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Hardcover Saucier's Apprentice Book

ISBN: 0394489209

ISBN13: 9780394489209

Saucier's Apprentice

Here is the first book all the great sauces of practical, workable system. Raymond Sokolov, the widely admired former Food Editor of The first to point out that the hitherto mysterious saucier's art,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Hardcover

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Absolutely the greatest sauce book for traditional French sauces

I have browsed through many sauce books in the past several years, and found two to be indispensable: Raymond Sokolov's THE SAUCIER'S APPRENTICE and Michel Roux's SAUCES. Both books accomplish their goals impeccably. Roux wishes to present readers with a faster way to produce restaurant quality sauces, providing readers with beautiful appetizing photos for each sauce in the process. It is a book meant not to scare off amateur chefs who are inclined to choose a "Betty Crocker" book rather than a real top notch text on traditional French cooking. Sokolov, on the other hand, appeals to the already converted French gourmet/gourmand. There are no photos, nor are they necessary, since his language is so descriptive and precise, it really creates a photo in your mind. I spent two days preparing the mother sauce for brown sauces and the result was spectacular. I've eaten at many of the top four and five star restaurants in New York, many restaurants throughout Europe (I lived in Germany near the French border for over three years), many restaurants in Chicago, and have never tasted better sauces than those I produced at home from the mother sauce. Here's the trick. You should follow Sokolov's instructions. After you've been through the process, you can get creative if you wish. But keep in mind Sokolov's goal is to teach amateur and professional chefs how to make TRADITIONAL SAUCES, not modern incarnations that use lots of fruits, etc.

A Wonderful Book -- But Be Prepared to Spend Serious Time...

If you're interested in the great French sauces, this is the book for you. Julia Child is a wonderful beginning in that direction, and she also has arranged the sauces more or less by family. But Sokolov takes it to the ultimate degree, particularly with his classical renditions of the "mother sauces". The sauces you will eventually end up with are generally far better than you will ever get in any restaurant outside of France. And even in France, in these degenerate days, most restaurants take shortcuts in making the brown sauces.One or two or three caveats: if you make the "mother sauce" espagnole, and then the demi-glace, following his recipe, you are going to need at least *two* enormous, restaurant-sized kettles. I had one very large one to start with and at some point in the proceedings had to go out and buy another one. He wasn't very clear about this.Plus, he consistently understates the *time* needed to do these recipes, perhaps because he doesn't want to frighten the reader away. He says, for instance, that to make the espagnole-demi-glace, you can do it easily over a weekend in bits and pieces, stepping away from the kitchen occasionally to pass the time with "Fanny Hill" (he's also a wonderfully witty and amusing writer into the bargain). But he is seriously wrong about this particular recipe, the most important one in the book. I am a very experienced cook, and I work fairly quickly, and I undertook this recipe with my French wife, another serious cook, plus occasional help from my mother, *another* very serious cook, and it essentially took *three* days to end up with, as I recall, 18 1-cup frozen portions of demi-glace. Plus there's an *enormous* amount of shopping to do to get the various ingredients -- even in San Francisco it necessitated several trips to wholesale meat markets and latino markets on Market Street for some of the more recondite items. You're never going to find all those bones and pig rinds at your local Safeway....Also, you need to have a *strong* person around to lift and carry a 20- or 30-gallon stock pot loaded to the very top with 10 pounds of bones, 10 pounds of meat, lotsa veggies, and gallons of water. This is never mentioned by him.This book is *not* for the neophyte or the dilettante, although most of the white sauces are a snap to make compared to the basic brown one. If you're only interested in white sauces, a beginning cook could use this book easily....Whatever my caveats, however, this is still a 5-star book. And, as I said, he's a wonderfully witty writer.

Great book for the professional or serious cook

I'm a culinary student here in New York and I picked up this book on the advise of my chef-instructor. I'm glad I listened to him. This book inspired my instructor to become a chef and to make almost every sauce in the book.As for the book, it's pretty straightforward. It starts with a brief history of French sauces and then it pretty much goes right into the sauces. There are 5 mother sauces (Sauce Espagnole, Hollandaise, Béchamel, Velouté, and Tomato) and from these 5 you can make hundreds and hundreds of little derivative sauces. For example, take Sauce Espagnole (Brown Sauce). If you combine equal parts of Brown Sauce and Brown Veal Stock and let that reduce, you've got Demi-Glace (Half-Glaze). Now if you sauté some mushrooms, shallots, add some white wine, Madeira, some demi-glace and tomato, you've got Sauce Chasseur.Here's another example. Take Velouté, add some mushroom liquid and a liaison, and mount the sauce with butter and you've got Sacue Allemande. Now take Sauce Allemande and add three simple ingredients and you've got Sauce Aux Champignons.There are about 70 pages devoted to just brown sauces. The two most time consuming mother sauces to make is Sauce Espagnole and Velouté. Both require stock, however, Velouté is easy to make since it only takes 30 to 40 minutes to make once you have the stock. Sauce Espagnole, on the other hand, takes about 6 to 8 hours to make. Plus you need brown veal stock which takes anywhere from 8-11 hours to make.As you can see it's pretty time consuming but if you take one weekend to make enough stock, once you're done you can freeze them in ice cube trays and take them as you need them. Remember the derivative sauces are really quick and simple, it's the mother sauces that take the most time.If you're serious about cooking, I highly recommend this book.

Complex yet understandable

The saucemaking of classical French Haute Cuisine is a profession in itself, and there is a 'theory' or method behind it's madness. One begins with a 'sauce mere' (the mother sauce), then converts it in a series of steps (involving the addition of new flavors, the straining of spent ingredients, and concentration by simmering), finally 'finishing' the sauce with the addition of delicate herbs or flavorings that would be lost with continued heating. For example, the sauce mere 'demi-glace' (brown sauce thickened with flour and flavored with herbs and wine) is converted to sauce Robert by concentrating with more wine, and then finishing off the heat with butter and mustard.This is the best book I've seen on the subject. Serious saucemaking is time consuming, but if the sauce meres are made in quantity and frozen in portions, the final assembly of nearly every sauce in the book may be accomplished as your dinner vegetables steam - by understanding the theory of progression from one sauce to the next, and devoting perhaps one Saturday every few months to keeping an eye on a stock pot, one may enjoy the sophistication of classical Haute Cuisine with the convenience of bottled substitutes. The initial chapters discussing the history of Haute Cuisine is a treat in itself. Most of the 100+ sauce recipes are followed with the recipe for a single classic example dish where it is featured.When served with a fine sauce, your family and guests will close their eyes and savor every bite of your meal. Nice...

Indispensable, one-of-a-kind book

I purchased this book after reading praise for it from Tom Fitzmorris, a local New Orleans food critic/restaurant reviewer/chef-in-his-own-right. The book was a worthwhile investment. The recipes are organized by "sauce families," or groups of sauce variations that are created from one "mother sauce." Sauce "family trees" are even presented graphically, which helps readers see the range of flavors that complement the original mother sauces (useful in creating your own kitchen variations). Many of the recipes make very large quantities of sauce, but - if you've got the freezer space - they do freeze easily, so don't be intimidated by the quantities. The anecdotes surrounding the naming of sauces and the traditional meal recipes for each sauce are written with dry humor, and will interest and amuse people who are into food. I found myself laughing out loud at times. I view this book partly as an archive for recipes that have fallen out of use (in this age of prions and "mad cow disease", it may be a while before bovine brains are a widely accepted ingredient again) and partly as a fundamental textbook for fine cooking. Every serious cook should own a copy.
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