Planning for France has reawakened my interest in the art of sauce making. For last night's dinner of roasted chicken, carrots and brown rice I made a simple (and hopefully really French) glaze to drizzle over everything.
Set aside about 1.5 cups of the juices and drippings that result from cooking the meat. In this case, I was using chicken that had brined (soaked in a flavored salty water bath) with tumeric and a bay leaf so after cooking the liquid had those infusions on top of the usual "salty poultry" flavor. To this broth I added a crushed thread of saffron and simmered for 1 minute in the microwave. The idea is to add any good combination of flavorings to create delicious liquid with a slightly overseasoned taste.
Meanwhile in a small saucepan use a tablespoon of good butter to cook 2 rounded tablespoons of pastry flour. If you don't have pastry flour, use the most finely ground soft white flour you have. Unfortunately this is a case where healthy whole wheat won't work, but you don't use much. Stir this paste in the bottom of your pan over med-low heat for 3 minutes.
Slowly add in the broth and turn up the heat. After a minute or so of bubbling the sauce will thicken and you are done! If you aren't worried about calories, an extra pat or 2 of butter melted in at this stage will give you a glossy finish.
I wish I could credit and thank the many sources I gleaned this technique from; a chef friend, my genius big sister, the Food Network and internet recipe sharers. This is, obviously, very flexible and inexact. I do it differently every time but the method is the same. More art, less science, all yum!
Please add any comments, suggestions, thoughts and results on your own saucy experiences!
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