Рецепт What is a Roux?
A few days ago I received a call from my son Bob. His wife Kim,was making a Cheddar Cheese Soup and the recipe called for making a roux. They often call me with a "cooking question," and I am always happy to answer. I am thrilled when my kids take an interest in cooking:) In Southern States, a roux is part of every day cooking, but I grew up learning how to thicken sauces and gravy using a flour and water mixture or a corn starch and water mixture also called a "Slurry" Soups and stews were thickened with rice, pasta or potatoes. So, to answer your question Bob and Kim, a roux is...........
What is a Roux?
A roux (ROO) is a mixture of flour and fat that, after being slowly cooked over low heat, is used to thicken mixtures such as soups and sauces. There are four classic roux: white, blond, brown and dark. The color and flavor is determined by the length of time the mixture is cooked. Both white and blond roux are made with butter. A light roux is cooked until pale golden. Blond roux is cooked until it is beige. Both are used to thicken cream and white sauces and light soups. The fuller-flavored brown and dark roux can be made with butter, drippings, and pork or beef fat. It's cooked to a deep golden brown, and to a deep dark mahogany brown, sometimes called a chocolate roux, and used for rich, dark soups and sauces. Cajun and Creole dishes use a lard-based roux, which is cooked, sometimes for almost an hour, until a beautiful mahogany brown. This dark nutty-flavored base is used for specialties like gumbo.
Roux thickens sauces, soups, and stews, as well as lending those dishes a special flavor. Cooking flour in fat inactivates an enzyme that, if not destroyed by high heat, interferes with flour's thickening ability. Cooking flour also changes the flour's raw cereal taste to a toasty or nutty flavor. Both the flavor and the color become deeper the longer the roux cooks. In addition to improving raw flour's flavor and color, cooking flour in fat helps to keep the starch in the flour from forming long strands or clumps when the roux is combined with a liquid. Keep in mind that the same weight of white roux has more thickening power than a darker roux, because the browning process causes some of the starch in the flour to break down. The darker the roux, the less thickening power it has. In addition to thickening a dish, roux will change the color of a sauce and lend a nutty/toasted flavor. Dark roux is important in Creole and Cajun cuisines, which gives gumbos and stews a unique character. Also, another advantage of using a roux is that the starches present in the flour do not break down as easily as some others, creating a more stable sauce.
Roux is prepared primarily with all-purpose flour, due to its starch content. Clarified butter is the most common fat used for making roux, but whole butter, vegetable oils, rendered chicken fat, or other rendered fats may also be used. Each fat will change the finished dish's flavor.
- How to make a roux~
- 1 cup all-purpose flour
- 1 cup fat, (drippings from pork, or chicken, butter, shortening or oil)
1. Choose the fat you want to use.
The fat you use to make a roux greatly impacts its flavor. Use bacon drippings to create a smoky, salty base for the dish you're making. Butter adds richness and shortening and other types of oil tend to create a light flavor.
Use the fat recommended in the recipe you're using. If it's not specified consider these options:
A. Use bacon or pork drippings to make a roux you'll be using for gumbo or other dishes that will have smokey elements.
B. Use butter to make a roux you'll be using for a cream soup, such as a chowder, cheese soup or mac 'n cheese.
C. Use shortening to make a roux for gratin dishes.
2. Heat fat in a skillet. Use a cast-iron skillet or another heavy frying pan. Place the pan over medium high heat and add the fat. Let the fat heat until it has just melted. If using oil, let oil heat up for 2 minutes.
3. Add the flour. Place the flour in the skillet with the fat. Use a whisk to begin stirring the mixture constantly. Use the whisk to break up any lumps in the flour and distribute it evenly through the melted fat.
For a thicker roux: add an extra 1/4 cup of flour.
For a thinner roux: reduce the flour by 1/4 cup.
4. Cook the roux. Continue whisking the roux constantly while it cooks. The mixture will begin to thin and darken after several minutes. Continue cooking until it has the color and consistency you need.
5. Remove the roux from heat. When the roux has reached the color and texture you want, remove it from the heat. It's now ready to use.
6. Store the roux. If you want to use the roux later, place it in a food storage container and keep it covered in the refrigerator. You can scoop out as much as you need on a recipe by recipe basis.
Information from: Wikihow, The Professional Chef: The Culinary Institute of America 8th Edition.