on โ07-02-2013 04:02 PM
I just had some flaxseed oil, and I'm thinking that's got to be up there with some of the worst things I've ever tasted....
It was worse than Brussel Sprouts!
on โ08-02-2013 12:31 PM
Lakeland, I don't like cream sauces much either ... they look so 'messy' and to me, taste quite floury.
on โ08-02-2013 12:41 PM
Lakeland, I don't like cream sauces much either ... they look so 'messy' and to me, taste quite floury.
i'm not sure why i dislike them so much Tas, maybe i'm a sauce bigot ๐
on โ08-02-2013 01:18 PM
I think I prefer the 'clearer' sauces Lakeland, less calories too .. ๐
on โ08-02-2013 01:23 PM
if your white sauces taste floury, it's because the roux hasn't been cooked out properly. A blonde roux is the foundation/thickening agent for classic sauces such as bechamel.
pretty straight forward
equal parts fat and flour (by weight, not volume)
preferably use clarified butter, but any butter or fat will do, depends on what tastes you like, or what you are using it for really.
melt fat
combine flour
cook out over low heat until floury taste is gone - careful, as the longer you cook it, the darker it gets, so if you end up with a dark roux, you use this for espagnole.
you can store the roux in the fridge if you want to use it later.
to make bechamel, if roux is cold, add warm milk (you can flavour it with things like an onion cloute - or anything you like - if roux is hot (ie, just cooked) use cool milk to help avoid lumps.
when adding the milk a bit at a time to the roux - start by mixing with a wooden spoon until the mix is liquid enough to use a whisk and then whisk like crazy, preferably in a figure 8 pattern, to not only combine, but to prevent the mix catching on the bottom of the pot and burning.
stop adding the milk once the desired consistency is reached - also remember it will continue to thicken until cool.
on โ08-02-2013 01:29 PM
I did see on a show once that mostly people add the milk to the roux slowly and a bit at a time to stop it from getting lumpy but then someone said that it's not necessary.
You can add all the cold milk at once and just whisk like mad while you're doing it until it's all combined and you won't get lumps. I've tried it and it really does work! You can always add extra milk after if you need to. I love cheese sauce and I suppose that is a white sauce.
on โ08-02-2013 01:54 PM
Paraffin (?sp) Oil - the Dr prescribed for me when I was a kid. Tasteless, but even straight from the fridge is felt warm and slimy.... I still shudder thinking about it.
That and the instant pudding my Mum used to make oh so many years ago - particularly the banana flavoured one. It made me retch, but as we were very poor and Mum said it was good for us ( made from milk you see) I HAD to eat it..... it always took forever for me to get it down. ๐
on โ08-02-2013 02:18 PM
I don't make cream sauces at all because I don't like them, but even in good restaurants, they've always tasted too 'floury' for me ... :-p, even if they were perfectly, I wouldn't like them, it's just personal taste.
on โ08-02-2013 02:20 PM
I love cheese sauce and I suppose that is a white sauce.
*nods*
the cheese is what puts the mornay into mornay
so you just add cheese to the mother sauce.
on โ08-02-2013 02:33 PM
Cheese sauce is wonderful, I do like that, but not made with cream or anything heavier than skim milk.
on โ08-02-2013 03:57 PM
That and the instant pudding my Mum used to make oh so many years ago - particularly the banana flavoured one. It made me retch, but as we were very poor and Mum said it was good for us ( made from milk you see) I HAD to eat it..... it always took forever for me to get it down. ๐
My kids used to love instant puddings. They called them "else puddings" because they were told they could have "something else" after they had finished all their veges :^O