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French mother sauces

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Sauces considered mother sauces. In order (left-to-right, top to bottom): Béchamel, Espagnole, Tomato, Velouté, Hollandaise and Mayonnaise.

In French cuisine, the mother sauces (Template:Lang-fr), also known as grand sauces (Template:Lang-fr) or leading sauces, are a group of sauce recipes upon which other sauces (often known as "daughter sauces") are based. There have been different classifications of mother sauces dating back to the 19th century.[1]

The most common group of mother sauces in current use is often attributed to chef Auguste Escoffier[2][3][4][5] as presented in the 1907 English-language edition of his seminal cookery book Le guide culinaire (A guide to modern cookery):[6]

  • Béchamel sauce: White sauce, based on milk thickened with a white roux.
  • Espagnole sauce: Brown sauce based on a brown stock reduction, and thickened with brown roux. Ingredients typically include roasted bones, bacon, and tomato (puréed and/or fresh).
  • Tomato sauce (sometimes "Tomate" or "Tomat"): As well as tomatoes, ingredients typically include carrots, onion, garlic, butter, and flour, plus pork belly and veal broth.
  • Velouté sauce: Clear sauce, made by reducing clear stock (made from un-roasted bones) and thickened with a white roux. Velouté is French for "velvety".
  • Hollandaise sauce: Warm emulsion of egg yolk, melted butter, and lemon juice or vinegar.

The French editions of Le guide culinaire did not include Hollandaise as a grande sauce,[7] but separately described mayonnaise—a cold emulsion of egg yolks with oil and vinegar—as a mother sauce; this was not included in the English edition.

History

The concept of mother sauces predated Escoffier's classification by at least 50 years; in 1844, a French magazine called "Revue de Paris" reported: "Oui ne savez-vous pas que la grande espagnole est une sauce-mère, dont toutes les autres préparations, telles que réductions, fonds de cuisson, jus, veloutés, essences, coulis, ne sont, à proprement parler, que des dérivés?" ("Don’t you know that the grand sauce Espagnole is a mother sauce, of which all the other preparations, such as reductions, stocks, jus, veloutés, essences, and coulis, are, strictly speaking, only derivatives?")[8]

Different classifications of French sauces into mother and daughter sauces have been proposed by different chefs, varying in number and selection.

Classification by Marie Antoine Carême

In 1833, Marie Antoine Carême published a classification of French sauces in his reference cookbook L’art de la cuisine française au XIXe siècle ("The Art of French Cuisine in the 19th Century"). Instead of mother sauces, he called them Grandes et Petites sauces ("great and small sauces").[9]

In this cookbook, Carême defined a sauce classification and listed four grandes sauces:

Carême classified the following as petites sauces:[9]

Classification by Jules Gouffé

In 1867 the French chef and pâtissier Jules Gouffé published Le livre de cuisine comprenant la grande cuisine et la cuisine de ménage (The Cookbook Including Grand And Domestic Cooking).[10]

In this book, Gouffé listed twelve mother sauces. (He used both the terms grandes sauces' and sauce mères).

  • Espagnole Grasse (Fattier Espagnole)
  • Espagnole Maigre (Leaner Espagnole)
  • Velouté Gras (Fattier Velouté)
  • Velouté Maigre (Leaner Velouté)
  • Allemande (Velouté thickened with eggs)
  • Béchamel à l’ancienne (Old Fashioned Béchamel)
  • Béchamel de volaille (Poultry Béchamel)
  • Béchamel maigre (Leaner Béchamel)
  • Poivrade brune (Brown Poivrade)
  • Poivrade Blanche (White Poivrade)
  • Poivrade Maigre (Leaner Poivrade)
  • Marinade

Classification by Auguste Escoffier

The pioneering chef Auguste Escoffier is credited with establishing the importance of Espagnole, Velouté, Béchamel and Tomate, as well as Hollandaise and Mayonnaise.[11][12] His book Le guide culinaire was published in 1903. The 1912 edition lists the "Grandes Sauces de base" as:[13]

  • Espagnole
  • Velouté
  • Béchamel
  • Tomate

Later in the text, he details these sauces and some variants:[14]

  • Sauce Espagnole
    • Sauce Espagnole maigre (leaner Espagnole sauce)
    • Sauce Demi Glace (reduced Espagnole sauce)
  • Jus de veau lié (reduced veal stock thickened with arrowroot)
  • Velouté
    • Velouté de volaille (poultry velouté)
    • Velouté de poisson (fish velouté)
    • Sauce Allemande (velouté thickened with eggs)
    • Sauce suprême (velouté thickened with cream)
  • Sauce Béchamel
  • Sauce Tomate

Escoffier listed Hollandaise sauce as a daughter/small sauce in Le guide culinaire.[15] He placed mayonnaise in the chapter on cold sauces, and described it as a mother sauce for cold sauces, comparing it to Espagnole and Velouté.[16]

The 1907 abridged English edition of Le guide culinaire, A Guide to Modern Cookery, listed five "basic sauces", including Hollandaise alongside the existing four:[17]

  • Espagnole
  • Velouté
  • Béchamel
  • Tomato
  • Hollandaise

A Guide to Modern Cookery detailed the preparation of these "leading sauces" and variations:[18]

  • Brown Sauce or Espagnole
    • Half Glaze
    • Lenten Espagnole
  • Ordinary Velouté Sauce
    • Velouté de volaille
    • Fish velouté
    • Allemande sauce or thickened velouté
  • Béchamel sauce
  • Tomato Sauce
  • Hollandaise Sauce

Instead of Escoffier's original list, "Jus de veau lié" and "Suprême sauce" were removed and "Hollandaise" was added. The English edition omitted the comments from the French edition that stated Escoffier considered mayonnaise to be a sort of mother sauce. Hollandaise is also absent from similar lists in Jules Gouffé's, Antoine Carême's, and Prosper Montagné’s cookbooks.

Expanded history

This is an expanded discussion of the history of French Mother Sauces. In French cuisine, a "Mother" sauce, also known as a “Grand” or “Leading” sauce, is a sauce from which other sauces, often called “Daughter” sauces, are derived. Classifying sauces into either Mother or Daughter sauces has one purpose: to bring clarity and sense to how sauces are being made and how they should be used.[19]

The first Mother/Daughter sauce classifications date back from the 19th century. The classification has been slightly amended in the early 20th century, but hasn't changed since then.[20]

Mother Sauce List(s)

The most popular and persistent Mother sauce selection is credited to Chef Auguste Escoffier and includes 5 elements:[21][22][23][24]

  1. Espagnole Sauce: Brown sauce based on a brown stock reduction, and thickened with brown roux. Ingredients typically include : Roasted bones, Bacon, Tomato (purée and/or fresh)
  2. Velouté Sauce: Clear sauce, made by reducing clear stock (made from un-roasted bones) and thickened with a white roux. Velouté is French for “Velvety”
  3. Béchamel Sauce: White sauce, based on milk thickened with a white roux.
  4. Hollandaise Sauce: Egg sabayon, mounted with clarified butter and flavoured with lemon juice.
  5. Tomate (sometimes spelled "Tomat") Sauce: Red ‘Tomato’ sauce. Ingredients typically include: carrots, onion, garlic, butter, and flour, plus pork belly and veal broth.

This list is often credited to Auguste Escoffier in his reference cookbook "Le Guide Culinaire". However, a closer analysis of Escoffier's books contradicts this selection of Mother sauces.

A more faithful selection

The list below is more faithful to Escoffier's original selection:[25][26][27]

  1. Espagnole
  2. Velouté
  3. Béchamel
  4. Sauce Tomate
  5. Mayonnaise (more details below)

The main difference here is that Hollandaise sauce has been replaced with Mayonnaise sauce, following Escoffier's original classification. This is further developed in the Hollandaise and Mayonnaise sections below.

Daughter Sauce List

Mother sauces can be derived into many different smaller sauces, often referred to as Daughter sauces. Here are a few examples of daughter sauces and their respective mother sauces.[28] It can be found in Les sauces mères et leurs dérivés:

History

First use

Although chefs Auguste Escoffier and Antoine Carême both had massive influences on French cuisine, they did not however invent the terms “Sauces mères” (French for “Mother Sauces”), nor did they come up with the first French sauce classification.[29]

The first use of the terms “Mother Sauce” is hard to locate in time, but it is at least anterior to May 1844 (50 years before Escoffier Culinary Guide first publication) when a French magazine called “Revue de Paris” published on page 380:[30]

“Oui ne savez-vous pas que la grande espagnole est une sauce-mère, dont toutes les autres préparations, telles que réductions, fonds de cuisson, jus, veloutés, essences, coulis, ne sont, à proprement parler, que des dérivés?”

“Don’t you know that Grand sauce Espagnole is a mother sauce, from which all other preparations, including reductions, stocks, jus, veloutés and essences, are only derivatives ?”

Mother / Daughter Sauce Classifications

Different classifications of French sauces into Mother and/or Daughter sauces have been established over the years by different chefs. They all aim at bringing clarity and sense to how sauces should be made, and how they should be used.  

Despite common held belief, there have not always been 5 mother sauces in French cuisine. In fact, their number and selection have varied greatly from one chef / author to the other. Below are listed the most important historical ones.

Sauce classification by Marie Antoine Carême

In 1833, Marie Antoine Carême published a classification of French sauces in his reference cookbook : “The Art of French Cuisine in the 19th Century”. ( Original title : L’art de la cuisine française au XIXe siècle ). Instead of mother sauces, he calls them “Grandes et Petites sauces” ( French for “Grand and Small sauces”).[31]

In this cookbook, Carême defined a sauce classification and listed 4 “Grand Sauces” :

  1. Espagnole
  2. Velouté
  3. Allemande
  4. Béchamel

In "The Art of French Cuisine in the 19th Century”, Carême mentioned that his versions of Allemande sauce and Béchamel sauce recipes both use the Velouté sauce recipe as a starting point. Since these recipes are quite different from the ones we know today, it seems logical to keep Carême's list untouched.[32]

Worth mentioning, Carême classified as small sauces the following ones:[33]

  • Poivrade sauce ( later upgraded as a mother sauce  by Jules Gouffé )
  • Suprême sauce ( later upgraded as a mother sauce by Auguste Escoffier )
  • Tomate sauce ( later upgraded as a mother sauce by Auguste Escoffier )
  • Hollandaise sauce
  • Mayonnaise sauce ( later upgraded as a mother sauce by Auguste Escoffier )
Sauce classification By Jules Gouffé

In 1867, Jules Gouffé, renowned French chef and pâtissier, published a cookbook called “The Cookbook Including Grand And Domestic Cooking” (Original title “Le livre de cuisine comprenant la grande cuisine et la cuisine de ménage”).[34]

In this cookbook, Gouffé established an updated sauce classification and listed 12 “Mother” sauces (Gouffé used the terms “Grand” or “Mother” sauces interchangeably)

  1. Espagnole Grasse ( Fattier Espagnole )
  2. Espagnole Maigre ( Leaner Espagnole )
  3. Velouté Gras ( Fattier Velouté )
  4. Velouté Maigre ( Leaner Velouté )
  5. Allemande ( Velouté thickened with eggs )
  6. Béchamel à l’ancienne ( Old Fashioned Béchamel)
  7. Béchamel de volaille (Poultry Béchamel)
  8. Béchamel maigre (Leaner Béchamel)
  9. Poivrade brune (Brown Poivrade)
  10. Poivrade Blanche (White Poivrade)
  11. Poivrade Maigre (Leaner Poivrade)
  12. Marinade

The list can safely be narrowed down to a selection of 6 sauces to avoid obvious redundancies:[35]

  1. Espagnole
  2. Velouté
  3. Allemande
  4. Béchamel
  5. Poivrade
  6. Marinade
Sauce classification by Auguste Escoffier

Auguste Escoffier is considered by many French and international chefs as a pioneer when it comes to Kitchen organisation. Called the “Chef of Kings and King of Chefs”, he brought cleanliness, quiet and discipline to professional kitchens. As a consequence, his sauce classification is considered by many, the most important historical contribution to sauces in general.

In 1903, he published what would become afterwards a reference cookbook : “Le Guide Culinaire” (French for “The Culinary Guide”).[36] Four editions of this book have been published afterwards but they all listed the “Grandes” sauces as follows:[37][38]

  1. Espagnole
  2. Espagnole maigre (leaner Espagnole sauce)
  3. Demi Glace (reduced Espagnole sauce)
  4. Jus de veau lié (reduced and thickened Veal stock)
  5. Velouté
  6. Allemande (Velouté thickened with eggs)
  7. Sauce suprême (Velouté thickened with cream)
  8. Velouté de volaille (poultry velouté)
  9. Velouté de poisson (fish velouté)
  10. Béchamel
  11. Sauce Tomate
  12. Mayonnaise (see specific section below)

The list can safely be narrowed down to a selection of 9 sauces to avoid obvious redundancies :

  1. Espagnole
  2. Demi Glace (reduced Espagnole sauce)
  3. Jus de veau lié (reduced and thickened Veal stock)
  4. Velouté
  5. Allemande (Velouté thickened with eggs)
  6. Sauce suprême (Velouté thickened with cream)
  7. Béchamel
  8. Sauce Tomate
  9. Mayonnaise (see specific section below)

Worth mentioning :

  • Chef Escoffier never treated Hollandaise sauce as a Mother sauce. Instead, he specifically called it a daughter / small sauce in his reference book “Le Guide Culinaire” (French for “The Culinary Guide”)
  • Chef Escoffier considered Mayonnaise as a Mother sauce. Even though being placed in a “Daughter” sauce chapter in the book, mayonnaise sauce is introduced as a mother sauce. That's why it has been reintegrated in the mother sauce list above.[39]

These special cases are further developed in the Hollandaise and Mayonnaise sections below.

The special case of Hollandaise sauce

Internet and the Hollandaise sauce

Over the internet, Hollandaise sauce is widely regarded as a Mother Sauce,[40][41][42][43] which would have been established by Auguste Escoffier himself.

However, a closer look at Escoffier's French cookbooks (not translations or adaptations) reveals that Hollandaise sauce never was considered a mother sauce. In fact, that sauce is located in a small sauces chapter called “Petites Sauces Blanches et sauces Composées.” ( French for “Small white sauces and derived sauces”).[44] No extra mention or specific introduction have been made by the author about this sauce.

Possible origin of the problem

Over the years, several translations of Escoffier's cookbooks have been made. One translation in particular could be at the origin of this dilemma :  “A guide to Modern Cookery by Escoffier, London, William Heinemann, 1907”.[45] This cookbook is not presented as an original cookbook, but as a translation of Escoffier's culinary guide.

In there, the “Leading Sauces” chapter includes 10 mother sauces. Below they are listed using their original English titles :

  1. Brown Sauce or Espagnole
  2. Half Glaze
  3. Lenten Espagnole
  4. Ordinary Velouté Sauce
  5. Velouté de volaille
  6. Fish velouté
  7. Allemande sauce or thickened velouté
  8. Béchamel sauce
  9. Tomato Sauce
  10. Hollandaise Sauce

Compared to Escoffier's original list, “Jus de veau lié” and “Demi Glace” have been removed and “Mayonnaise” has been replaced with “Hollandaise” sauce, without any mention or clarification from the translator himself.

This list has then been narrowed down to 5 elements ( Espagnole, Velouté, Béchamel, Tomate and Hollandaise) and then extensively advertised online.

Since Hollandaise was absent from Auguste Escoffier's, Jules Gouffé's, Antoine Carême's or even Prosper Montagné’s cookbooks, one can assume that including it here is more of a free interpretation than a faithful translation.

In conclusion, Hollandaise Sauce is not a Mother Sauce based on Escoffier’s work.

The special case of Mayonnaise sauce

Mayonnaise from an historical point of view

From an historical point of view Mayonnaise always was considered by Escoffier himself a true mother sauce. The following extract comes from Escoffier reference cookbook “Le guide culinaire”, and is used to introduce Mayonnaise recipe:[46]

FR : “La plupart des sauces froides dérivés de la mayonnaise qui pour cette raison est considérée comme une sauce mère au même titre que l’Espagnole et le Velouté.”

ENG : “Most cold sauces derive from Mayonnaise sauce, and that is why it should be considered a mother sauce just like Espagnole and Velouté”

Worth mentioning, that introduction paragraph has been discarded in the first English translation of this cookbook :  “A Guide to Modern Cookery by Escoffier” London, by William Heinemann, 1907.[47]

In conclusion, Mayonnaise sauce is a Mother Sauce based on Escoffier's work.

Mayonnaise from a science point of view

From a science point of view, Mayonnaise sauce can be considered as Mother sauce : It is a true emulsion,[48] and many daughter sauces derive from it or from its concept.

Hollandaise sauce is more of a warm emulsified suspension,[49] than a true emulsion, and so feels a bit less legitimate to be considered a Mother sauce.

Sauces

Many sauces, often referred to as daughter sauces, can be derived from mother sauces.:[50][51]

Béchamel sauce

Béchamel is a milk-based sauce, thickened with a white roux and typically flavoured with onion, nutmeg or thyme.

Derived from Béchamel

Espagnole sauce

Espagnole is a strong-flavoured brown sauce, made from a dark brown roux and brown stock, usually beef or veal stock, and tomatoes or tomato paste.

Derived from Espagnole

Velouté sauce

Velouté is a clear sauce, light in colour, made by reducing clear stock (made from un-roasted bones), usually veal, chicken or fish stock, thickened with a white or blond roux. Velouté is the French word for "velvety".

Derived from Velouté

Tomato sauce

The sauce tomate described by Escoffier is a tomato sauce made with fatty salted pork breast, a mirepoix of carrots, onions and thyme, and white stock.

Derived from Tomato

Hollandaise sauce

Hollandaise is a warm emulsion based on egg yolk, clarified butter, and flavoured with lemon juice or vinegar.

Derived from Hollandaise

Mayonnaise

Mayonnaise is an emulsion of egg yolk and oil, served cold and flavoured with lemon juice, vinegar and seasoning.

Derived from Mayonnaise

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