T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3803.1 | Use Butter! | LANDO::EBENS | Mary Jean Ebens - BXB2-2/G06 | Tue Jun 01 1993 13:35 | 1 |
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3803.2 | re:-1 AND season to taste! | LEVERS::WOODFORD | Real Person seeks Real Position-Offers anyone? | Fri Jun 04 1993 14:38 | 1 |
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3803.3 | There is such a thing as a butter SAUCE! | TEMPE::WAGNER | Tuned to music no one can hear... | Sat Jun 05 1993 07:39 | 13 |
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RE: .1 & .2
Thank you so much for you responses! I hope I amused you sufficiently!
I guess I should have used the word THICK in my opening question. And
maybe I should have ask for a specific group of spices.
But thank you for your responses anyway.
Dave
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3803.4 | Beurre Blanc | ASDG::HARRIS | Brian Harris | Sun Jun 06 1993 12:03 | 33 |
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The classic butter sauce is a Beurre Blanc. Properly made, this is a
warm, thick and creamy sauce, made of reduced wine & vinegar with lots
of sweet butter whipped in. The trick is to keep the sauce from
becoming oily, like melted butter.
Beurre Blanc (makes 1 cup)
~~~~~~~~~~~~
2-1/2 Tablespoons white wine vinegar
2-1/2 Tablespoons dry white wine (or lemon juice)
1 Tablespoon very finely minced shallots
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/8 teaspoon white pepper
2 Tablespoons sweet unsalted butter
8 oz. sweet unsalted butter, chilled and cut into 16 pieces
1. In a 6-cup, medium weight stainless saucepan, boil the vinegar,
wine, shallots & seasonings with 2 Tablespoons butter until it is
reduced to a syrupy consistency (about 1-1/2 Tablespoons should
remain).
2. Remove the pan from the heat and immediately whisk in 2 pieces of
chilled butter. As the butter softens and creams into the liquid,
whisk in another piece. Set the pan over very low heat and, whisking
constantly, continue adding pieces of butter as the previous piece
has almost creamed into the sauce. When done, the sauce will be
thick and ivory colored. Immediately remove from heat as soon as
the last bit of butter is added. Taste for seasonings and add salt
pepper and lemon as required.
3. Serve immediately. This sauce can not be reheated but may be kept
a short time over barely tepid wate
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3803.5 | Thanx! | TEMPE::WAGNER | Tuned to music no one can hear... | Mon Jun 07 1993 05:34 | 17 |
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<<< Note 3803.4 by ASDG::HARRIS "Brian Harris" >>>
-< Beurre Blanc >-
Thanks, Brian, if for nothing else, taking me seriously! Your recipe
sounds pretty good and I will have to give it a try. One of the things
I'm trying to get away from is that oily consistency, as you mentioned.
I knew butter sauces existed, after all, how would Green Giant make
their "Niblet Corn in Butter Sauce" product? 8*)
Anyway, thanks again for the recipe and if you, or anyone else, comes
across anymore I would appreciate them.
Dave
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3803.6 | Sante Fe' Butter | RINGER::WALTER | used to be Aquilia | Mon Jun 07 1993 12:57 | 18 |
| I tried a recipe recently for corn on the cob. Its called Sante Fe'
Butter. Although I doubt its what your looking for, its delicious on
bread, corn or anything that requires butter. I think it would also be
good on pasta for those who do not like sauces.
2 cloves garlic minced
2 tablespoons chopped cilantro
1 tablespoon chopped parsley (i omitted this)
1 teaspoon cumin
Soften butter and mix all together. I served slightly warm for easier
spreading. Can be kept for 1 week -- or so the recipe says. I don't
understand how it would go "bad" if kept in the refrigerator however.
cj
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3803.7 | Sauce Batarde | ASDG::HARRIS | Brian Harris | Mon Jun 07 1993 22:43 | 31 |
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re: .5
Dave,
Thanks, but it's not really *my* recipe. The credit goes to Julia.
Anyway, here's another butter sauce called "Sauce Batarde".
Sauce Batarde (makes 2 cups)
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2 egg yolks
1 Tablespoon cold water
16 Tablespoons unsalted sweet butter, diced
3 Tablespoons flour
2 cups warm water, lightly salted
1 Tablespoon fresh lemon juice
Beat egg yolks with cold water until smooth; set aside.
In a heavy saucepan, over low heat, melt 4 tablespoons of butter. Add
the flour and stir until the mixture begins to bubble. Take the pan
from the heat and whisk in the warm water. Return to heat and whisk
until it comes to a boil. Remove from the heat again and let cool one
minute. Add the beaten egg yolks, return to the heat and continue to
whisk until the sauce thickens slightly. Do not allow the sauce to
boil.
Off the heat, add the lemon juice and the remaining butter and whisk
until amalgamated. Adjust the seasonings and serve immediately.
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3803.8 | | COMET::HAYESJ | Duck and cover! | Tue Jun 08 1993 05:08 | 14 |
| re: .6 cj
>2 cloves garlic minced
>2 tablespoons chopped cilantro
>1 tablespoon chopped parsley (i omitted this)
>1 teaspoon cumin
Is this the low fat/calorie/cholesterol recipie? There's no butter in it.
:-)
Seriously, how much butter should these ingredients be added to?
Steve
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3803.9 | -6 | RINGER::WALTER | used to be Aquilia | Tue Jun 08 1993 11:03 | 8 |
| hee hee, sorry about the goof in reply six. i added 1 1/2 sticks of
butter to this. i did NOT use unsalted and do not suggest it either.
the more it sits, the more flavorful it will be. watch the garlic if
you don't like alot of garlic because 2 cloves goes along way.
cj
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3803.10 | Chicken/butter sauce | POWDML::CORMIER | | Wed Jun 09 1993 11:03 | 11 |
| Here's a suggestion, I do this for pasta:
Warm up some chicken broth (skimmed and defatted).
Take it off the heat, and slowly drop in pieces of ice cold butter. The
butter must be cold, or you'll get that greasy texture because it will
melt. You really only want it to combine. I don't have
any specific measurements, it simply depends on how much pasta I have,
and how rich I want to make it (more or less butter).
Whisk it until it's a creamy color, and toss with pasta.
The chicken broth helps cut down on some of the fat and calories, and
adds a nice flavor. A sprinkle of parsley is nice, too.
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3803.11 | Basil-Garlic Butter | AIMHI::OBRIEN_J | Yabba Dabba DOO | Mon Sep 27 1993 17:44 | 19 |
| Basil-Garlic Butter
(Great with vegetables, chicken or seafood, or as a spread on hot
French bread)
8 tablespoons (1 stick) unsalted butter, room temperature
4 garlic cloves, minced
1/2 cup fresh basil leaves (about 1/2 ounce bunch)
1 tsp. Dijon mustard
1 tsp. grated lemon peel
Melt 1 tbs. butter in heavy small skillet over medium-high heat. Add
garlic and saute until just beginning to turn golden, about 30
seconds. Puree remaining 7 tbs. butter, garlic mixture, basil, Dijon
mustard and lemon peel in processor until basil is finely chopped.
Season to taste with salt and pepper. Transfer to small bowl and
chill. Can be prepared 4 days ahead.
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