Cookbook:Sauces
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Sauces are thickened liquid additions to a recipe, used to enhance the flavor or appearance, or to add moisture. In the 1800s, the French chefs Antonin Carême and Auguste Escoffier developed a systematic categorization of sauces, based on five "mother sauces". All sauces were considered to be a variation of one of these sauces. As other cuisines and ingredients have become more common to world cuisine, the number of mother sauces and sauce families has expanded slightly, but most sauces can be seen as a variation or adaptation of a few basics.
The sauces below are grouped by their family. The first five groups are the traditional sauce families, with the modern additions following. Except for the Dessert family, the top sauce in each family is that family's "mother sauce". Many of the mother sauces use a roux as the thickening agent. Roux itself is not really a sauce, as it would not be used alone.

White milk-based sauces
White stock-based sauces
Brown sauces
Egg-based emulsions
Tomato-based sauces
- Tomato Sauce
- Barbecue Sauce
- Barbecue Sauce - Kansas City style
- Barbecue Sauce - Sweet
- Chicken Barbecue Sauce
- Basic Indian Tomato Gravy
- Ketchup
- Marinara Sauce
- Pico de Gallo
- Pizza Sauce
- Puttanesca Sauce
- Spaghetti Sauce
- Tomato Pasta
- Tomato Sauce Piquante
- Salsa
Purees
- Pesto
- Coconut Chutney
- English Field Bean Pate
- Guacamole
- Onion Chutney
- Peanut Sauce
- Red Chile Sauce
- Saus Kacang - Indonesian Peanut Sauce
- Sriracha
Fermented sauces
Vinaigrettes
- Vinaigrette
- Beurre Blanc
- Caramelized Sweet and Sour Onion Marmalade
- Champagne Vinaigrette
- French Dressing
- Honey Mustard Salad Dressing
- Mango Atchar
- Neapolitan Anchovy Sauce
- Red Pepper and Goat Cheese sauce
- Senf - German Style Sweet Mustard
- Sweet and Sour
Dessert sauces
See also
- Household Cyclopedia Sauces - a collection of Public Domain sauce recipes.
- These can be converted to the Recipe template.