T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1348.1 | | CALVA::WOLINSKI | uCoder sans Frontieres | Thu Aug 25 1988 10:05 | 12 |
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The one I use is very simple,
Saute 1-2 Tbp of finely minced shallots or onions, 2 or more cloves
of garlic in 2 Tbp of butter until transparent. Add 1/3 cup of honey
and 1/3 cup of Dijon style mustard. Bring to a simmer and then remove
from the heat. You can also add a pinch of mixed herbs if you want.
Goes great on chicken and fish.
-mike
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1348.2 | | VIA::GLANTZ | Just a bag of quarks & leptons | Thu Aug 25 1988 13:32 | 12 |
| Variations on Mike W's recipe: use less honey (maybe a Tbs or less),
and add some heavy cream until it thins to the consistency you want.
You can also add ground pepper (white is best). You can also add a Tbs
or 2 of white wine or cognac (less if cognac) before thinning with the
cream.
Comment on Mike's recipe: I like the taste of shallots in this recipe
a lot better than onion, and I sometimes use less garlic.
Incidentally, some people like this sauce as a salad dressing.
- Mike
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1348.3 | Did I actually get complimented on dinner??? | EMASA2::MAHON | | Tue Aug 30 1988 14:44 | 6 |
| I am forever trying to spruce up my husbands dinners. He likes
to eat fish, and I was looking for a new sauce. This one is out
of the world (so he says). He even asked if I could use it all
the time on his fish. I put alittle more dijon (actually, I used
guldens), and a little less honey, because he is not too keen on
very sweet sauce. Thumbs up to this recipe.
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1348.4 | Addition to last note | EMASA2::MAHON | | Tue Aug 30 1988 14:51 | 5 |
| Adding on to note 1348.3, I didn't barbecue the fish. It was pooouring
out and I wasn't about to use the gas grill. I put the fish on
tin foil, poured the sauce on top, and covered it up with more tin
foil. It kind of bakes the flavor into the fish. I only used scrod,
but it came out very tasty.
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1348.6 | this one's good | CSG::SCHOFIELD | | Fri Sep 09 1988 11:44 | 6 |
| I just made this up last week and it was fantastic on chicken and
fish. Dijon mustard with a couple of shakes of red pepper and garlic
and black pepper. Mix and spread on food and bake/broil, whatever.
it was really good, the red pepper gives it a bit of a tang.
bs
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1348.7 | Mustard & Bourbon Marinade | NECVAX::OBRIEN_J | | Tue Sep 13 1988 15:25 | 22 |
| MUSTARD AND BOURBON MARINADE
(GOURMET/AUGUST 1988)
1/2 cup Dijon-style mustard
1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons bourbon
1/4 cup soy sauce
1/2 cup firmly packed dark brown sugar
2 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce
1/3 cup minced scallion
In a bowl stir together the mustard, the bourbon, the soy sauce,
the brown sugar, the Worcestershire sauce, and the scallion. Use
the marinade to marinate shrimp or scallops, covered, at room
temperature for 1 hour, or beef, chicken, or pork, covered and
chilled, overnight. Baste the shellfish or meat with the
marinade as it is grilled.
Makes about 1 1/3 cups.
Have not tried, but sounds like what you may be looking for.
Enjoy!
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1348.8 | Another variation | PENUTS::HOGLUND | | Wed Sep 21 1988 12:34 | 2 |
| Add a pinch of dill weed for fish.
.
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1348.9 | mustard sauce for steak. | PAKORA::KANDERSON | Kat came back,the very next day | Thu Dec 03 1992 15:32 | 3 |
| Can't find it in here....
Does anyone have the sauce recipe for Steak "a'la Provance"???? (sp)
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1348.10 | | CALVA::WOLINSKI | uCoder sans Frontieres | Fri Dec 04 1992 10:36 | 30 |
|
Rep .9
>>>Does anyone have the sauce recipe for Steak "a'la Provance"???? (sp)
I'm not quite sure about the name but try this,
2 Cups beef stock reduced to 1 Cup
2 TBsp chopped shallots
1 clove minced garlic
1/3 Cup cream or half/half
3-4 TBsp strong mustard
Saute the shallots and garlic in alittle olive oil until soft.
Add the reduced beef stock and cream. When you do this remove
the pan from the heat and let it cool slightly which will help
the cream from sperating. Reduce the sauce by about 1/3 over
medium heat again low to medium heat should keep the sauce
from curdling. Thicken the sauce if you like with alittle
cornstarch and water. Just before you serve stir in the mustard.
If you add the mustard too soon it will greatly reduce the
taste. You can also add salt and pepper to taste and your
favorite herbs. This sauce also goes well with pork or chicken
if your substitute chicken stock for the beef.
-mike
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