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My new years resolution this year was generally to cook more and spefically to learn to make hollandaise sauce.

James, being a total novice I think I need a bit more instruction and detail than your summary.

So, does anyone have a good recipie or any tips? Sean, you must have something to say on the subject?

James? Do you mean me?


I think because it's such a simple and well established sauce to make, you'll probably find that most of the blenderless recipes are more or less the same.


This recipe is pretty much what I'd do (and I like the site's "scientific" angle):

http://www.exploratorium.edu/cooking/eggs/recipe-hollandaise.html

I think the big mistake here is that people are confusing 'Holendase' sauce with its better known cousin Hollandaise sauce. They are very different beasts.


A 'Holendase' sauce requires a quart of DM's fresh breast milk, two onions (although some say that DM's milk is sour enough already), a bar of Green & Black's chocolate, the tears of a dozen spoilt ED brats, a bottle of rum and a dash of environmentally friendly washing powder. These should be filtered through the defunct drain underneath Green & Blue, reduced over a table-warmer from the Dulwich Tandoori and then drizzled over a veggie ciabatta from Mon Petit Chou. I hope I have cleared up this unfortunate misunderstanding.

Clean up time.


Made hollandaise but too impatient to follow recipe exactly. Used two egg yolks and half a lemon and two thirds pack of butter. Didn't bother to melt it, just added in knobs (honi soit qui mal y pense).


Too lemony, though I quite like it tart (ditto).

What you really need to do is make a good reduction. This involves simmering white wine vinegar with peppercorns and finely sliced shallots. When this is ready, whisk in your egg yolks over a bain marie. Once fluffy and when ribbons appear when you're whisking you can begin to add your clarified butter. Whisk constanly until thick and the eggs have cooked out.



Ooooh - check out all the chef jargon in there!


I remember learning to make that at work with sort of celebrity chef - Nigel Smith. (If you google his name and Blackburn, you might recognise him) Anyway, I was standing over the range in my new whites, whisking away. My arm was killing me and I was beginning to get rather hot. He uttered the words "what are you - a man or a mouse?" At this point I was ready to throw in the towel and stated "mouse!". Anyway, whenever I make hollandaise now, I recall that moment and make sure that the whisking continues.



Finally, if you make too much hollandaise you can always refrigerate it and resurrect it again the next day. Just heat some cream in a pan and whisk in the solidified hollandaise.

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