How many chefs would admit that they forgot to add something into a recipe? Not many & that is why Chef Jean-Pierre is such a great teacher/chef because he's so honest & entertaining. He understands that no matter how good a recipe may be it must be adapted to an individuals taste. That sauce looks amazing!
When I was growing up my dad was sous chef and later executive chef at several different fine restaurants. He later owned a successful French bistro in uptown Wichita, KS. My working life started as a kid washing dishes over the summer while also watching the master and his assistants at work. Seeing these videos brings back many great memories and lessons I learned working in those kitchens. Thanks Chef.
I love this... I love Béarnaise, and Hollandaise ... one trick I learned early on, is that if you overdo the heat (I did, as a novice chef)... do not fret, because you can then fold in a chopped hard-cooked egg, and then you have a Sauce Grebiche... it's different, it's not smooth like the originally intended sauces, but you can resurrect a seemingly awful disaster and turn it into something else that is practical, a little different, and can be used in any way you see fit.
Beautiful sauce. Fun to hear about your classical training and memory of being taught to move the whisk in a figure “8” but that you stirred it the regular way when the teacher wasn’t looking! Haha! If we could take a time machine back to that era, what else would we see? I’d love to hear more anecdotes, and how things were different then. Thanks for starting our Mondays off with a smile. The past 19 months have been so bleak and you’re a ray of sunshine. God bless you, Chef🌷
Thank you Juliette! "If we could take a time machine back to that era, what would we see?" Wow I certainly could write a book. But I rather concentrate on the future than the past!!! 😂
I'm not sure I'd have the coordination to do this. I've watched Jacques Pepin figure 8-ing with his right hand and circling the skillet with his left while literally banging out the omelet at lightning speed!
Write that book anyway, Chef, we'd all love to read it! Over the last 50 years, you must have seen everything from minor mistakes to kitchen disasters to guests who made you think 'I don't care what you order, as long as it's a taxi.' 😀
Chef, remember, you are a human after all. You never forget to humor us, you show your tricks, you spill and show all the fun you have, and really, I love how you do all of it.
..and again we improve our skill by watching a master at work. When I was taught to cook, it was never this much fun, entertaining or enjoyable. Thanks again Chef J-P
I make a great Bearnaise, so let me share a few tricks. When you are cooking the egg, yes, keep touching the bottom of the pan, but look for the vapor coming off the mixture! The temp of the pan bottom should hurt if you keep your palm there, but not enough so that you jerk your hand or finger away because it burns. (If you are making yoghurt and don't have a thermometer, the milk should be that same, yes it hurts if I keep my finger in this, and then add the starter) Look for wisps of vapor coming off the beaten mixture. Wisp of vapor, take it off the heat immediately, and add cold butter! Next if the sauce breaks and separates, you are not dead. Use no stick cooking spray - tiny spray, the lecithin 9 times out of 10, will let you beat the stuff back together. Worst case scenario, take another egg yolk, beat and warm, and slowly add the broken sauce into the fresh egg, the same way you added the butter into the egg. You will be fine. The only irretrievable Bearnaise is a scrambled one. Lastly, if you sauce is too thin, you can put it back onto the heat, same palm rule applies, heat and whisk until it thickens, 1-2 minutes max.
I have never seen someone who knows so much, so openly share your hard earned knowledge and experience with us. After using your balsamic vinegars for a month now (and folks in 70 years I have never tasted a product so good) I have decided my Christmas shopping for family will be from your web site. I may even treat myself to one of your non stick skillets. You deserve the business!
If only every teacher/instructor/coach was as open, honest and entertaining as you! Even the pros make little mistakes! Live and learn! The sauce looks awesome!!! Can't wait to try it on a nice NY striploin!
I am so happy you use chervil. I know so many chefs who use ONLY tarragon, and the difference in flavour when you use both tarragon and chervil is insane.
i love how he basically teaches. if u enjoy a technique or seasoning than do it. real chefs have fun or else it becomes a job. love this guy. 2nd video already and I am so so hooked.
Maybe 1974... in Hawaii the first time, my Dad said order anything you want, I had a fillet of beef with bearnaise and a lobster tail... I fell in love with this sauce
My grandparents owned an herb, honeybee and melon farm. Tarragon was one of my grandmother's favorites. I remember the smell of this sauce wafting from her kitchen when I was young. Thanks Chef, love you.
Not editing out common mistakes, like forgetting to add s&p and adding it afterwards…just love it! Thank you for always keeping it real, Chef! God bless😊
I remember the first time I had bearnaise on lobster. I thought I'd died and gone to heaven. Having downsized from my house with a wonderful gas stove I'm dealing with a quak electric stove. I'm going to attempt this the way you do your hollandaise with the blender. I've used your receipe for that and talk about good! Fingers crossed.
I don't know if you are pressed for time or its you production crew who wants short videos, but in my opinion, the more demonstration and or info, is the way to go. If you'd rather not limit yourself, go for it. If people want to learn, they watch. Well done as always, Chef!
@ chef jean-Pierre . i think you dropped a nugget of wisdom i have never heard anybody else offer . using the simple act of touching the pot to check the temperature is brilliant. i have struggled with this a bit. first try by touching the pot to gauge the temperature and i absolutely nailed it. i did use the bowl over water as a heat source due to a 30 year old electric stove that is all over the place. but moving back and forth by how hot the stainless bowl was in my hand . so easy to keep it in the temp zone you want. thank you very much for sharing with everybody.
Making everything from scratch the old way must have been a lot more work, but I bet the flavors were out-of-this-world excellent! Some pre-processed foods are okay, some are even good, and they all are convenient. But often they are not as flavorful as the real thing, slow-made from scratch. I like how you do mise-en-place and make difficult things look easy with a little burst of fast work. Of course it helps to have the ingredients, and the equipment, and the space at hand. Cooking is fun!
Jean-Pierre it is wonderful to see you so excited about all the recipes you make, I grew up in a kitchen helping my dad and he was always so excited about the food before it hit the customers, and un turn I love cooking.
I made a fish chowder almost exactly the same way, minus the fat and plus fish stock. An entire bunch of tarragon. It was fantastic! Little did I know, I was standing on the shoulders of culinary giants. Thanks Jean-Pierre!
I am in Toyohashi, Japan, making a bearnaise, carbonara and amatriciana for my niece. I knew about these dishes but Chef Jean-Pierre incites you to try. I ordered guanciale, pecorino romano, pecorino sardo and bucatini from an Italian outfit in Tokyo. What a great teacher! Some talented people want to show you that they are the only ones capable of doing something. Great teachers want to convince you that you can do it too..... (Whether it is an illusion remains to be seen!!)
I already know how to make Béarnaise Sauce but I love Jean Pierre so much and how he maneuvers within his kitchen, it’s appealing and fun to watch; not to mention his sense of Humor
Forgetting things eh? I went to work, very proud having remembered all my ingredients for chili day, only to become very sad at having forgot my dutch oven to cook it in! Happily a co-worker had packed his car with a pot and a slow cooker the night before, only to forget the ingredients on the day of. By our powers combined: DELICIOUS CHILI!
JP I have learned so much watching your channel. I swear to God I thought I made the best Caesar salad in the world and I learn from you how and why the oil was just separating from the rest of the mix I did not know putting it in slowly, would make such a huge difference much like the recipe here I think God every day that you are here to teach us idiots how to cook we all love you very very much
You cant just scrutinize a great chef like jeanne pierre when he forgot to put salt & pepper in his dish. He's funny and honest teacher. God bless you.
I can bet now day if anyone forget and apology accept he or she forgot it many of us will say he or she is noob . but they fact keep JP differ than other is his attitude behaviour knowledge detail experience way of talking teaching fun
I have learned so much from watching you. Thanks for sharing and teaching me I don’t want to say cook, because I could cook before. You have helped me elevate my cooking. Thank you.
Cheff Jean-Pierre's channel is very underrated. Its a hidden gem and I learned a lot. I hope he blows past 1 million and then 10 million subscribers. I always recommend his channel to all my foodie friends. One of the best cooking channels on UA-cam.
Tarragon is one of the most aromatic herbs for the kitchen it is so clear and distinct from other herbs - i love it for sauces it goes so well with duck :) thanks chef for including and explaining this :)
I have made this twice now. I was always intimidated by these sauces but after watching your videos for months now I felt confident to try this. It came out so much better than I expected. I paired it with tenderloin for Easter. I also followed your clarified butter instruction, and am happy to be making my own instead of buying it. You have completely transformed my abilities as a cook, and I am so grateful I look forward to each segment every week. Thank you!
I am currently growing Chervil. I have tried & tried but failed several times. Finally, I got it to grow. So very delicate but beautiful herb. Since I am in Florida I thought it would never grow but I finally reached the summit. Now on to Tarragon, only French I might add.
Instead od studying for exam I watched cooking videos and as it usually goes, I got hungry. So. I went to the kitchen... thinking I want to try this sauce, I´m gonna make it with something easy. So I made an egg benedict to go with it which I watched some time ago and learned it with great success (at least for me, it tastes great, I havent learned how to make them pretty as master chef in his video yet lol). Then I sat down and took the first bite and UNDERSTOOD why master chef makes that expression at the end of each video as I made the exact same one. I took a bite, then there was a five second silence while my taste buds absorbed all the flavour and yeah, so good. Like, it´s an experience. After eating it all I went to the kitchen and licked the cooking spoon. After that I even fed my cat, who eats twice a day and it´s neither morning nor evening to feed her, but she watched me eat and looked hungry.
Homemade bearnaise have always been a process of water bath and lots of swearing in my family. I've now practiced this recipe enough times that I can do it flawlessly every time, and the looks on my family's faces when I did it "IN A SINGLE PAN?!?!" was priceless.
My Friend! This looks hard enough for me to try! My wife loved the eggs Benedict, and I’m sure she will love this on a filet mignon as well. Thank you for the instruction.
I just found this for you, this is a great buy on Amazon: www.amazon.com/Carving-knife-fork-set-carving/dp/B08TLRZ4FT/ref=sr_1_6?crid=1SY6CT2C4NCSM&dchild=1&keywords=fork+and+knife+carving+set&qid=1634935058&sprefix=fork+and+knife+carving+set%2Caps%2C139&sr=8-6
Fantastic! Admittedly, I never heard of Bearnaise until a few years ago and wow was I hooked the first time I tried it. I prefer it over tartar sauce even. So glad you taught us how to make it.
I love all your sauce recipes JP, you have bought my cooking to the next level, and yes did notice no salt and pepper but you loved it without it, not scared to make it now bring on the next one.
Hi! My favourite sauce! 💛 And there is another way I use it... Adding a bit tomato paste, a bit smoked paprika, garlic, a bit wine (or stock), og serve it with chicken and rice! Always a favourite among my friends! Love Tove
Thank you chef, for sharing a life times worth of experience with us. Watching you has re-invigorated my desire to push myself to cook better for my family and friends. Taking professional technique and applying it to new dishes has made me a much more creative cook and has given me the creative control that I needed to take it to the next level. Thank you Jean !!! --den
Sometimes the difference between a sauce and a soup is a very thin line.....I would chug that gooseneck of sauce like a pirate with a wine jug. This is a must-try recipe! Thanks Chef.
How many chefs would admit that they forgot to add something into a recipe? Not many & that is why Chef Jean-Pierre is such a great teacher/chef because he's so honest & entertaining. He understands that no matter how good a recipe may be it must be adapted to an individuals taste. That sauce looks amazing!
Exactly! Chefs like Gordon Ramsay burn their bread and then call it perfect...
Plus how many times have we seen him say "if you dont 'Ave it, no problem, if you dont like it, dont add it"
@@butterybiscuit346 he truly is a blessing.
@@Batvolle Ramsey is a chef?!
I am a chef too.
I often start to cook something and then - I forget what.
So it ends mostly up as a stew. 😁
The man that never made a mistake, made nothing.
Greetings from Ireland.
🙏😀
indeed👍👍
@@ChefJeanPierre Would a Breville "Control Freak" cooktop be better for you than gas? ua-cam.com/video/xg1z8B7yWDA/v-deo.html
No doubt my friend. Alternatively, get your mother in law to grab you some cuttings 😂
When I was growing up my dad was sous chef and later executive chef at several different fine restaurants. He later owned a successful French bistro in uptown Wichita, KS. My working life started as a kid washing dishes over the summer while also watching the master and his assistants at work. Seeing these videos brings back many great memories and lessons I learned working in those kitchens. Thanks Chef.
Extra servings of Chef on Monday mornings - that is how to start the week!
We love you too, and we are so fortunate!
Thank you Daniel! 😀
I love this... I love Béarnaise, and Hollandaise ... one trick I learned early on, is that if you overdo the heat (I did, as a novice chef)... do not fret, because you can then fold in a chopped hard-cooked egg, and then you have a Sauce Grebiche... it's different, it's not smooth like the originally intended sauces, but you can resurrect a seemingly awful disaster and turn it into something else that is practical, a little different, and can be used in any way you see fit.
😢
Beautiful sauce. Fun to hear about your classical training and memory of being taught to move the whisk in a figure “8” but that you stirred it the regular way when the teacher wasn’t looking! Haha! If we could take a time machine back to that era, what else would we see? I’d love to hear more anecdotes, and how things were different then.
Thanks for starting our Mondays off with a smile. The past 19 months have been so bleak and you’re a ray of sunshine. God bless you, Chef🌷
Thank you Juliette! "If we could take a time machine back to that era, what would we see?" Wow I certainly could write a book. But I rather concentrate on the future than the past!!! 😂
@@ChefJeanPierre
Everyone has a story to tell - but some are juicier than others! 😉
I'm not sure I'd have the coordination to do this. I've watched Jacques Pepin figure 8-ing with his right hand and circling the skillet with his left while literally banging out the omelet at lightning speed!
Write that book anyway, Chef, we'd all love to read it! Over the last 50 years, you must have seen everything from minor mistakes to kitchen disasters to guests who made you think 'I don't care what you order, as long as it's a taxi.' 😀
@@scottmcalba 😂😂😂😂😂😂
We love you too Chef. God Bless you and God Bless America !
🙏🙏🙏😀
Béarnaise sauce is the ultimate on seared Rainbow Trout of Sockeye Salmon!
Absolutely delightful....merci Chef Jean-Pierre
Oh I'm going to try this next time I do salmon!
I love trout, definitely trying it on fish.
Only Chef Jean-Pierre takes the time to explain the why in a recipe. Keep the great videos coming!
JP You are the first chef I ever seen to use Chervil in the sause, they all use parsley. Thumbs up for You!
You just can’t help but like him. I really enjoy the techniques.
🙏🙏🙏💗
Chef, remember, you are a human after all. You never forget to humor us, you show your tricks, you spill and show all the fun you have, and really, I love how you do all of it.
This is the first time that I see this recipe. Thanks for cheering with us. Big hugs for you chef JP, from Puerto Vallarta Mexico
I love doing everything from scratch. The end product is a symphony of taste!
Glad to see the number of subscribers to your channel is steadily rising. You're simply the best cooking channel!
I'm watching that like I do my 401K. One I know will only increase and the other has more fluctuations.
really impressed too
..and again we improve our skill by watching a master at work. When I was taught to cook, it was never this much fun, entertaining or enjoyable.
Thanks again Chef J-P
I make a great Bearnaise, so let me share a few tricks. When you are cooking the egg, yes, keep touching the bottom of the pan, but look for the vapor coming off the mixture! The temp of the pan bottom should hurt if you keep your palm there, but not enough so that you jerk your hand or finger away because it burns. (If you are making yoghurt and don't have a thermometer, the milk should be that same, yes it hurts if I keep my finger in this, and then add the starter) Look for wisps of vapor coming off the beaten mixture. Wisp of vapor, take it off the heat immediately, and add cold butter! Next if the sauce breaks and separates, you are not dead. Use no stick cooking spray - tiny spray, the lecithin 9 times out of 10, will let you beat the stuff back together. Worst case scenario, take another egg yolk, beat and warm, and slowly add the broken sauce into the fresh egg, the same way you added the butter into the egg. You will be fine. The only irretrievable Bearnaise is a scrambled one. Lastly, if you sauce is too thin, you can put it back onto the heat, same palm rule applies, heat and whisk until it thickens, 1-2 minutes max.
I have never seen someone who knows so much, so openly share your hard earned knowledge and experience with us. After using your balsamic vinegars for a month now (and folks in 70 years I have never tasted a product so good) I have decided my Christmas shopping for family will be from your web site. I may even treat myself to one of your non stick skillets. You deserve the business!
Thank you so much 🙏💗😀
If only every teacher/instructor/coach was as open, honest and entertaining as you! Even the pros make little mistakes! Live and learn! The sauce looks awesome!!! Can't wait to try it on a nice NY striploin!
IMO the best instruction of the basic sauces clearly explained and shown. Even I can understand it!!
I am so happy you use chervil. I know so many chefs who use ONLY tarragon, and the difference in flavour when you use both tarragon and chervil is insane.
i love how he basically teaches. if u enjoy a technique or seasoning than do it. real chefs have fun or else it becomes a job. love this guy. 2nd video already and I am so so hooked.
Maybe 1974... in Hawaii the first time, my Dad said order anything you want, I had a fillet of beef with bearnaise and a lobster tail... I fell in love with this sauce
You sir, a champion of the culinary skills. You instruct the audience with such information. Love the videos.
By far the best cooking channel on UA-cam!
Thank you for sharing your expertise with us! Nothing to give but appreciation and gratitude from my side!
This Gentleman is simply Devine.. Love watching
My grandparents owned an herb, honeybee and melon farm. Tarragon was one of my grandmother's favorites. I remember the smell of this sauce wafting from her kitchen when I was young. Thanks Chef, love you.
i love tarragon too
Keep them videos coming Uncle Jean! We can't get enough of your great food and wonderful personality. You are family.
Not editing out common mistakes, like forgetting to add s&p and adding it afterwards…just love it! Thank you for always keeping it real, Chef! God bless😊
Merci chef. Excellent matériel. Super méthode pour expliquer. Bénédictions.
Hi Jean Pierre we sure do miss you. Remember that cruise we were on and how much fun we had. Dr. Richard W Moss here.
what do you mean miss you? He is still around right?
Chef Jean-Pierre, vous êtes formidable ! Un gros merci du Québec !
Looks HEAVENLY. I am so glad you are doing a sauce series. THANK YOU CHEF!!!!
I remember the first time I had bearnaise on lobster. I thought I'd died and gone to heaven. Having downsized from my house with a wonderful gas stove I'm dealing with a quak electric stove. I'm going to attempt this the way you do your hollandaise with the blender. I've used your receipe for that and talk about good! Fingers crossed.
I don't know if you are pressed for time or its you production crew who wants short videos, but in my opinion, the more demonstration and or info, is the way to go. If you'd rather not limit yourself, go for it. If people want to learn, they watch. Well done as always, Chef!
you say we are fantastic, but no! it is you Jean-Pierre! thank you so much!
I’ve watched cooks and chefs all my life… and you are the best Jean-Pierre. Hands down!
Thank you very much 🙏
Bearnaise is a pain in the aise. But it turns steak into something magical. Just do it.
Could not agree with you more, Thanks! 😀
Try it with sliced Tenderloin on a good, crusty French bread. Best steak sandwich, ever.
Thanks for keeping it real chef!
Painaise??
@ chef jean-Pierre . i think you dropped a nugget of wisdom i have never heard anybody else offer . using the simple act of touching the pot to check the temperature is brilliant. i have struggled with this a bit. first try by touching the pot to gauge the temperature and i absolutely nailed it. i did use the bowl over water as a heat source due to a 30 year old electric stove that is all over the place. but moving back and forth by how hot the stainless bowl was in my hand . so easy to keep it in the temp zone you want. thank you very much for sharing with everybody.
Sauce Bearnaise with Roasted Prime Rib......a blast.
I liked how you somewhat discreetly mentioned you are going to get your gas back :) I second that!
YES!!! Indeed, it's coming back in a couple more weeks😀
Making everything from scratch the old way must have been a lot more work, but I bet the flavors were out-of-this-world excellent! Some pre-processed foods are okay, some are even good, and they all are convenient. But often they are not as flavorful as the real thing, slow-made from scratch. I like how you do mise-en-place and make difficult things look easy with a little burst of fast work. Of course it helps to have the ingredients, and the equipment, and the space at hand. Cooking is fun!
Jean-Pierre it is wonderful to see you so excited about all the recipes you make, I grew up in a kitchen helping my dad and he was always so excited about the food before it hit the customers, and un turn I love cooking.
We love you, too, Chef. Merci.
I made a fish chowder almost exactly the same way, minus the fat and plus fish stock. An entire bunch of tarragon. It was fantastic! Little did I know, I was standing on the shoulders of culinary giants. Thanks Jean-Pierre!
We are blessed to have and enjoy CJP. Thank you, Chef!
I am in Toyohashi, Japan, making a bearnaise, carbonara and amatriciana for my niece. I knew about these dishes but Chef Jean-Pierre incites you to try. I ordered guanciale, pecorino romano, pecorino sardo and bucatini from an Italian outfit in Tokyo.
What a great teacher!
Some talented people want to show you that they are the only ones capable of doing something. Great teachers want to convince you that you can do it too..... (Whether it is an illusion remains to be seen!!)
Very, very few Chefs are able to make a truly good Bearnaise sauce from scratch. Chef Jean-Pierre wins the golden onyo!
Can someone help me. Did he say sherbol? I’m not certain. Shallots. Tarragon. Sherbol?
@@rbu2136 Chevril
@@rbu2136 Chervil
@@rbu2136 as he said, if you don't have Chervil, don't worry about it. Tarragon is the only must have for this sauce. This ain't rocket science!
Butter, butter and a little bit more butter! I love your programs so much, dear Jean Pierre. From Melbourne, Australia
I already know how to make Béarnaise Sauce but I love Jean Pierre so much and how he maneuvers within his kitchen, it’s appealing and fun to watch; not to mention his sense of Humor
We all love you too Chef Jean-Pierre !!! ❤🇨🇵🏝
Forgetting things eh? I went to work, very proud having remembered all my ingredients for chili day, only to become very sad at having forgot my dutch oven to cook it in! Happily a co-worker had packed his car with a pot and a slow cooker the night before, only to forget the ingredients on the day of. By our powers combined: DELICIOUS CHILI!
🤣🤣🤣
JP I have learned so much watching your channel. I swear to God I thought I made the best Caesar salad in the world and I learn from you how and why the oil was just separating from the rest of the mix I did not know putting it in slowly, would make such a huge difference much like the recipe here I think God every day that you are here to teach us idiots how to cook we all love you very very much
You cant just scrutinize a great chef like jeanne pierre when he forgot to put salt & pepper in his dish. He's funny and honest teacher. God bless you.
"jeanne"? oh my God, is -he- she one of the trans people now?!
@@fukpoeslaw3613 😅😅
I can bet now day if anyone forget and apology accept he or she forgot it many of us will say he or she is noob . but they fact keep JP differ than other is his attitude behaviour knowledge detail experience way of talking teaching fun
Jean-Pierre is the friendliest,funniest chef I’ve come across on UA-cam! And his depth of cooking knowledge is off the charts ❤
This chef I will never forget…! 👍
I have learned so much from watching you. Thanks for sharing and teaching me I don’t want to say cook, because I could cook before. You have helped me elevate my cooking. Thank you.
Cheff Jean-Pierre's channel is very underrated. Its a hidden gem and I learned a lot. I hope he blows past 1 million and then 10 million subscribers. I always recommend his channel to all my foodie friends. One of the best cooking channels on UA-cam.
🙏🙏🙏😀
Thank you chef, you're great!!!!
I make an excellent Hollandaise, and now I can make the perfect Bearnaise. My life is complete.
Thank you Chef J-P
A rare truce between the master and his enemy...'water'. Thanks for another excellent presentation Chef Jean-Pierre.
Tarragon is one of the most aromatic herbs for the kitchen
it is so clear and distinct from other herbs - i love it for sauces
it goes so well with duck :)
thanks chef for including and explaining this :)
I put this over scallops and spinach. Really good I suggest always having white wine on hand for cooking. Works for SO many things.
I have made this twice now. I was always intimidated by these sauces but after watching your videos for months now I felt confident to try this. It came out so much better than I expected. I paired it with tenderloin for Easter. I also followed your clarified butter instruction, and am happy to be making my own instead of buying it. You have completely transformed my abilities as a cook, and I am so grateful I look forward to each segment every week. Thank you!
He ware’s his personality on his sleeve! He a real guy! Love his personality!
I am currently growing Chervil. I have tried & tried but failed several times. Finally, I got it to grow. So very delicate but beautiful herb. Since I am in Florida I thought it would never grow but I finally reached the summit. Now on to Tarragon, only French I might add.
I love, love, love your channel. Please keep teaching!!
The moment I first put bearnaise in my mouth I was like "yea, tarragon is my favorite herb". Love it!
Was the best restaurant in Ft Lauderdale. Chef Jean please come out of retirement miss you and the great food you cook.
Thank you Joseph, but I like my retirement on UA-cam! 😀
Instead od studying for exam I watched cooking videos and as it usually goes, I got hungry. So. I went to the kitchen... thinking I want to try this sauce, I´m gonna make it with something easy. So I made an egg benedict to go with it which I watched some time ago and learned it with great success (at least for me, it tastes great, I havent learned how to make them pretty as master chef in his video yet lol). Then I sat down and took the first bite and UNDERSTOOD why master chef makes that expression at the end of each video as I made the exact same one. I took a bite, then there was a five second silence while my taste buds absorbed all the flavour and yeah, so good. Like, it´s an experience.
After eating it all I went to the kitchen and licked the cooking spoon.
After that I even fed my cat, who eats twice a day and it´s neither morning nor evening to feed her, but she watched me eat and looked hungry.
🙏🙏🙏😊👍
We love you too. Chef!
I just love how you teach us! So much knowledge given so freely, thank you!!
Homemade bearnaise have always been a process of water bath and lots of swearing in my family.
I've now practiced this recipe enough times that I can do it flawlessly every time, and the looks on my family's faces when I did it "IN A SINGLE PAN?!?!" was priceless.
The thing with tarragon is even when I find it, it doesn't last long. So, I use dried. I LOVE it.
My Friend! This looks hard enough for me to try! My wife loved the eggs Benedict, and I’m sure she will love this on a filet mignon as well. Thank you for the instruction.
I am amazed how much I learn in a 10 minute video from Chef Jean-Pierre! Amazing Chef and a great teacher!
I just found this for you, this is a great buy on Amazon: www.amazon.com/Carving-knife-fork-set-carving/dp/B08TLRZ4FT/ref=sr_1_6?crid=1SY6CT2C4NCSM&dchild=1&keywords=fork+and+knife+carving+set&qid=1634935058&sprefix=fork+and+knife+carving+set%2Caps%2C139&sr=8-6
Fantastic! Admittedly, I never heard of Bearnaise until a few years ago and wow was I hooked the first time I tried it. I prefer it over tartar sauce even. So glad you taught us how to make it.
I love all your sauce recipes JP, you have bought my cooking to the next level, and yes did notice no salt and pepper but you loved it without it, not scared to make it now bring on the next one.
I like the colour and sheen of the sauce. And of course, the taste!
Never even heard tarragon vinegar ...will get some ! In american kitchens we just add tarragon and shallot , i must know what this tastes like !!
And we love you Chef ❤️
Cook well and stay humble
Love the show , I've always been the WORST cook, now I'm cooking things I cannot even pronounce!! Thank you for making it possible.
What a great teacher.
Hi!
My favourite sauce! 💛 And there is another way I use it...
Adding a bit tomato paste, a bit smoked paprika, garlic, a bit wine (or stock), og serve it with chicken and rice!
Always a favourite among my friends!
Love
Tove
Bearnaise? Hollandaise? Food of the gods.
😛! Merci bien!!!
Thank you chef, for sharing a life times worth of experience with us. Watching you has re-invigorated my desire to push myself to cook better for my family and friends. Taking professional technique and applying it to new dishes has made me a much more creative cook and has given me the creative control that I needed to take it to the next level. Thank you Jean !!! --den
Oooh finally! This is going to be... exciting! My favorite sauce, so as always; Thank you, chef!
I am learn so much about cooking from you Jean, besides laughing a lot too.
Thanks for making a complicated sauce look easy!
Ok.... getting all the stuff right now ! Into the kitchen !
Best channel on UA-cam!
Another great video and recipe with Chef JP.
I look forward to every video you post. Thank you for all you do, I'm becoming a better home chef with every video!!
Top Chef Jean Pierre!!! Magnifiques recettes que j'adore repliquer à la maison!!! Merci Thank you so much!
Sometimes the difference between a sauce and a soup is a very thin line.....I would chug that gooseneck of sauce like a pirate with a wine jug. This is a must-try recipe! Thanks Chef.
one of my favorite sauces maybe my favorite thanks CJP.
Thank you 😀Chef!!!!!!!! Merci!!!!! 💝🍽💖🥂🍾☺️☺️☺️
Wonderful! Thank you. One of my top 5 favorite sauces.