Cooking/Roux

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Roux

Description: Roux is a mixture of wheat flour and fat. It is the basis of three of the mother sauces of classical French cooking: sauce béchamel, sauce velouté, and sauce espagnole (and from those we can make all sorts of yummy sauces and dishes from cheese sauce to gumbo). Butter, vegetable oils, or lard are common fats used. It is used as a base for gravy, other sauces, soufflés, soups and stews.

Assessment Checklist

Objective: This will teach you to make a basic roux in 3 segments. One light, one medium, one dark. We will use a variety of fats, each best suited to the application.


Directions: each individual will prepare 3 rouxs. The first will be a light roux made with butter and flour. This should be prepared as if it were to be used in a béchamel sauce. The Second will be prepared medium for gravy and will be made of drippings (bacon drippings are easiest here) and flour. The third will be prepared for a gumbo and will be prepared dark, using vegetable oil as a base because it has a high burn point.

Items Needed


Scale


Conditions of Assessment

Here We Go

Okay, now that you've gotten your assignment, let's go ahead and start work. Odds are good you've never made a roux before, so I'll walk you through it. Let's begin with the ...

Light Roux

Medium Roux

A medium roux is often called a caramel or peanut butter roux due to the colour and that's what we're shooting for. Something the colour of light peanut butter or a caramel. Pretty much, we start like above and cook longer till we have the right mix.


Dark Roux

This time we're going to make a really dark roux called a "Brick Roux". This is the last stage of roux making right before it burns and is useless and it's the one you're most likely to mess up. Careful.

Thickening

Bear this is mind when using a roux. The darker it is, the less thickening power it has. The lighter it is, the less flavour it has.

This is what makes a blonde or peanut butter roux the most commonly used. they thicken well but also have flavour. A brick roux has a lot of flavour (this is what I would personally use for gumbo) but will barely thicken at all, so plan to use other thickening agents for that. Another type of roux, perhaps, or okra.

That completes your lesson in roux. Now that you can make one, you can make just about any sauce you can imagine. So let your mind go and see what you can come up with. Remember that cooking is a lot like playing, but you get to eat the mud pies ... without getting sick.


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