sugarsnap
Assistant Cook
Ok, im a 30 year old woman, i have cooked for years, but i very rarely venture into things with sauces unless they come from a packet.
Main reason being is im worried that if i fluff the sauce up, then ive ruined everything.
I can make a cheese sauce (melted butter and flour, add milk) but even this goes wrong sometimes. And once, i thought id just sprinkle some flour into the sauce as it was very thin.... how wrong did that go. It looked AWFUL and i had to sieve the lumps out and then after that it was a case of 'better not try that again'.
So my questions are:
How do you thicken a milk based sauce.
How do you thicken a stock based sauce.
Are there are tricks for adding flour in the case of my fluffed cheese sauce to stop the dreaded curdly-lumps.
Another question regarding sauces, is it possible to make a 'creamy sauce' using actual cream? Like, if i wanted a creamy chicken sauce, use a chicken stock and add cream to the mix? Can you use milk?
Ok, onto help with dinner!
Tonight, i have some beef, which i was going to slice up, add onions, peppers, and bake in a casserole dish with herbs and a dollop of marmite! Now, would i need to thicken the beef stock before i add it?
Also, which herbs would go with this - because as it stands at the moment, im liable to just chuck any old thing in, basil, parsley - mixed herbs! Does anybody have any suggestions to improve on my pot luck of adding ingredients!
Thanks
x
Main reason being is im worried that if i fluff the sauce up, then ive ruined everything.
I can make a cheese sauce (melted butter and flour, add milk) but even this goes wrong sometimes. And once, i thought id just sprinkle some flour into the sauce as it was very thin.... how wrong did that go. It looked AWFUL and i had to sieve the lumps out and then after that it was a case of 'better not try that again'.
So my questions are:
How do you thicken a milk based sauce.
How do you thicken a stock based sauce.
Are there are tricks for adding flour in the case of my fluffed cheese sauce to stop the dreaded curdly-lumps.
Another question regarding sauces, is it possible to make a 'creamy sauce' using actual cream? Like, if i wanted a creamy chicken sauce, use a chicken stock and add cream to the mix? Can you use milk?
Ok, onto help with dinner!
Tonight, i have some beef, which i was going to slice up, add onions, peppers, and bake in a casserole dish with herbs and a dollop of marmite! Now, would i need to thicken the beef stock before i add it?
Also, which herbs would go with this - because as it stands at the moment, im liable to just chuck any old thing in, basil, parsley - mixed herbs! Does anybody have any suggestions to improve on my pot luck of adding ingredients!
Thanks
x