Sauce Espagnole (Brown Mother Sauce)
Sauce Espagnole (Brown Mother Sauce) - kvalifood.com
Makes ca. 750 mL / 3 cups - about 6 servings
Ingredients
Brown roux
- 45 g (3 tbsp) clarified butter or unsalted butter
- 45 g all-purpose flour
Sauce
- 1.25 L brown beef (or veal) stock, warm
- 25 g smoked pork belly (or unsmoked bacon), cut into small cubes
- 1 medium onion (100 g), roughly chopped
- 1 medium carrot (100 g), roughly chopped
- 1 celery rib (50 g), roughly chopped
- 30 g (2 tbsp) tomato paste
- 15 g (1 tbsp) unsalted butter (for sweating)
Bouquet garni
- 2 sprigs fresh thyme
- 4-6 parsley stems
- 1 bay leaf
- 1/4 tsp whole black peppercorns
- 1 garlic clove, halved (optional)
Directions
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Prepare the roux separately. In a small heavy-bottomed saucepan, melt 45 g clarified butter over medium heat. Add 45 g flour and stir constantly with a wooden spoon. Cook 8-12 minutes until the roux reaches a deep brown color (darker than peanut butter, with a nutty aroma). Remove from heat and set aside.
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Sweat the mirepoix. In a large heavy-bottomed pot, melt 15 g butter over medium heat. Add the pork belly cubes and cook 3-4 minutes until they begin to render fat. Add onion, carrot, and celery. Cook 8-10 minutes, stirring occasionally, until vegetables are lightly browned.
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Pince the tomato paste. Add the tomato paste to the vegetables and stir well. Cook 5-8 minutes, stirring frequently, until the paste darkens to a rust color. This removes raw acidity and deepens flavor.
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Add the stock. Pour in the warm brown stock gradually, stirring to deglaze the pot. Bring to a simmer.
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Add the roux. Whisk the reserved brown roux into the simmering stock a spoonful at a time, ensuring each addition is fully incorporated before adding more. This prevents lumps.
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Add the bouquet garni. Tie thyme, parsley stems, bay leaf, and peppercorns in cheesecloth (add garlic if using). Submerge in the sauce.
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Simmer and skim. Reduce heat to a gentle simmer. Cook uncovered for 1.5-2 hours, skimming fat and impurities from the surface every 20-30 minutes. The sauce should reduce by roughly one-third to one-half.
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Strain. Remove the bouquet garni. Strain the sauce through a fine-mesh sieve (or cheesecloth-lined sieve for extra smoothness), pressing lightly on the solids. Discard solids.
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Season and store. Taste and adjust salt. Use immediately as a base for derivative sauces, or cool and refrigerate (up to 3 days) or freeze (up to 3 months).
Notes
- Stock quality matters most. A well-made brown veal or beef stock is 90% of this sauce’s flavor. Homemade is strongly preferred; commercial stock will produce a noticeably weaker result.
- Veal stock is the classical choice and produces a more refined, gelatinous sauce. Beef stock works but is heavier. A blend of both is a good compromise.
- The roux should be dark brown, not burnt. If it smells acrid or has black specks, discard and start over. A proper brown roux smells nutty.
- Pork belly is traditional and adds a subtle smoky depth. It can be omitted for a lighter or pork-free version without fundamentally changing the sauce.
- This is a base sauce, not a finishing sauce. Use it to make demi-glace (reduce espagnole with equal parts brown stock by half) or derivative sauces like bordelaise, chasseur, Robert, or bigarade.
- Skimming is essential. The long simmer draws out impurities and fat. Skimming every 20-30 minutes keeps the sauce clean-tasting.
See Also
Béchamel Sauce
Sauce Bordelaise
Aioli (Traditional Provencal Garlic Emulsion)
Bearnaise Sauce