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Stocks, Soups, and
      Sauces




                     1
Stocks
     Are often called
      the chef’s building
      blocks because
      they form the base
      for many soups
      and stocks.



                        2
A STOCK IS…

 A flavorful liquid made by gently
  simmering bones and/or vegetables
  in a liquid to extract their flavor,
  aroma, color, body and nutrients.




                                         3
The Four Essential Parts
           of a
        Stock Are
 Mirepoix
 Aromatics
 Liquid
 Major Flavoring
  Ingredient
                            4
Ingredients:
1) Bones – major ing.
   Chicken stock – chx bones
   White stock – beef, beal, pork bones
   Brown stock – beef,veal browned in an
   oven.
   Fish stock – fish bones and trimmings
   from fillet
   fumet – often used for flavorful fish stock,
   esp. made with wine.
                                                  5
2. Mirepoix –(meer-pwah) aromatic veg. , 2 nd
  most impt. Contributors. Carrots, onion,
  celery. Chopped coarsely.
3. Acid prod. – Acid help dissolve connective
  tissue. (Lemon, vinegar, tomato products)
4. Scraps & left overs.
5. Seasoning & spices – “aromatics”. Salt is
  impt. Ing.
Sachet – herbs & spices usually tied in a
  cheesecloth
                                                6
 Bouquet garni – assortment of fresh herbs,
  tied in a bundle with string.
  (thyme, parsely stems, bay leaves,
  cloves,garlic)

Ingredients proportion:
Bones – 50%
Mirepoix – 10%
Water – 100%
                                               7
Types of Stock

        White Stock
        Brown Stock
        Fumet
        Court Bouillon
        Glace
        Remouillage
        Bouillon
                          8
TYPES OF STOCK:

Bouillon – in french cuisine, is a simply “broth”,
made by simmering a mirepoix and aromatic herbs
(boquet garni), with either beef, vel or poultry.

Fumet – is a concentrated stock, particularly one
made from fish and mushroom, used to add flavor
or to less intensely flavored stock

Consomme- is a clear soup made from richly
flavored stock that has been clarified usually a
fining process thru the use of egg protein (egg
white)
Court bouillon – a flavored liquid for poaching
and quick cooking foods. Traditional uses
include poaching fish and sea food

Glace – stock that is reduced until it coats the
back of the spoon, making it so concentrated.
Demi Glace – is a rich brown sauce use as a
base for many sauces

Remoulage – “rewetting” stock made from
bones that already been used once. Discard the
mirepoix and herbs after draining. Add fresh
mirepoix.
Bones For Stock Are
   Prepared By:
           Blanchi
            ng
           Brownin
            g
           Sweatin
            g

                      11
Blanching – to get rid of some impurities that can
cause cloudiness. Steps: rinse bones in cold
water, to wash away the blood. Impurities dissolve
easily in cold water. Hot water retards extraction.
Bring water to bloil, as the water heat, impurities
solidify and rise to the surface. Drain the bones
and now ready for stock pot.
Browning – put the bones in an oven about 375F
for 1 hr. to brown
Sweating Bones or Shells. Bones or shell are
used in fumets. The proteins present in fish bones
and shellfish can take on an unacceptable flavor if
allowed to cook to long.
Sweating is a procedure that starts flavor release
quickly. The stock can e cooked in less than 45
minutes, with full extraction of body and flavor.

1. Heat a small amount of oil or clarified butter in
a rondeau.
2. Add the bones or shells and mirepoix.
3. Cook over moderate heat, stirring occasionally,
until the flesh on the bones turns opaque, or the
shells have a bright color, and the moisture is
released from the mirepoix
What Four Qualities
Are Stocks Evaluated
        On?
1. Flavor
2. Color
3. Aroma
4. Clarity


                       14
Cooling and Storing
Stock
  Put the stockpot in the ice-bath and stir often.
                                     When cool,
   place in the refrigerator.

  Break down the large amounts of stock into
   smaller amounts.
     Place stock in small containers in the
     refrigerator.
     Stir occasionally


                                                      15
Preparing Soups




 Any good soup is made with the best
  ingredients available.
 Clear Soups & Thick Soups
              are the two basic types
                                    16
Helpful Hints For Cream
    And Purée Soups:
 If a cream soup becomes
  too thick, add water or
  stock until the correct
  consistency is achieved.
  Never use heavy cream- it
  can hide the flavor of the
  main ingredient.
 If the soup has a sour or
  “off” flavor, or has
  curdled, discard it. Cream
  soups have a brief
  storage time once the
  cream has been added.
 To store cream soups       17
Classifications of soup
1. Clear soups – are all based on clear,
   unthickend broth or stock.
 a. broth or bouillon – clear soups without
   solid ingr.
  b. Vegetable soup – clear, seasoned stock
   with veg,meat, and starches.
  c. Consomme’ – rich, flavorful stock or
   broth that has been clarified by adding
   eggwhite.
                                          18
2) Thick soup – are opaque rather than
  transparent.
 a. Cream soup – soups are thicken with
  roux, beurre maine, liaison or other
  thickening agents.
 b. Purees’ naturally thickened by pureeing of
  the ingredients. Until they are smooth and
  creamy as cream soup.
 c. Bisques – thickened soup made from
  shellfish with cream
                                            19
d. Chowder – hearty soups made from fish
  and shellfish and or veg. Usually contain
  milk and potatoes.
e. Potage – term associated with thick, hearty
  soups.
3. Specialty & National Soup – native soups
  from the other countries.
4. Vegetarian soups and Low fat soup – veg.
  based soup. No meat

                                             20
Which Soups Are Clear
And Which Soups Are
       Thick?
 Consom   Clear
  mé        Soup
 Bisque   Thick
 Broth     Soup
 Cream    Clear
 Purée     Soup
           Thick
            Soup        21
Garnish:
1. Garnishes – vegetables (brunoise shape)
2. Toppings – clear serve w/o topping
  Thick soups: fresh herbs(parsely, asge, celery
   leaves, leek (jullienne), sliced toasted almonds,
   grated cheese, sieved eggyolk, croutons,
   parmesan cheese, crumbled bacon, paprika,
   flavored butter, sour cream
Accompaniments:
  They are serve with crackers. Corn chips, bread
   sticks, cheese straws, whole grain wafers


                                                       22
From Which Country Does
  Each Specialty Soup
      Originate?
   Borscht        Russia
   Gazpacho       Spain
   Gumbo          Louisiana
   Minestrone     Italy
   Vichyssoise    France




                                23
Cooling And Finishing
     Techniques
 Remove surface fat
  from soup before
  service.
 Blot with strips of un-
  waxed brown butcher
  paper to eliminate
  unwanted fat.
 Soups should be
  garnished just before
  service.               24
Sauces
- A flavorful liquid, usually to thickened,
  used to season, flavor and enhance
  the food
 Add moisture and richness to food
 Introduce complementary and
  contrasting flavors
 Enhance the appearance of food
 Add texture to the dish                25
Structure of Sauces:
1. Liquid ( base of the most sauces)
  - white stock – veloute sauce
  - crown stock – brown sauce, espagnole
   (ess pahn yohl).
  - Milk – bechamel
  - tomato plus stock – tamato sauce
  - Clarified butter - hollandaise


                                           26
2. Thickening Agents :
 a. Starches – flour, corn starch, arrowroot,
  maize, bread crumbs, rice flour.
 b.Roux = mixture of equal parts of fat and
  flour.
 c. Flour – Bread flour less starch.
 d. Eggyolk
 e. Liaison – a mix. Of eggyolk and cream,
  used to enrich and lightly thickened the
  sauce
  f. Reduction                                27
Beurre maine – (burr mahnyay) mixture of equal parts of
  soft raw butter, flour worked together to form a smooth
  paste. It is used for quick thickening at the end of
  cooking to finish a sauce.
White wash – a thin mixture of flour and cold water. Not
  recommended.
How to make liason :
Beat together eggyolk and cream in stainless. 2-3 parts cream: 1 part
     eggyolk
Slowly add a little hot liquid to the liaison beating constantly. This is
     known as “tempering”
Off the heat, add the warm, diluted liaison to the rest of the sauce.
     Stirring well as you pour in
Return the sauce to low heat to warm it gently, but do not heat higher
     than 180F or it will curdle.
Hold for service above 140F
The Five Grand Sauces

Béchamel
Veloute
Espagnole (Brown)
Tomato
Hollandaise
Bernaise

                     29
 Bechamel – classic standard white sauce.
  Simply milk and roux.
 Veloute – bases of many variations. Made
  of roux and stock.
 Espanogle – “brown sauce” , more
  complicated than bechamel and veloute.
  It accompany red meats. Extra flavor is
  added like the mirepoix
 Tomato sauce - pureed tomato sauce is
  the main ingr. (coulis) (koo-lee), puree of
  veg. of fruits                              30
 Hollandiase – considered an egg thickener
  sauce, but the egg is not thickened by
  coagulation. It works by emulsification
 Bearnaise – Major ingredient is not a stock
  or milk but butter




                                            31
Miscellaneous Sauces

 Coulis
 Jus
 Compound Butters
 Salsa



                       32
How Do Miscellaneous
  Sauces Function?
 They Function in much the same way
  that grand sauces do. They add flavor,
  moisture, texture, and color to the dish.
 They also allow chefs to change the
  menu items by providing a lower-fat
  alternative to the usually heavy grand or
  derivative sauces.

                                              33
Thickeners

Are added to sauces to give them
   additional richness and body




                               34
Examples of
Thickeners:
 Beurre manié
 Liaison
 Slurry
 Roux
     White roux
     Blond roux
     Brown roux



                   35
To Pair the Correct Sauce
      with a Meal
The sauce should be suitable for the
 style of service.
The sauce should be suitable for the
 main ingredient’s cooking technique.
The sauce’s flavor must be appropriate
 for the flavor of the food it is
 accompanying.

                                          36

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Stocks, Soups and Sauces: The Chef's Building Blocks

  • 2. Stocks  Are often called the chef’s building blocks because they form the base for many soups and stocks. 2
  • 3. A STOCK IS…  A flavorful liquid made by gently simmering bones and/or vegetables in a liquid to extract their flavor, aroma, color, body and nutrients. 3
  • 4. The Four Essential Parts of a Stock Are  Mirepoix  Aromatics  Liquid  Major Flavoring Ingredient 4
  • 5. Ingredients: 1) Bones – major ing. Chicken stock – chx bones White stock – beef, beal, pork bones Brown stock – beef,veal browned in an oven. Fish stock – fish bones and trimmings from fillet fumet – often used for flavorful fish stock, esp. made with wine. 5
  • 6. 2. Mirepoix –(meer-pwah) aromatic veg. , 2 nd most impt. Contributors. Carrots, onion, celery. Chopped coarsely. 3. Acid prod. – Acid help dissolve connective tissue. (Lemon, vinegar, tomato products) 4. Scraps & left overs. 5. Seasoning & spices – “aromatics”. Salt is impt. Ing. Sachet – herbs & spices usually tied in a cheesecloth 6
  • 7.  Bouquet garni – assortment of fresh herbs, tied in a bundle with string. (thyme, parsely stems, bay leaves, cloves,garlic) Ingredients proportion: Bones – 50% Mirepoix – 10% Water – 100% 7
  • 8. Types of Stock  White Stock  Brown Stock  Fumet  Court Bouillon  Glace  Remouillage  Bouillon 8
  • 9. TYPES OF STOCK: Bouillon – in french cuisine, is a simply “broth”, made by simmering a mirepoix and aromatic herbs (boquet garni), with either beef, vel or poultry. Fumet – is a concentrated stock, particularly one made from fish and mushroom, used to add flavor or to less intensely flavored stock Consomme- is a clear soup made from richly flavored stock that has been clarified usually a fining process thru the use of egg protein (egg white)
  • 10. Court bouillon – a flavored liquid for poaching and quick cooking foods. Traditional uses include poaching fish and sea food Glace – stock that is reduced until it coats the back of the spoon, making it so concentrated. Demi Glace – is a rich brown sauce use as a base for many sauces Remoulage – “rewetting” stock made from bones that already been used once. Discard the mirepoix and herbs after draining. Add fresh mirepoix.
  • 11. Bones For Stock Are Prepared By:  Blanchi ng  Brownin g  Sweatin g 11
  • 12. Blanching – to get rid of some impurities that can cause cloudiness. Steps: rinse bones in cold water, to wash away the blood. Impurities dissolve easily in cold water. Hot water retards extraction. Bring water to bloil, as the water heat, impurities solidify and rise to the surface. Drain the bones and now ready for stock pot. Browning – put the bones in an oven about 375F for 1 hr. to brown Sweating Bones or Shells. Bones or shell are used in fumets. The proteins present in fish bones and shellfish can take on an unacceptable flavor if allowed to cook to long.
  • 13. Sweating is a procedure that starts flavor release quickly. The stock can e cooked in less than 45 minutes, with full extraction of body and flavor. 1. Heat a small amount of oil or clarified butter in a rondeau. 2. Add the bones or shells and mirepoix. 3. Cook over moderate heat, stirring occasionally, until the flesh on the bones turns opaque, or the shells have a bright color, and the moisture is released from the mirepoix
  • 14. What Four Qualities Are Stocks Evaluated On? 1. Flavor 2. Color 3. Aroma 4. Clarity 14
  • 15. Cooling and Storing Stock  Put the stockpot in the ice-bath and stir often. When cool, place in the refrigerator.  Break down the large amounts of stock into smaller amounts. Place stock in small containers in the refrigerator. Stir occasionally 15
  • 16. Preparing Soups  Any good soup is made with the best ingredients available.  Clear Soups & Thick Soups are the two basic types 16
  • 17. Helpful Hints For Cream And Purée Soups:  If a cream soup becomes too thick, add water or stock until the correct consistency is achieved. Never use heavy cream- it can hide the flavor of the main ingredient.  If the soup has a sour or “off” flavor, or has curdled, discard it. Cream soups have a brief storage time once the cream has been added.  To store cream soups 17
  • 18. Classifications of soup 1. Clear soups – are all based on clear, unthickend broth or stock. a. broth or bouillon – clear soups without solid ingr. b. Vegetable soup – clear, seasoned stock with veg,meat, and starches. c. Consomme’ – rich, flavorful stock or broth that has been clarified by adding eggwhite. 18
  • 19. 2) Thick soup – are opaque rather than transparent. a. Cream soup – soups are thicken with roux, beurre maine, liaison or other thickening agents. b. Purees’ naturally thickened by pureeing of the ingredients. Until they are smooth and creamy as cream soup. c. Bisques – thickened soup made from shellfish with cream 19
  • 20. d. Chowder – hearty soups made from fish and shellfish and or veg. Usually contain milk and potatoes. e. Potage – term associated with thick, hearty soups. 3. Specialty & National Soup – native soups from the other countries. 4. Vegetarian soups and Low fat soup – veg. based soup. No meat 20
  • 21. Which Soups Are Clear And Which Soups Are Thick?  Consom Clear mé Soup  Bisque Thick  Broth Soup  Cream Clear  Purée Soup Thick Soup 21
  • 22. Garnish: 1. Garnishes – vegetables (brunoise shape) 2. Toppings – clear serve w/o topping Thick soups: fresh herbs(parsely, asge, celery leaves, leek (jullienne), sliced toasted almonds, grated cheese, sieved eggyolk, croutons, parmesan cheese, crumbled bacon, paprika, flavored butter, sour cream Accompaniments: They are serve with crackers. Corn chips, bread sticks, cheese straws, whole grain wafers 22
  • 23. From Which Country Does Each Specialty Soup Originate?  Borscht  Russia  Gazpacho  Spain  Gumbo  Louisiana  Minestrone  Italy  Vichyssoise  France 23
  • 24. Cooling And Finishing Techniques  Remove surface fat from soup before service.  Blot with strips of un- waxed brown butcher paper to eliminate unwanted fat.  Soups should be garnished just before service. 24
  • 25. Sauces - A flavorful liquid, usually to thickened, used to season, flavor and enhance the food  Add moisture and richness to food  Introduce complementary and contrasting flavors  Enhance the appearance of food  Add texture to the dish 25
  • 26. Structure of Sauces: 1. Liquid ( base of the most sauces) - white stock – veloute sauce - crown stock – brown sauce, espagnole (ess pahn yohl). - Milk – bechamel - tomato plus stock – tamato sauce - Clarified butter - hollandaise 26
  • 27. 2. Thickening Agents : a. Starches – flour, corn starch, arrowroot, maize, bread crumbs, rice flour. b.Roux = mixture of equal parts of fat and flour. c. Flour – Bread flour less starch. d. Eggyolk e. Liaison – a mix. Of eggyolk and cream, used to enrich and lightly thickened the sauce f. Reduction 27
  • 28. Beurre maine – (burr mahnyay) mixture of equal parts of soft raw butter, flour worked together to form a smooth paste. It is used for quick thickening at the end of cooking to finish a sauce. White wash – a thin mixture of flour and cold water. Not recommended. How to make liason : Beat together eggyolk and cream in stainless. 2-3 parts cream: 1 part eggyolk Slowly add a little hot liquid to the liaison beating constantly. This is known as “tempering” Off the heat, add the warm, diluted liaison to the rest of the sauce. Stirring well as you pour in Return the sauce to low heat to warm it gently, but do not heat higher than 180F or it will curdle. Hold for service above 140F
  • 29. The Five Grand Sauces Béchamel Veloute Espagnole (Brown) Tomato Hollandaise Bernaise 29
  • 30.  Bechamel – classic standard white sauce. Simply milk and roux.  Veloute – bases of many variations. Made of roux and stock.  Espanogle – “brown sauce” , more complicated than bechamel and veloute. It accompany red meats. Extra flavor is added like the mirepoix  Tomato sauce - pureed tomato sauce is the main ingr. (coulis) (koo-lee), puree of veg. of fruits 30
  • 31.  Hollandiase – considered an egg thickener sauce, but the egg is not thickened by coagulation. It works by emulsification  Bearnaise – Major ingredient is not a stock or milk but butter 31
  • 32. Miscellaneous Sauces  Coulis  Jus  Compound Butters  Salsa 32
  • 33. How Do Miscellaneous Sauces Function?  They Function in much the same way that grand sauces do. They add flavor, moisture, texture, and color to the dish.  They also allow chefs to change the menu items by providing a lower-fat alternative to the usually heavy grand or derivative sauces. 33
  • 34. Thickeners Are added to sauces to give them additional richness and body 34
  • 35. Examples of Thickeners:  Beurre manié  Liaison  Slurry  Roux  White roux  Blond roux  Brown roux 35
  • 36. To Pair the Correct Sauce with a Meal The sauce should be suitable for the style of service. The sauce should be suitable for the main ingredient’s cooking technique. The sauce’s flavor must be appropriate for the flavor of the food it is accompanying. 36

Editor's Notes

  1. Certain connective tissues like “collagen” and the cartilage which is the best source of gelatin. That makes the stock flavorful
  2. Bouillon – in french cuisine, is a simply “broth”, made by simmering a mirepoix and aromatic herbs (boquet garni), with either beef, vel or poultry. Fumet – is a concentrated stock, particularly one made from fish and mushroom, used to add flavor or to less intensely flavored stock Consomme- is a clear soup made from richly flavored stock that has been clarified usually a fining process thru the use of egg protein (egg white) Court bouillon – a flavored liquid for poaching and quick cooking foods. Traditional uses include poaching fish and sea food Glace – stock that is reduced until it coats the back of the spoon, making it so concentrated. Demi Glace – is a rich brown sauce use as a base for many sauces Remoulage – “rewetting” stock made from bones that already been used once. Discard the mirepoix and herbs after draining. Add fresh mirepoix.
  3. Blanching – to get rid of some impurities that can cause cloudiness. Steps: rinse bones in cold water, to wash away the blood. Impurities dissolve easily in cold water. Hot water retards extraction. Bring water to bloil, as the water heat, impurities solidify and rise to the surface. Drain the bones and now ready for stock pot. Browning – put the bones in an oven about 375F for 1 hr. to brown Sweating Bones or Shells . Bones or shell are used in fumets. The proteins present in fish bones and shellfish can take on an unacceptable flavor if allowed to cook to long. Sweating is a procedure that starts flavor release quickly. The stock can e cooked in less than 45 minutes, with full extraction of body and flavor. 1. Heat a small amount of oil or clarified butter in a rondeau. 2. Add the bones or shells and mirepoix. 3. Cook over moderate heat, stirring occasionally, until the flesh on the bones turns opaque, or the shells have a bright color, and the moisture is released from the mirepoix.
  4. Standard portion : Appetizer – 6-8 oz. (200 to 250 ml) Main course – 10-12 oz (300-350 ml)
  5. Beurre maine – (burr mahnyay) mixture of equal parts of soft raw butter, flour worked together to form a smooth paste. It is used for quick thickening at the end of cooking to finish a sauce. White wash – a thin mixture of flour and cold water. Not recommended. How to make liason : Beat together eggyolk and cream in stainless. 2-3 parts cream: 1 part eggyolk Slowly add a little hot liquid to the liaison beating constantly. This is known as “tempering” Off the heat, add the warm, diluted liaison to the rest of the sauce. Stirring well as you pour in Return the sauce to low heat to warm it gently, but do not heat higher than 180F or it will curdle. Hold for service above 140F
  6. Bechamel
  7. Guidelines in preparing Holladaise sauce: Combine eggyolks and reduction in a stainless steel bowl. Whip over hot water bath. Continue to whip over hot water until thick and light. Very slowly whip in the butter. Set the bowl in a sauce pan lined with a kitchen towel to hold it steadly. The finished sauce should be thick but pourable.