online “hollandaise sauce” and used a Food Network recipe to get the right ratios of egg yolk, lemon juice and butter. 
The ingredients for hollandaise are as follows per serving (let’s say one yolk = one serving…you may have a little over one serving, depending on the size of egg, etc.)

One egg yolk
About 3 1/4 teaspoons of lemon juice
2 tablespoons of melted butter

Melt the butter and set it aside to cool just slightly — you don’t want it so hot that it will cook the egg yolk.  Use a metal bowl that is not too much bigger than the saucepan you are going to use as your make-shift double boiler (unless you have a double boiler).  Put just enough water in the pan so that when you place the bowl on top of the pan that the pan does not directly touch the water.  I put about an inch of water in the sauce pan and get it to a boil.  Once its at a boil, I turn the heat down, and put a dishcloth over the sauce pan (be careful so it doesn’t hang over and touch the heating element or flame of the burner).  In the metal bowl, whisk vigorously the egg yolk and lemon juice together until it becomes thicker and increases in volume.  Place the bowl over the towel and the barely boiling water, while still whisking.  The dishcloth helps hold the bowl in place while whisking and makes sure that the water doesn’t touch the bowl.  This is where its a little bit tricky – keep whisking quickly while slowly drizzling the melted butter into the egg yolk and lemon juice.   You have to whisk rapidly so that the egg doesn’t cook.  Keep whisking.  The sauce should continue to thicken and double in volume.  Once at this point you can take the sauce off of the heat and either serve immediately, or keep in a warm spot off the heat, covered.  If you wait a bit to use it and it starts to cool, you can still keep it together with whisking rapidly. 

Hollandaise
Source

This sauce stuns me each time I make it — it is so rich and delicious — I often end up using my fingers to get every last taste from the bowl.  Mmmm…  Its also very quick and uses very few ingredients.  Its a great way to make a dish very decadent. 

I hope this recipe works for you — please give feedback if it doesn’t work.  I’ve made Hollandaise twice recently and both times with great result.  Next I need to find a way to successfully make poached eggs! 🙂

Tags: guest post, Hollandaise, recipe, sauce

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