The following is a shortcut I've developed based upon techniques I've observed on Iron Chef where they have to develop a lot of flavor in a short amount of time. The total time this takes is around an hour. The pictures below represent my throwing this together as part of a meal a made for an out of town business guest.
Ingredients:
I start with a canned broth - beef in this case - so I've got some pre-existing flavor base to start from. Then I'm going to need elements from each of the five flavor groups. In this case we have:
Sweet - Carrot, onion, garlic
Bitter - Celery, parsely
Sour - Wine
Salt - Salt Pork and salt
Umami - Salt pork and cured salami
One of the keys is to use a lot of each ingredient because you want to get a lot of flavor into the broth. I also cut everything pretty small since there wasn't going to be a lot of time for flavor extraction. I've started with all the veggies but the parsley and the two meat products. I cooked them in some oil at a low heat so they don't brown but start getting soft (sweating).
Then I add my broth, wine, parsley, salt and pepper. In this case I used two cups each of broth and wine because I wanted a winey/sour Germanic type sauce. You can change your proportions of the various flavors to alter the outcome. For example you could use a lower proportion of wine to broth for a less wine based flavor.
I then cooked it at a medium heat for about 40 minutes to get a good reduction.
Then strain out the solids, put the sauce back in the pan and reduce over a higher heat.
I could have reduced this down to a pretty concentrated sauce but I wanted a good volume so I chose to thicken it instead with a slurry of corn starch and water.
Here's the finished product on a boneless pork chop with homemade spaetzle.
5 comments:
That's pretty impressive for an hours work.
You should go on one of the cooking reality shows. You would kick ass
That looks do-able, even for me! Thanks for sharing your tips!
That looks good. And I adore spaetzle, although I usually bake mine with cheese and onions.
Every time I read your blog, I get hungry. This seems simple enough. May have to add it to my list of things to try.
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