I love the acknowledgements of what Frank was substituting and why! Im all about tradition but sometimes i just dont want to search for or spend so much on pine nuts
I feel so vindicated making pesto with walnuts for the exact same reason he said. It's how I've been making my pesto for a few years now. We'll buy the walnuts for pesto, freeze what we don't use, then use them for Christmas cookies months later.
I hate the black specks. In anything, actually. I always use white pepper but I really think the black specks ruin a pretty sauce. (To be fair though, in something like a lasagne, you'd never see it).
Chef Frank ain't a culinary instructor for nothing! I leard a lot today - for example now I know why my hollandaise was always so runny! Thanks again Frank and Epicurious!
Made the Tomato Sauce today. Came out better than I had even hoped. My new go-to gravy. I used D.O.P. San Marzano whole tomatoes. I gently broke them down with an immersion blender before cooking. Added a dash of crushed red pepper and 1 tsp Brown Sugar. Better than most places in Boston’s North End.
Black or white peper in a bechamel is fine with me but I also like half a teaspoon of english mustard. The 3 sauces that were fully cooked can be made as a batch and put into smaller tubs for the freezer. Great for super midweek meals.
You are going to LOVE making your own sauces. So much better than store-bought, and you get to adjust the flavors to your liking (within reason... don't go putting crushed oreo cookies in your chili).
I still remember making my first Béchamel when learning how to make Lasagna. It came out surpirsingly well and made me feel like a pro in that moment :D (which is a little silly of course)
I actually had a similar experience, seeing a bechamel thicken up the way that it does felt like magic, I used to only make way more straightforward recipes, basically just boiling and pan frying stuff where you cook things in the most straightforward way possible. Bechamel sauce opened a whole new world by showing how a super simply technique and a bit of flour can help make a thick and delicious sauce.
Chef Frank did a fantastic job demonstrating and explaining these, but most of us don't have the time to make some of them on a weeknight. Bechamel, pesto, even hollandaise, those are fine, but brown and tomato sauces become weekEND sauces if they have to cook multiple hours.
I'm annoyed that i've never seen a roux added to the stock/broth/gravy on it's own rather than having the stock mixed in to it. It makes so much sense. Thank you Frank for doing what you do.
There is a reason stock is usually added to the Roux. If clumps form when there is little liquid it's easy to break them apart. If clumps form in a lot of liquid you have balls of flour floating in the stock and it's impossible to break them up without blending the sauce.
Roux is just one technique for thickening sauces. If you which to use flour into a liquid you either make a beurre manier, which is a paste of equal amounts butter and flour, or you make a slurry of water and a starch. In sweden it is most common now to thicken sauces with cornstarch and water, which does not cause lumps and have the advantage of being mostly tasteless and glutenfree
Because it's extremely stupid to do so. An actual chef will tell you this, yes I am one. Why would you thicken anything before you strain it. Just think about it.
I'm gonna be honest, I can't ever conceive of having so little in life to worry about that I'd be upset over small black specs in a flavorful bechamel sauce. It's one of those things like supposedly some Italian chefs saying you better not use garlic and onion in a single meal. I hear them, I just don't care. It's delicious.
Using the double boiler for the hollandaise is a great idea. Scrambled hollandaise is probably not so bad, but when I've done things like custard, I've had it boil when I had my back turned for two seconds. And then the whole thing tastes off
Most of the time i put a whole layer of bechamel in the middle of the lasagne, with or without cheese it depend on what i did last time. I love it this way. I heard others make spots of bechamel in every layer, but its faster and more simple if you do it my way, imo the taste almost the same, with mine you can taste the bechamel with every bite. If i make my lasagne with 500g of meat i make the bechamel with 500ml of milk(50g butter,50g flour) salt and peper for your taste, and with some nutmeg. I let this here if you want to try it. Have a nice day everyone.😊
I loved this but wish you’d gone into more detail about how the mother sauces could be adapted to make a variety of sauces. Like you said that the brown sauce is a great base for loads of different types of sauces but the only example you gave was as a chicken gravy…
Yeah I agree. I especially wish that he mentioned that bechamel sauce can also be used for desserts if you add sugar and some vanilla or other dessert spices, it's super simple and delicious but I feel like not many people know about it, they only think about it as something for savory dishes.
Great souces, chef Proto. Being Italian off the "plane" I was a bit worried about the tomato sauce, but I also cook that "pseudo" Amatriciana for my family, and they love it! That brown sauce looks incredible!
Tomato sauce and brown sauce (which seems like sort of a combination of espagnole and velouté, though closer to the former), while essential to know, take more time and/or are more involved. I'd consider them more like "make on Sunday to have for the week" sauces, rather than sauces to make on a weeknight for dinner. Chimichurri and beurre blanc are easy sauces that don't take a lot of time to make.
The difference between white pepper and black pepper is that black pepper still has the "shell of the pepper" included and the white one has the center. The Black one has more Piperin (the stuff that makes pepper hot).
The difference between white and black pepper isn't simply the color. The phrase I was taught goes: "Black for bite, white for heat, red for burn". In other words, black pepper is a front taste seasoning, white a middle, and red an after taste seasoning. I often use small amounts of all three, to fully season a dish and recognize that if one is trying to season to taste, you have to wait longer to judge if the white and red pepper are at the proper levels.
I like to cook the roux for bechamel a little bit longer than usual since it tends to soften the grainy texture of the flour, and it can give a slightly toasted flavor as long as you don't cook it for too long
Super easy cheese sauce! Take a lemon, juice it, toss that juice in a pan on the lowest heat add baking soda you just made sodium citrate! Should taste slightly sweet but not tart. Now add cheese, I like a nice cheddar but works with many cheeses, then add cream or milk. If you like add chili, onions, garlic or my fav BACON! Too thick? Add more cream/milk! Too thin? Add more cheese. Ready in 10 minutes super easy and an AMAZING dip!
THAT"S HOW YOU MAKE SODIUM CITRATE!?!?!??!?! I must try this, but I have a couple bags of sodium citrate that I already ordered for my "lazy" fondue recipe
My complaint with his red tomato sauce is, when you use tomato paste you should always let it cook a bit first before adding other tomatoes. Sautee it with the onions a couple minutes. That way the paste softens and sweetens. If you skip that step, your paste will taste sour and sharp no matter how long you simmer the sauce
Missing carrots and celery as well. Pancetta isn't needed as you end up with a very greasy pasta sauce. Onions are chopped too coarse for my liking and basil really only needs to be added at the end to increase fragrance. Overcooked basil isn't pleasant.
When I make Vegetarian or Vegan brown sauce my go to is: "add as many Umami flavours as possible!" Usually: mushrooms, carrots, onion, garlic, tomato paste, mustard, soy sauce, bay leaf, wine, salt, pepper and whatever else I may have to hand that tastes umami. Then I just blend it all up and sometimes I thicken it with a roux.
Is there a book with all these recipes he's done on Epicurious? I'd love to grab it and leave it in my kitchen, this channel is my go-to spot for inspiration for something to cook in the kitchen! :)
Hi Frank. You went «if i see it cooking a bit too quickly». I get what you are saying, but a lot of people wont. Can you describe how you see the sauce curdling? What do you watch for? What are the signs of imminent disaster? Great video. I’ll make a batch of brown sauce base next weekend for sure.
That was instructive. Beyond basic white sauce for maccaroni cheese and gravy for Christmas dinner, theres a lot here to discover. Must say that 2 hours on a sauce sounds expensive!
@randyschwing9102 well when I started out in 1981, there was a skills class. It was among the first 5 classes. In that block we had to master the 5 basic mother sauces, knife cuts, etc. As for "spelling out" the CIA, there are still people out there that only associate CIA with the government and not the food education. I graduated in November 1982 and then did 2 rounds of fellowship in dining room service. Oh, yes I know that is not what they call it now. I was also a service club member, and gave tours of the Culinary. So, what were you doing in 1981? Rudeness will not benefit you in any way.
Hey Frank! What type of stone is your countertop and backsplash/display wall? Renovating my kitchen and can’t find anything similar! It’s my final step!
I took a night class at a local community College to learn the 5 leading or mother sauces. I like what you did here though. Learned something new todat😊
You found a nice plate of steamed asparagus? I like your kitchen WAY better than mine. I just find to-do lists in mine. Frank, I'm some kind of broken Italian, but I can't eat tomatoes. What can I use besides tomato paste in the brown sauce?
A great video, I will never buy a pesto in a jar ever again. I like how you used walnuts, pine nuts are great but way to expensive. I will eventually make all the sauces you made. 🥰🥰
On the brown sauce, why use a sachet for the spices if you're going to strain the entire mixture? Is it because the holes on the strainer are too large? Or because the flavor would be too strong without the sachet?
7:35. That looks the part! Will give that a go tonight for dinner ❤. However, in UK that sauce recipe would be considered blasphemy! Here, the brown sauce is really thick brown, vinegar tasting slurry 😢
2:14 classically trained chef here - been making béchamel using hot milk (heated with bay, clove and white onion) since college and never been lumpy because you add it bit by bit, if you dump any liquid on a roux it's a coin flip if it gets lumpy...also white pepper in white sauces, please
Concerning canned tomatoes, haven’t they already been simmered for a long time when canning? Because then even more cooking might be not so beneficial, they should already be sweet. Please I need to know 🙏🙏
Let's be real, Frank is holding this entire Epicurious operation together.
😂💯
💀💀💀💀💀
Let's be frank, Frank is holding this entire Epicurious operation together.
And Saul Montiel! 🌶️
Let's be frank, Frank is holding this entire Frank operation together.
I love the acknowledgements of what Frank was substituting and why! Im all about tradition but sometimes i just dont want to search for or spend so much on pine nuts
Exactly. Over ten bucks at Trader Joe’s! Outrageous!
Don’t use them, then. They are not only expensive, they are, to me, tasteless. I use pistachios.
@@seaeagle8976 Definitely have found alternatives.
It's also really great that for those of us who are allergic to pine nuts but not walnuts
I hate pine nuts. And too many leaves a metallic after taste in your mouth
For the sauce brune (brown sauce), you'll GREATLY increase the yield if you wait to add the roux until AFTER you've strained.
I was wondering about that!
Very smart, thank you!
My new favorite YT chef is Frank Proto. He makes great things with easy technique.
And Lan Lam. She's awesome, too.
I love how he explains things not just cooking, this is my best cooking channel now ❤
I feel so vindicated making pesto with walnuts for the exact same reason he said. It's how I've been making my pesto for a few years now. We'll buy the walnuts for pesto, freeze what we don't use, then use them for Christmas cookies months later.
Almonds seem even better
Try Fava beans
@ProtoCookswithChefFrank in France we are taught to do Béchamel with nutmeg !
Totally enjoying Chef Frank's lessons. My youngest is taking culinary studies at Their high school, his classes help me with them.
Did not know there is a highschool actually called "Their highschool".
@einundsiebenziger5488 my child is non binary, so I capitalize Their.
@@terrybradford3727thank you for supporting them!You are doing a great job
french people be like "dont use black pepper, its gonna have spots" and then also "look at the beautiful vanilla spots"
French people also be "we surrender" 😂
Lol
There used to be a time where French cooks removed the vanilla spots...
Sounds like a horrible, strict food critic 😂
I hate the black specks. In anything, actually. I always use white pepper but I really think the black specks ruin a pretty sauce. (To be fair though, in something like a lasagne, you'd never see it).
Chef Frank ain't a culinary instructor for nothing! I leard a lot today - for example now I know why my hollandaise was always so runny! Thanks again Frank and Epicurious!
Made the Tomato Sauce today. Came out better than I had even hoped. My new go-to gravy. I used D.O.P. San Marzano whole tomatoes. I gently broke them down with an immersion blender before cooking. Added a dash of crushed red pepper and 1 tsp Brown Sugar. Better than most places in Boston’s North End.
I use brown sugar too in my tomato sauce too, I find it “blends in” with the taste a lot better than white sugar.
Black or white peper in a bechamel is fine with me but I also like half a teaspoon of english mustard.
The 3 sauces that were fully cooked can be made as a batch and put into smaller tubs for the freezer. Great for super midweek meals.
8:35 "It only needs one more thing and that's time."
Me: "You should've put the thyme in the sachet."
😂
This was fantastic! These are sauces that I use all the time, but always pre-made. It's going to be great making them myself. Thank you!!
You are going to LOVE making your own sauces. So much better than store-bought, and you get to adjust the flavors to your liking (within reason... don't go putting crushed oreo cookies in your chili).
wait.. you can buy bechamel sauce premade? where?
@@Sabrina-sx9fl LIDL e.g.
stop it @@Sabrina-sx9fl
🤣
I still remember making my first Béchamel when learning how to make Lasagna. It came out surpirsingly well and made me feel like a pro in that moment :D (which is a little silly of course)
It's not silly, im glad it made you happy!
I actually had a similar experience, seeing a bechamel thicken up the way that it does felt like magic, I used to only make way more straightforward recipes, basically just boiling and pan frying stuff where you cook things in the most straightforward way possible.
Bechamel sauce opened a whole new world by showing how a super simply technique and a bit of flour can help make a thick and delicious sauce.
I also get sad whenever people make moussaka without bechamel.
Thank you! Black pepper is just fine.
Chef Frank has been my favorite since forevaaah!!
Chef Frank did a fantastic job demonstrating and explaining these, but most of us don't have the time to make some of them on a weeknight. Bechamel, pesto, even hollandaise, those are fine, but brown and tomato sauces become weekEND sauces if they have to cook multiple hours.
*crock pot entered the chat*
😅
13:12 min video. Easy to watch. Easy to understand. Easy to duplicate. Exp points gained on a lunch break.
Frank, you’re Magic! And a wonderful teacher. Thank you.
These are great and thank you again for making them easy to follow.
I'm annoyed that i've never seen a roux added to the stock/broth/gravy on it's own rather than having the stock mixed in to it. It makes so much sense. Thank you Frank for doing what you do.
There is a reason stock is usually added to the Roux. If clumps form when there is little liquid it's easy to break them apart. If clumps form in a lot of liquid you have balls of flour floating in the stock and it's impossible to break them up without blending the sauce.
Roux is just one technique for thickening sauces. If you which to use flour into a liquid you either make a beurre manier, which is a paste of equal amounts butter and flour, or you make a slurry of water and a starch.
In sweden it is most common now to thicken sauces with cornstarch and water, which does not cause lumps and have the advantage of being mostly tasteless and glutenfree
I've always used cornstarch, never flour. So much less stressful to not have to worry about clumps
Because it's extremely stupid to do so. An actual chef will tell you this, yes I am one. Why would you thicken anything before you strain it. Just think about it.
Great episode! All the sauces looked amazing and...now I'm hungry!
Clear and useful. Thank you . . .
Excellent presentation! Thank you!
Y’all taking notes?? Every video I’ve seen is so full of culinary knowledge. Imma need a new note book soon.
I feel like chef Frank really missed an opportunity by not saying "we're really fond of fond."😅
I feel like non culinary people will see bechamel with white or black pepper the same as vanilla or vanilla bean ice cream
@das_blut9966 Nice.
@das_blut9966I once poured tea on my Sunday roast, thinking it was gravy. I thought gravy was in the tea mug.
I'm gonna be honest, I can't ever conceive of having so little in life to worry about that I'd be upset over small black specs in a flavorful bechamel sauce. It's one of those things like supposedly some Italian chefs saying you better not use garlic and onion in a single meal. I hear them, I just don't care. It's delicious.
Hilarious but definitely not the case lol
I agree with Frank, I can deal with the black specks.
Using the double boiler for the hollandaise is a great idea. Scrambled hollandaise is probably not so bad, but when I've done things like custard, I've had it boil when I had my back turned for two seconds. And then the whole thing tastes off
I didnt realize people did it without a double boiler it would be so much harder to control the heat
A bit of paprika and red wine vinegar will take any tomato sauce to a new height very quickly. Super yum
Excellent video lesson ,
I need to get these down pat ,,
Thanks for posting !
Most of the time i put a whole layer of bechamel in the middle of the lasagne, with or without cheese it depend on what i did last time. I love it this way. I heard others make spots of bechamel in every layer, but its faster and more simple if you do it my way, imo the taste almost the same, with mine you can taste the bechamel with every bite. If i make my lasagne with 500g of meat i make the bechamel with 500ml of milk(50g butter,50g flour) salt and peper for your taste, and with some nutmeg. I let this here if you want to try it. Have a nice day everyone.😊
Awesome video !!! Thanks!
Looks great! For the brown sauce, why put the herbs in cheesecloth if you’re gonna strain everything anyway?
I agree. We just wanted to introduce the concept of the sachet
Yes. Also, why add the roux before straining? Seems like too much of the thickened sauce would cling to the strained solids.
I loved this but wish you’d gone into more detail about how the mother sauces could be adapted to make a variety of sauces. Like you said that the brown sauce is a great base for loads of different types of sauces but the only example you gave was as a chicken gravy…
I concur!
Yeah I agree. I especially wish that he mentioned that bechamel sauce can also be used for desserts if you add sugar and some vanilla or other dessert spices, it's super simple and delicious but I feel like not many people know about it, they only think about it as something for savory dishes.
Same!
Great vid! why make the sachet if you will be straining anyway?
Thank you Chef Frank. This episode was extremely informative and helpful to me. The tips and tricks were top notch. Thank you again. ☺☺😋😋🥰🥰
We need the recipe for your Lasagne! Looks unreal 😍
10:15 you can use pine nuts in way more things than just pesto
Great souces, chef Proto. Being Italian off the "plane" I was a bit worried about the tomato sauce, but I also cook that "pseudo" Amatriciana for my family, and they love it! That brown sauce looks incredible!
Excellent show
Tomato sauce and brown sauce (which seems like sort of a combination of espagnole and velouté, though closer to the former), while essential to know, take more time and/or are more involved. I'd consider them more like "make on Sunday to have for the week" sauces, rather than sauces to make on a weeknight for dinner. Chimichurri and beurre blanc are easy sauces that don't take a lot of time to make.
i think someone else came up with the title, chef Frank probably just wanted to make 5 easy essential sauces
Béarnaise made with schmaltz, gotta be my number one.
The difference between white pepper and black pepper is that black pepper still has the "shell of the pepper" included and the white one has the center. The Black one has more Piperin (the stuff that makes pepper hot).
Brilliant. Makes me want to cook more
I’ve made hollandaise 100x. Never once used the towel over the bowl to finish tip. 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
You're not a pro until you whisk the yolk in a SS bowl over an open flame.
Agree with chef, black pepper in white sauce is fine... black specks of vanilla beans in a vanilla custard isn't complained about...
The difference between white and black pepper isn't simply the color.
The phrase I was taught goes: "Black for bite, white for heat, red for burn".
In other words, black pepper is a front taste seasoning, white a middle, and red an after taste seasoning.
I often use small amounts of all three, to fully season a dish and recognize that if one is trying to season to taste, you have to wait longer to judge if the white and red pepper are at the proper levels.
Thank you Chef Frank
Just made the red sauce. Did not have tomatoes paste but had a different red sauce. The taste was a whole other level.
I like to cook the roux for bechamel a little bit longer than usual since it tends to soften the grainy texture of the flour, and it can give a slightly toasted flavor as long as you don't cook it for too long
Also reduces the thickening capability of the roux just btw
Super easy cheese sauce! Take a lemon, juice it, toss that juice in a pan on the lowest heat add baking soda you just made sodium citrate! Should taste slightly sweet but not tart. Now add cheese, I like a nice cheddar but works with many cheeses, then add cream or milk. If you like add chili, onions, garlic or my fav BACON! Too thick? Add more cream/milk! Too thin? Add more cheese. Ready in 10 minutes super easy and an AMAZING dip!
THAT"S HOW YOU MAKE SODIUM CITRATE!?!?!??!?! I must try this, but I have a couple bags of sodium citrate that I already ordered for my "lazy" fondue recipe
@@dressmaking Yep! Check out Adam Ragusa's video on broken sauces! You'll love it!
Bechamel sauce is the base for 1 of our favorites, SOS. Yummy!
شكرا لك
Thank you for the garlic after the onion talk. Ive done this for years and i never understood why people throw garlic in first thing
My complaint with his red tomato sauce is, when you use tomato paste you should always let it cook a bit first before adding other tomatoes. Sautee it with the onions a couple minutes. That way the paste softens and sweetens. If you skip that step, your paste will taste sour and sharp no matter how long you simmer the sauce
Agreed. Add paste after garlic for a minute before cans of tomatoes
Missing carrots and celery as well. Pancetta isn't needed as you end up with a very greasy pasta sauce.
Onions are chopped too coarse for my liking and basil really only needs to be added at the end to increase fragrance. Overcooked basil isn't pleasant.
@@smartsquirrel1oil makes it greasy too.
Thank you very much
Awesome. Gonna try and make the pesto sauce for fusilli pasta.
Great lessons, thanks
I cant wait to try this. Im still waiting for my potatoes to be ready for french fries, but when I finish that recipe i will definitely try this.
Bechemel is what we call gravy in the south. Most often make with bacon or sausage drippings instead of butter.
Great video I have learned a lot by watching it
When I make Vegetarian or Vegan brown sauce my go to is: "add as many Umami flavours as possible!"
Usually: mushrooms, carrots, onion, garlic, tomato paste, mustard, soy sauce, bay leaf, wine, salt, pepper and whatever else I may have to hand that tastes umami. Then I just blend it all up and sometimes I thicken it with a roux.
Is there a book with all these recipes he's done on Epicurious? I'd love to grab it and leave it in my kitchen, this channel is my go-to spot for inspiration for something to cook in the kitchen! :)
Frank also has the BEST pancake recipe...if you like pancakes check that out
Thank you for sharing with us your technics and lifehackes!
... techniques* and lifehacks*
@@einundsiebenziger5488 *techneeks and lifehaques
I like the spots. But also love white pepper... So iI put both!
Thank you!
How do you keep your hollandaise sauce texture if you need to serve it later?
Simply beautiful
Hi Frank. You went «if i see it cooking a bit too quickly».
I get what you are saying, but a lot of people wont. Can you describe how you see the sauce curdling? What do you watch for? What are the signs of imminent disaster?
Great video. I’ll make a batch of brown sauce base next weekend for sure.
That was instructive. Beyond basic white sauce for maccaroni cheese and gravy for Christmas dinner, theres a lot here to discover. Must say that 2 hours on a sauce sounds expensive!
This felt like i was back in the class room in skills clas at the Culinary Institute of America!
No CIA grad spells the whole name out. There is also nothing called 'skills class'.
@randyschwing9102 well when I started out in 1981, there was a skills class. It was among the first 5 classes. In that block we had to master the 5 basic mother sauces, knife cuts, etc. As for "spelling out" the CIA, there are still people out there that only associate CIA with the government and not the food education. I graduated in November 1982 and then did 2 rounds of fellowship in dining room service. Oh, yes I know that is not what they call it now. I was also a service club member, and gave tours of the Culinary. So, what were you doing in 1981? Rudeness will not benefit you in any way.
thank you chef for your videos
Hey Frank! What type of stone is your countertop and backsplash/display wall? Renovating my kitchen and can’t find anything similar! It’s my final step!
I took a night class at a local community College to learn the 5 leading or mother sauces. I like what you did here though. Learned something new todat😊
"Gimme a straw" dead lol
Nutmeg in bechamel is a gamechanger
I want to see Saul & Frank swap ingredients and cook.
You could add peppercorns to your béchamel then strain it out so you can have black pepper flavor but not have pepper bits in it.
Love the comment "i'll deal with the spots" relating to using the black pepper in the béchamel! I have always thought this!
You found a nice plate of steamed asparagus? I like your kitchen WAY better than mine. I just find to-do lists in mine.
Frank, I'm some kind of broken Italian, but I can't eat tomatoes. What can I use besides tomato paste in the brown sauce?
Just skip it. The sauce will still taste great.
@@frankproto5057 Oh wow, I wasn't expecting an answer. Thank you!
Dude need a "Thanks" button so we can put a couple of bucks in the tip jar for him.
My mum always likes to roast off the tomato paste and then add the liquids. Adds a bit of a toasted flavour that i like
I make a ton of "hollandaise"...make a bechamel. At end..2 or 3 egg yolks quicky mixed in...lemon juice and a bit of cayenne.
A great video, I will never buy a pesto in a jar ever again. I like how you used walnuts, pine nuts are great but way to expensive. I will eventually make all the sauces you made. 🥰🥰
After I made pesto sauce for the first time I could never go back to can. Ever.
I was not expecting the asparagus at the end!
Can Béchamel be made and then saved for later? If so, how and how long can it be stored?
On the brown sauce, why use a sachet for the spices if you're going to strain the entire mixture? Is it because the holes on the strainer are too large? Or because the flavor would be too strong without the sachet?
7:35. That looks the part! Will give that a go tonight for dinner ❤.
However, in UK that sauce recipe would be considered blasphemy! Here, the brown sauce is really thick brown, vinegar tasting slurry 😢
2:14 classically trained chef here - been making béchamel using hot milk (heated with bay, clove and white onion) since college and never been lumpy because you add it bit by bit, if you dump any liquid on a roux it's a coin flip if it gets lumpy...also white pepper in white sauces, please
nah its all about preference
very informative thx
Concerning canned tomatoes, haven’t they already been simmered for a long time when canning? Because then even more cooking might be not so beneficial, they should already be sweet. Please I need to know 🙏🙏
Awesome. Step up my game.
No nutmeg on bechamel?
That’s your recipe not his though I like nutmeg in it depending on where the bechemel is going
My favourite line. "Rich brown flavour"
Do you need the sachet when you strain anyways? And your dont heavily press the straining content?
You don’t need the sachet if you are straining. We wanted to show it for the video. I don’t press too hard because it makes your sauce cloudy.
What was the point of the sachet if everything was being strained after anyways?
wooow amazing 😍😍😍
I love it how he says i found some steamed asparagus
As if he didn’t know it was there.
Can anyone explain the word "stat" at 12:47?😪
Please, help me!
Question: why create the sachet if everything goes through a strainer at the end? couldn’t I just put the herbs straight in the pot?