Schnittlauchsauce (Viennese Chive Sauce)
Schnittlauchsauce (Viennese Chive Sauce) - kvalifood.com
Schnittlauchsauce is the traditional Viennese sauce served alongside Tafelspitz (boiled beef). What makes it distinctive is the bread-and-egg emulsion - white bread soaked in broth, pressed through a sieve with cooked egg yolk, then emulsified with oil like a mayonnaise. Chives are folded in at the very end, never cooked. The sauce should be thick enough to hold its shape slightly on the plate.
Ingredients
Serves 4-6
- 50 g crustless white bread (~2 slices, such as toast or soft roll)
- 150 ml warm beef broth
- 2 hard-boiled eggs, peeled
- 2 raw egg yolks
- 120 ml neutral oil (sunflower or corn germ oil)
- 1 tsp mustard, mild and smooth (Dijon-style or Austrian Senf)
- 1 tbsp gherkin brine (or white wine vinegar)
- 1 tsp fresh lemon juice
- 1 pinch sugar
- 1 pinch cayenne pepper
- salt, to taste
- black pepper, to taste
- 4 tbsp fresh chives, finely cut into rings
Directions
- Tear the bread into pieces and soak in the warm beef broth until soft, about 5 minutes.
- Shell the hard-boiled eggs and separate the yolks from the whites. Set the whites aside.
- Press the soaked bread (with its liquid) and the cooked egg yolks through a fine sieve into a mixing bowl. Alternatively, blend until completely smooth with an immersion blender.
- Add the raw egg yolks and mustard to the bread paste. Blend or whisk to combine.
- While blending, add the oil in a thin stream to emulsify, as when making mayonnaise. The sauce should become thick and creamy.
- Season with the gherkin brine (or vinegar), lemon juice, sugar, cayenne, salt, and pepper. Taste and adjust - the sauce should have a noticeable but not sharp acidity.
- Finely chop the reserved hard-boiled egg whites and fold them into the sauce for texture.
- Just before serving, fold in the freshly cut chives. Do not heat the chives.
- Serve cold or at room temperature alongside Tafelspitz or other boiled beef. If desired, warm very gently (do not let it boil or the emulsion will break).
Notes
- The sauce can be prepared a few hours ahead and refrigerated. Add chives just before serving.
- Gherkin brine (Essiggurkerlwasser) is the authentic Austrian acid. It adds a complexity that plain vinegar does not match. Use liquid from an open jar of pickled gherkins.
- Raw egg yolks are used. Use fresh, high-quality eggs.
- For a lighter version, replace half the oil with sour cream or creme fraiche and reduce the bread to 30 g.
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