Unpretentious quality. You have top quality fish, expert technique and simple ingredients. The light texture of the béarnaise is just sublime. This is one of the few Michelin 3 star chefs who does not go on with superlatives when describing what he is doing. He just explains what he is doing and why he does it that way.
Amazing dish though I couldn't afford some of the ingredients so I made some substitutes.... ...I swapped the Turbot for Fish Fingers and the bearnaise sauce for a tin of beans, pretty versatile little dish, not too light not too heavy. Simple and very tasty. Thanks for sharing!
You’re very fortunate .... if you have this dish you should let us know how good it was ... it looked amazing so I can only imagine how wonderful the taste is
@@whowawoo actually the average Belgian can afford to eat there. Average bank balance in UK (minus €35,000)... Average bank balance in Belgium (plus €35,000)... Minimum wage in Belgium for a dishwasher is €11.62 an hour and that is indexed so it increases every year! Someone who washes dishes!!!
I understand leaving the skin on with it being roasted but why not remove the cartilage? Whenever I've cooked halibut t-bones its something I've always been told to do.
@@timkrygiel7333 Turbot bones and cartilage have a wonderful flavour. The way this guy cuts and cooks it is the absolute best. Filleting is just for show. I cook this fish the same way without the sauce and still end up crunching on the bones, because they are so tasty.
Jesus. I can't get tarragon that looks anything like this. Amazing. All of this is amazing. The entire process. Re-heating some leftover Chinese, and drooling over this dish.
Chef Peter Goossens, Thank you for your detailed demonstration and instructions for your preparation of the turbot and the bernaise sauce. Hartelijk bedankt, David, Brooklyn, New York
this type of food is more in the traditional french style of high cuisine, which is totally different from the tasting menus of alot of modern Michelin starred restaurants. Although this particular dish does seem like a very large portion even for the traditional style, but no doubt you will pay alot for this meal, because of all the expensive ingerdients, and the fact that it is a 3 michelin star restaurant.
@@prodigypenn true, food now evolves alot and i agree that the price maybe high. Its just that for me if given an choice, i would go for a 3 course meal that is solid in the size of portions rather than 15 course tasting menu of bits and bite portion. How about your choice?
Respect to this Belgian guy. Belgians are very talented in cooking. One of the most gastronomic countries I've ever known. Full of surprises and astonishment 👌👌👌
I love this kind of 3 Michelin stars restaurant. Not some full of gold fancy diamond covered place, where 10 dudes put 1 leaf on the top of the dish with tweezers and ruler, and the head chef is controlling the process with such rough face, like he gonna eat that dude, who will put the leaf 0.0001mm wrong. This place feels warm and cozy, food looks simply delicious. Eatable gold and caviar might not be necessary for 3 stars of Michelin.
It's amazing to consider that every movement made by a michelin star chef is not without reason. Comparably, my cursor is all over the place before it reaches its target destination.
Une plat des années 80 mais en ce moment elles reviennent à la mode. Sûrement délicieux. Le meilleur poisson avec du homard et une sauce classique c’est toujours gagnant.
I'm going to use the Bearnaise technique shown to start Hollandaise. Do the emulsion with the softened butter second, after first binding the yolks. New to me, anyway.
Isn't that how it's normally done Clarify the butter Beat your yolks with tarragon vinegar or gastrique, till they become quit thick(this is like sabayon) then slowly add the butter till u have the right consistency. Add tarragon and season with salt and cayenne( won't make it grey-ish and no chance to get big chunks of the pepper)
He used softened raw butter, not clarified. I thought Hollandaise was prepared in a double boiler, adding clarified butter as the yolks heated until the proper consistency is reached. Then finishing with salt and lemon juice. This method binds the yolks with water, then adds raw, unclarified butter.
For the bearnaise I have found a middle ground between gossens method and french cooking academy. They say reduce a gastrix with vinegar and herbs, let it cool and then beat the yolks. Gossen just takes a vinegar and water to the yolks. You can take a shortcut in time for the gastrix, by throwing in ice cubes to cool it. Thereby you can start beating the yolks immediately. Then in with the additional fresh herbs to taste. Water or ice in warm gastrix or room temperature yolks. A productivity enhancer for wannabe micheliners at home.
Hello ! You don't really need to let it cool down, because we always had water with the egg yolk and reduction before doing the sabayon. But what im surprise with is that you call the bearnaise reduction a gastrique, which is not ! Gastrique is caramelised sugar deglaze with vinegar, that we use to give taste for sauces ! Have a good day
I love it,old school,honest,simple.Good.😍 In the restaurant I work atm we would dott dott dott dott line line another line shiso miso cream creme creme creme mayonnaise mayonnaise mayonnaise crispy crispy something more crispy, scarlet here oyster leaves there, something fermented yeah, a perfect egg, green oil, red oil, black oil,Sous Vide,Smoked Butter, Maltodextrin.......And in the end the plate looks spartanic😂😭😱😆😜 Really miss the old school.
So butter to grill the turbot, butter for the bearnaise sauce, and butter to fry the lobster. Looks line 19th century French cuisine is still unrivaled!
And let's not forget the fiddling around with tweezers. Cause we all know that if the baby coriander isn't placed in a 45°angle the dish is ruined & it goes into the trash lol
Damn Brother, you nailed it. Perfect. There should be more comments like yours on these types of videos. Me? This kinda thing never, ever gets even a little bit old to me. Been a while since I been in a professional kitchen, but the love and desire to continue soaking up every bit of the art as possible, hopefully will stay with me until I check out. Respect to you Bro.
Note: Hof van Cleve is currently the best restaurant in the world according to wbppstars standard with a rating of 94. Gordon Ramsay flagship restaurant in London, Restaurant Gordon Ramsay currently holds the rating of 85.
Yet it isn’t at all the actual best in the world. They have some great stuff at Hof van Cleve, but this is not really a creative dish - just pure taste. Which isn’t bad at all, but won’t rank you high when it comes to naming the world’s best.
@@VVMagi Michelin is not known for its fascination with what you call creativity. I'd like you to name one creative dish associated with Gordon Ramsay. When I hear the name I think immediately of Beef Wellington. Hardly the most creative idea, but when executed perfectly, unbeatable. What creative dish of his were you thinking of?
Gordon facking Ramsey can't even cook Carbonara. Completely overrated. Also, Marco Pierre White did not make Gordon cry, he made himself cry. That was his choice to cry.
Now, this is how i cook at home. Simple ingridients and fast oven. Butter solves it all guy as well. I love our european way of eating. :) Winter is coming thow, so more long cooking meals ahead, but summer will be here in no time :) The fish shoud be either started or finished on the grill on the side of the bone, the same way the porterhouse steak is firstly placed on the bone, the reason is for a fish to get worm and start coocking from the inside out. The bone is acting as a transmiter of the heat so it will also shorten the blood, so it wont spill out (one can never squeze it out before as he showed, only salt can do it, but not here) I also woud put the onion before the lobster, as this is not a cold tartar souse, but hot and soft bearnese. Now the grill placed under the shelf is wrong as all the fat will be hard to clean, but good there are the cleaners. Also the wedding ring, shef!? Seriously? Otherwise top!
Only part they didn't mention is about the oven where they cook the fish, is that the feel temperature is lower but it's set on 200'C so the feel temp in such an oven should be around 175-180
Hey i see a lot of guys here from the kitchen. Im chef too, but how is a way of serving this dish? Does the customer get that big piece of the turbot? Btw organization and smooth way of cooking is really nice to watch. Well done
We have a similar looking fish over here in the USA, we call it a flounder. I love watching masters of their craft work, in any profession. That kitchen sounds like it's got a blast furnace going on. I wonder what the charge on a wonderful dish like this would be?
Though not sure about his technique of scraping the butter off the spoon with the whisk which has the bernaise sauce on it, then putting that spoon back into the butter from what I could see. Could be wrong, and if that butter is only for making bernaise with then maybe its ok, but that otherwise is quite a bit of contamination :/
@@jlpl_HL - I was wondering how he avoided splitting the bearnaise when he added the hot lobster and butter that it had been fried in - I guess you answered the question :-)
He wouldn't be making that sauce for one thing. It's a sauce built on butter, live with it. If you're anti-butter, use another sauce. There are plenty out there, like bitter vinegar envy sauce.
You hear a lot of misunderstood criticisms of small portions at 2 and 3 Michelin star restaurants, but that is a serious portion of turbot. I don’t know if it’s for a single diner or meant to be shared between 2 people. But if it’s for a single person than it’s pretty extravagant!
@@Marc-hx5vp Since Dutch is a Germanic language it's absolutely not incorrect to call it as I did. It's not my fault someone decided to name their country after an entire ethnic group with splinter cultures forming their own dialects well before that Nation State was formed and thus confusing the matter for those without H.S. level reading comprehension.
@@macanoodough Very broad strokes. Sure they are all Germanic languages, but not German. Flemish is a version of Dutch. Flemings and Dutchman understand eachother, more like Spanish from Latin America vs Spanish from Spain. German is a different language, different words, different Grammar.
@@macanoodough hahaaha no dude it's totally not correct to call it "some version of German" just because it's a Germanic language. By that logic you can, literally, say that English is some version of German too
I love how compact and we'll designed that kitchen is. Even has a little butchers block. I wonder if it is a development or event kitchen. Unless out of show is another acre of kitchen
His restaurant is in a farmhouse (Hof Van Cleve -- hof means like farmhouse -- out in the country. I'm sure he has space enough to set a little side-kitchen off to do stuff like this. He's a pretty media-savvy guy in Belgium, but not your Ramsay type in the least. Ramsay has abundant stars for restaurants he visits once in a while. Goossens has three and he's behind the stove any time you go there.
Unless you are a master chef yourself, you wont notice the difference between this fish and one you'll find at a reasonable price at your local fishmonger. The lobster and fish might cost you 50$ at most. The rest is almost irrelevant, so im sure you can do all that yourself for 60 easily. Unless i missed a fancy truffle or caviar somewhere, im not sure where you get the 500 euro.
Kind of surprised at the portion size of turbot, I thought it was for two people sharing, I bet its fairly expensive on the menu but looks amazing, handy way of making Bearnaise sauce too.
Unpretentious quality. You have top quality fish, expert technique and simple ingredients. The light texture of the béarnaise is just sublime. This is one of the few Michelin 3 star chefs who does not go on with superlatives when describing what he is doing. He just explains what he is doing and why he does it that way.
Glorious. Just the Lobster Bearnaise alone is a work of artistry and skill. The Turbot steak is perfection. Butter!
Like Julia Child already said:" You can never have enough Butter in the house!"
This disc is requires both labor and utmost skill in addition to the best ingredients. He deserves every cent he receives for this wonderful dish!
Old school cooking at its finest, pure simplicity.
Watching him make bearnaise is amazing
Advanced as phuk making it on the stove
He just whipped it out like it was nothing. Awesome - yes.
Amazing dish though I couldn't afford some of the ingredients so I made some substitutes....
...I swapped the Turbot for Fish Fingers and the bearnaise sauce for a tin of beans, pretty versatile little dish, not too light not too heavy. Simple and very tasty.
Thanks for sharing!
Did you add three packets of butter to the beans to give it that authentic Michelin taste? :-)
so... you just fried something else and added a side of canned beans- that's just a sad dinner not a variation of this dish hahaha
@@braindmgindustries I was joking! :)
@@braindmgindustries Dunno. There's just something fishy about your comment...
@opachki
Um really dude? You couldn’t tell he was joking/being ironic? C’mon, now......
A true classic cooked by a real chef , I salut you chef
A great chef and person. His restaurent is just 1km from my home.
And you still can't afford to eat there
You’re very fortunate .... if you have this dish you should let us know how good it was ... it looked amazing so I can only imagine how wonderful the taste is
I once ate a human
@@whowawoo actually the average Belgian can afford to eat there. Average bank balance in UK (minus €35,000)... Average bank balance in Belgium (plus €35,000)... Minimum wage in Belgium for a dishwasher is €11.62 an hour and that is indexed so it increases every year! Someone who washes dishes!!!
@@jordy46682 Obviously average people from the civilzed world can afford to eat there if they want to. Such a strange thing to say..
This was a classic French dish, timeless and authentic ..... Well done chef !!
I understand leaving the skin on with it being roasted but why not remove the cartilage? Whenever I've cooked halibut t-bones its something I've always been told to do.
@@timkrygiel7333 The flavour my friend ! The flesh next to the bone is wonderful. Plus, it has a better standing for presentation.
@@timkrygiel7333 Turbot bones and cartilage have a wonderful flavour. The way this guy cuts and cooks it is the absolute best. Filleting is just for show. I cook this fish the same way without the sauce and still end up crunching on the bones, because they are so tasty.
Jesus. I can't get tarragon that looks anything like this. Amazing. All of this is amazing. The entire process. Re-heating some leftover Chinese, and drooling over this dish.
Nice, simple, no bs decoration and pretentious skill, great!
Chef Peter Goossens, Thank you for your detailed demonstration and instructions for your preparation of the turbot and the bernaise sauce. Hartelijk bedankt, David, Brooklyn, New York
Look Peter, it's David from NYC ...
@@MaFd0n What was the purpose of your comment? Does the chef know you; and do you also live in Brooklyn?
I loved his little swim/wiggle example of the fish swimming on bottom of ocean!
yeah. 17 minutes to cook a food for just 2 minutes eating, what a waste of time .
@@upahtv huh?
@@upahtv You would eat all that in 2 minutes? Are you an American?
@@upahtv is 17 minutes a lot?
@@upahtv You are either just trolling, or an imbecile. I think maybe both.
So glad I found this channel, AMAZING channel brilliant documentarys
Yup.. thats a portion in my book~ worth the money paid. Simple to the point no fuss cooking and the end product is superb. The food i want to eat.
this type of food is more in the traditional french style of high cuisine, which is totally different from the tasting menus of alot of modern Michelin starred restaurants. Although this particular dish does seem like a very large portion even for the traditional style, but no doubt you will pay alot for this meal, because of all the expensive ingerdients, and the fact that it is a 3 michelin star restaurant.
@@prodigypenn true, food now evolves alot and i agree that the price maybe high. Its just that for me if given an choice, i would go for a 3 course meal that is solid in the size of portions rather than 15 course tasting menu of bits and bite portion. How about your choice?
that dish would almost certainly be for 2 people on the menu :P update: checked and it is.
Wow this dish looks absolutely amazing. I could imagine the smell and taste mmmmhh.
He beat that Bernaise sauce like it owed him money.
:)
😂👌
😂
She better not be gone all night and come back with no money!😤
💀😭
Unbelievable. Was just wondering what to do with all the turbot I have in my fridge and this video comes up on my watch list.
And did you have the rest of the ingredients?
You silly nanny
Sam K They are simple enough ingredients aside from the lobster no? Just Turbot with Béarnaise sauce is heavenly already.
And creepy at the same time..
Feed it to the gulls.
Great chef and great drummer. 160bpm.
Drummer?
@@-RandomBiz- when he prepares the sauce his movements are really fast and with tempo. Like a drummer.
@@dragonflyworkshop Oh ok lol he got that stick control lmao
Spectacular. A true chef. Simple and good.
He is a master using that whisk.
Worth seeing on it's own.
Respect to this Belgian guy. Belgians are very talented in cooking. One of the most gastronomic countries I've ever known. Full of surprises and astonishment 👌👌👌
I love this kind of 3 Michelin stars restaurant.
Not some full of gold fancy diamond covered place, where 10 dudes put 1 leaf on the top of the dish with tweezers and ruler, and the head chef is controlling the process with such rough face, like he gonna eat that dude, who will put the leaf 0.0001mm wrong.
This place feels warm and cozy, food looks simply delicious. Eatable gold and caviar might not be necessary for 3 stars of Michelin.
So true, i would rather want 100 % taste like this dish than a freaking flower and some useless gold on my food
Believe me, this guys will also tear you into pieces if you fuck up
good amount of food. flavours that work. touches of detail. really delicious looks like
It's amazing to consider that every movement made by a michelin star chef is not without reason.
Comparably, my cursor is all over the place before it reaches its target destination.
Une plat des années 80 mais en ce moment elles reviennent à la mode. Sûrement délicieux. Le meilleur poisson avec du homard et une sauce classique c’est toujours gagnant.
I could understand all you wrote malgré it's in French 🥳🥳🥳
I'm going to use the Bearnaise technique shown to start Hollandaise. Do the emulsion with the softened butter second, after first binding the yolks. New to me, anyway.
Isn't that how it's normally done
Clarify the butter
Beat your yolks with tarragon vinegar or gastrique, till they become quit thick(this is like sabayon) then slowly add the butter till u have the right consistency.
Add tarragon and season with salt and cayenne( won't make it grey-ish and no chance to get big chunks of the pepper)
normal way !
He used softened raw butter, not clarified. I thought Hollandaise was prepared in a double boiler, adding clarified butter as the yolks heated until the proper consistency is reached. Then finishing with salt and lemon juice. This method binds the yolks with water, then adds raw, unclarified butter.
30 years in hotels and it's also new to me, though it all makes perfect sense too.
Thank you so much for sharing... I always had difficulties with hollandaise and béarnaise sauces I see my past mistakes!!!
Have eaten there a few times.One of the best in the world!
Out of interest. How much did it cost???
@@jslfcs6655 cheapest menu about 200€ p.person
Breathtaking skill. Wonderful food 🍷
This is not Cooking, This is Art.
For the bearnaise I have found a middle ground between gossens method and french cooking academy.
They say reduce a gastrix with vinegar and herbs, let it cool and then beat the yolks. Gossen just takes a vinegar and water to the yolks.
You can take a shortcut in time for the gastrix, by throwing in ice cubes to cool it. Thereby you can start beating the yolks immediately. Then in with the additional fresh herbs to taste. Water or ice in warm gastrix or room temperature yolks.
A productivity enhancer for wannabe micheliners at home.
Hello ! You don't really need to let it cool down, because we always had water with the egg yolk and reduction before doing the sabayon.
But what im surprise with is that you call the bearnaise reduction a gastrique, which is not ! Gastrique is caramelised sugar deglaze with vinegar, that we use to give taste for sauces !
Have a good day
Thanks mine came out exactly like yours
I’ve watched this like 10 times for over a 6 year period 👌🏾👌🏾
Wow, thats a HUGE portion.
whenever I need a refresh on how to make Bearnaise this is the video I go to 😀
I love it,old school,honest,simple.Good.😍
In the restaurant I work atm we would dott dott dott dott line line another line shiso miso cream creme creme creme mayonnaise mayonnaise mayonnaise crispy crispy something more crispy, scarlet here oyster leaves there, something fermented yeah, a perfect egg, green oil, red oil, black oil,Sous Vide,Smoked Butter, Maltodextrin.......And in the end the plate looks spartanic😂😭😱😆😜
Really miss the old school.
So butter to grill the turbot, butter for the bearnaise sauce, and butter to fry the lobster. Looks line 19th century French cuisine is still unrivaled!
No Knoor stock pot?
bitofolivool
You can replace the turbot steak with a couple Knorr cubes.
I love knowing exactly what you're joking about lmfao fantastic comment
Could use knorr barenaise
You can have the side with lobster or scallop or bacon. There’s really no wrong options here, its your choice
The key to all Michelin stars:
Copious amounts of butter and vigorous whisking.
And let's not forget the fiddling around with tweezers.
Cause we all know that if the baby coriander isn't placed in a 45°angle the dish is ruined & it goes into the trash lol
Bearnaise sauce is essentially hot mayo
Edible flours. Drops of flavored sauces. Deep fried lotus root garnish. Liquid nitrogen something.
Stephan Reichelt you need just to cook the eggs , not a hot mayo 🙈🙈
@@stephanreichelt1960 Try that and see how it works out for you.
Amazing tips for perfect Bearnaise. The main body of the base sauce is actually water and egg yolk. Very little butter. Love this video
where’s the red wine flavor? the tarragon vinegar, perhaps?
@@evelyn4885 red wine flavor does not belong in bearnaise sauce.
Bravo, great idea and looks amazing
It’s amazing, all of the love and effort for one dish. To me, you either feel it or you don’t-
Damn Brother, you nailed it. Perfect. There should be more comments like yours on these types of videos. Me? This kinda thing never, ever gets even a little bit old to me. Been a while since I been in a professional kitchen, but the love and desire to continue soaking up every bit of the art as possible, hopefully will stay with me until I check out. Respect to you Bro.
I love all the high quality cutting boards he's got all over the kitchen
Teiteitrotoetwurottwutrutrtyuwrtuwtrtrtwutuwtuworewtuwt
MrFunkhauser maybe thats the reason why he ownes a 3 stars restaurant for more then 20 years
Note: Hof van Cleve is currently the best restaurant in the world according to wbppstars standard with a rating of 94. Gordon Ramsay flagship restaurant in London, Restaurant Gordon Ramsay currently holds the rating of 85.
Yet it isn’t at all the actual best in the world. They have some great stuff at Hof van Cleve, but this is not really a creative dish - just pure taste. Which isn’t bad at all, but won’t rank you high when it comes to naming the world’s best.
The difference is that Peter Goossens is in the kitchen, and Gordon is on the telly.
@@VVMagi Michelin is not known for its fascination with what you call creativity. I'd like you to name one creative dish associated with Gordon Ramsay. When I hear the name I think immediately of Beef Wellington. Hardly the most creative idea, but when executed perfectly, unbeatable.
What creative dish of his were you thinking of?
Gordon facking Ramsey can't even cook Carbonara. Completely overrated.
Also, Marco Pierre White did not make Gordon cry, he made himself cry. That was his choice to cry.
A true master at work.
Minimalist, calm, no BS cooking ..
Looks so easy when a pro makes it. I am impressed and drooling 🤤
I've already eaten there and it's Fabulous!!!! :-)
Please take me next time!
jep, zalige ervaring met een prijskaartje :p
@@wm.d.nelson4912 :-)
@@colin1656 idd
thats was so great i wish i could have seen the plating
I often make this easy, affordable, dish; especially when I’m pressed for time, as it is so quick & simple to do.
First, catch your turbot.
How is it affordable? I have not even ever seen a turbot in any fish store....and I don't want to know how much they are!
Sarcasm sarcasm sarcasm.
The way he make the bernaise,it make me wanna start cooking.Best chef,you see it also by his cut finger!
If you mean with "cut finger" the one from his left hand: it is not cut, it is just bent inwards.
The only thing I was thinking the whole time was damn that’s gonna be a lot of dishes
Ahh, the dishwasher.
The unsung hero of every restaurant on Earth.
C est surtout la cuisson du poisson qui est exceptionnelle. Waouh
Now I can finally use the turbot in my garden haha
not too fancy not too rustic, I love it
3:04
tap tap ... push push push ... tap tap
Now, this is how i cook at home.
Simple ingridients and fast oven.
Butter solves it all guy as well. I love our european way of eating. :)
Winter is coming thow, so more long cooking meals ahead, but summer will be here in no time :)
The fish shoud be either started or finished on the grill on the side of the bone, the same way the porterhouse steak is firstly placed on the bone, the reason is for a fish to get worm and start coocking from the inside out. The bone is acting as a transmiter of the heat so it will also shorten the blood, so it wont spill out (one can never squeze it out before as he showed, only salt can do it, but not here)
I also woud put the onion before the lobster, as this is not a cold tartar souse, but hot and soft bearnese. Now the grill placed under the shelf is wrong as all the fat will be hard to clean, but good there are the cleaners. Also the wedding ring, shef!? Seriously? Otherwise top!
First time seeing a menu from a 3 started cheff that can actually fix your hunger problem.
You should check out Paul Bocuse's recipes. Enough food to feed a village .
It seems delicious. Best wishes from Bilbao.
I feel like this translation just skipped a few parts.
I speak dutch and they actually did a good job translating all important info.
Yeah, don't worry, it's not all literally translated but all important info is present in the subtitles...
so u guys are saying in the dutch language ur using lots of unneeded words :D
Only part they didn't mention is about the oven where they cook the fish, is that the feel temperature is lower but it's set on 200'C so the feel temp in such an oven should be around 175-180
They hit the important parts.
Hey i see a lot of guys here from the kitchen. Im chef too, but how is a way of serving this dish? Does the customer get that big piece of the turbot? Btw organization and smooth way of cooking is really nice to watch. Well done
"gordon taking notes"
tap fish, butter on, in the pan, done
Forgot the 'season beautifully'
beautiful
4 minutes instead of 14, cause gordon's meals 90% uncooked ;)
Gently sweep and squeeze fresh lemon
@@joshuabarlow9048 Rather have a chef say that, then having someone explain the process of applying salt & pepper for 2,5 minutes.
We have a similar looking fish over here in the USA, we call it a flounder. I love watching masters of their craft work, in any profession. That kitchen sounds like it's got a blast furnace going on. I wonder what the charge on a wonderful dish like this would be?
Probably 120 Euro?
watching this with a spoon of nutella in my hand
Nutella sucks
😂
pocky sticks here... chocolate and strawberry at the same time ;¬)
I see Mrs. Croccombe has competition.
very interesting technique on the bernaise with the fresh butter ill try it next time :) good stuff thx for sharing this :)
This tecnique is necesary that the bearneise sauce is not cut in the process.👍
Though not sure about his technique of scraping the butter off the spoon with the whisk which has the bernaise sauce on it, then putting that spoon back into the butter from what I could see. Could be wrong, and if that butter is only for making bernaise with then maybe its ok, but that otherwise is quite a bit of contamination :/
@@jlpl_HL - I was wondering how he avoided splitting the bearnaise when he added the hot lobster and butter that it had been fried in - I guess you answered the question :-)
@@5ynthesizerpatel He added the bearnaise to the lobster, not the other way round.
@@5ynthesizerpatel it was room temp butter, that brought down the sabayon temp down, and the lobster brought it back to temp.
Looks amazing but just wondering what would he do without butter
He wouldn't be making that sauce for one thing. It's a sauce built on butter, live with it. If you're anti-butter, use another sauce. There are plenty out there, like bitter vinegar envy sauce.
Watching this while eating a bowl of white pasta with salt. I had a stock cube in the water but was too old to dissolve...
🤣🤣🤣
what great luck! a lobster just for the sauce on the other hand... this some luxury trash at its finest, I'll go with the pasta
You hear a lot of misunderstood criticisms of small portions at 2 and 3 Michelin star restaurants, but that is a serious portion of turbot. I don’t know if it’s for a single diner or meant to be shared between 2 people. But if it’s for a single person than it’s pretty extravagant!
Just Amazing looks delicious. Made by a true professional.
And decent portion as well.
At least it's unlike other pretentious restaurant, where i dont need a microscope to find where my dish is at
Masterpiece. I will use "grid" grilling technique at home.
GOATED on the whisk
I was watching at 1.5 speed and the dude was like a machine.
@@ManSkirtBrew The figure-of-eight technique is the best out there. Yeah but try doing it.
J'ai adoré! Je regrette d'être si éloigné de votre restaurant. Bravo
éloigné in distance or money?
10:15 Just discovered a new ASMR spot. Peter Goossens vigorously making a bearnaise sauce
love it, very old fashioned
What watch is he wearing? It is beautiful
Darude:Model Sandstorm
Lebeau Courally
The kind he can afford at a 3 Michelin star chefs salary.
Not the kind you should be wearing in a kitchen especially not with a leather band
I love that it is a proper portion.
Hahaha..I was waiting to see if he was going to cut a small portion for the dish
That thing looks like a piece of pie! Amazing knife and whisk skills
Outstanding!
How much would this dish cost at the restaurant?
$95 ish id bet. I've had similar things in Hawaii, it really depends on where you order such a thing. Could be 50$, could be 200$.
Check the website for prices. 3 stars is expensive beyond belief.
Genius in the Kitchen! Top dish!
Ok, for a min i thought he was gonna make a turbo dish in speed cause i had no idea what a turbot steak is until i saw the video...!!! :)))
i was looking forward to an easy and quick recipe as well xD
Real cooking.
Real classic .
This dish looks absolutely delicious!
Great technique, simple, and fresh. You can't go wrong. I love eating well.
All i can think of while he is beating the eggs:
WHISK WHISK WHISK DONT LET IT COOK DONT LET IT COOK WHISK WHISK WHISK
If not you end up with scrambled eggs
You know best eh 😉
Simple and beautiful
wait isnt this a reupload...
Hi Pierre, it is partially: there are new images and extra information, and most importantly, English subtitles 🙌
This is literally the best real time cooking I have ever seen on UA-cam. This guy is AMAZING!
I guess I never heard Flemish spoken before so I thought he made up his own version of German...
It's the Belgium version of Dutch, not German
@@Marc-hx5vp Since Dutch is a Germanic language it's absolutely not incorrect to call it as I did. It's not my fault someone decided to name their country after an entire ethnic group with splinter cultures forming their own dialects well before that Nation State was formed and thus confusing the matter for those without H.S. level reading comprehension.
@@macanoodough Very broad strokes. Sure they are all Germanic languages, but not German. Flemish is a version of Dutch. Flemings and Dutchman understand eachother, more like Spanish from Latin America vs Spanish from Spain. German is a different language, different words, different Grammar.
@@macanoodough hahaaha no dude it's totally not correct to call it "some version of German" just because it's a Germanic language. By that logic you can, literally, say that English is some version of German too
@@helloitismetomato Root derivatives are key to understanding the scripts before us.
I love how compact and we'll designed that kitchen is. Even has a little butchers block. I wonder if it is a development or event kitchen. Unless out of show is another acre of kitchen
His restaurant is in a farmhouse (Hof Van Cleve -- hof means like farmhouse -- out in the country. I'm sure he has space enough to set a little side-kitchen off to do stuff like this. He's a pretty media-savvy guy in Belgium, but not your Ramsay type in the least. Ramsay has abundant stars for restaurants he visits once in a while. Goossens has three and he's behind the stove any time you go there.
Wasn't this an old video? I swear I have seen this exact preparation before.
Hi, it is partially: there are new images and extra information, and most importantly, English subtitles 🙌
@@wbpstars Thank you for the English subtitles!
Jesus Hong . I see corona time took its toll on you .
🙏🏼 G.N.I.P young man
(G- go , N- nuts ,In Peace)
Turbot looks nice but that watch. Now that is a timeless classic.
A nice easy recipe you can recreate at the comfort of your own kitchen. You just need 500 euros worth of ingredients and a ton of pans and other stuff
Unless you are a master chef yourself, you wont notice the difference between this fish and one you'll find at a reasonable price at your local fishmonger. The lobster and fish might cost you 50$ at most. The rest is almost irrelevant, so im sure you can do all that yourself for 60 easily. Unless i missed a fancy truffle or caviar somewhere, im not sure where you get the 500 euro.
Peter in mijn ogen een van de beste koks ter wereld
yes, that's the way I cook turbot for my kids
Kind of surprised at the portion size of turbot, I thought it was for two people sharing, I bet its fairly expensive on the menu but looks amazing, handy way of making Bearnaise sauce too.
One of the best chefs in Belgium, probably 350-400 euros for a menu
I'm guessing that dish is for the four-top.
The website explains that the choice of a set menu is for the whole table.
hofvancleve.com/en/menus#the-freshness-of-nature
Butter makes everything tasty ;)
Toffe video, ik kom zeker een keer Tarbot bij u eten! Groeten uit Nederland