The Five French Mother Sauces: The Mother of all Resources

by Jacob Burton on December 1, 2008

Since we covered so much ground in the French Mother Sauce Series, both on the blog and podcast, I figured it would be a good idea to place all the information in one, easy to find post. The mother of all mother sauce resources if you will.

So here it is; a list of the mother sauces with their corresponding podcast episodes, classical components, serving suggestions and how to posts.

But first, a quick history lesson.

A Brief History of The Mother Sauces

The French mother sauces were originally four base sauces set forth by Antonin Careme in the 19th century. Careme’s four original mother sauces were Sauce Tomat, Bechamel, Veloute and Espagnole. Then in the 20th century, Chef Auguste Escoffier added the fifth and final mother sauce, hollandaise, with its derivatives covering almost all forms of classical emulsion sauces including mayonnaise.

One Last Thing…

Some of the classical versions of these sauces use different thickening agents to bring the sauce to its proper consistency. If you’re unfamiliar with thickening agents such as roux, liasons, or emulsions, you can follow the corresponding links for more information.

Sauce Bechamel

  • Base: Milk (Usually Whole Milk)
  • Thickening Agent: White Roux
  • Classical Flavorings: White Onion, Clove, Bay Leaf, Salt, White Pepper, Nutmeg
  • Common Secondary Sauces: Cream Sauce, Mornay, Cheddar Cheese Sauce, Mustard Sauce, Nantua
  • Classically Served With: Eggs, Fish, Steamed Poultry, Steamed Vegetables, Pastas, Veal
  • Technique and Recipe: How To Make Bechamel and its Derivatives
  • Corresponding Podcast Episode: FCS Episode 10| Bechamel

Sauce Veloute

Sauce Tomat (AKA Tomato Sauce)

  • Base: Tomatoes (Raw, Tomato Paste, Tomato Puree, Stewed Tomatoes)
  • Thickening Agent: Classically a Roux, modern versions commonly use a reduction or purees
  • Classical Flavorings: Salt Pork, Mirepoix, Garlic, White Veal Stock, Salt & Pepper, Sugar (Just enough to balance acidity, not enough to make the sweetness perceptible).
  • Common Secondary Sauces: Modern variations concentrate more on seasonings giving rise to sauces such as Creole, Portuguese and Spanish Sauce Tomat.
  • Classically Served With: Pasta, Fish, Vegetables (Especially Grilled), Polenta, Veal, Poultry (Especially Chicken), Breads and Dumplings such as Gnocchi.
  • Technique and Recipe: How to Make Tomato Sauce and Its Modern Variations
  • Corresponding Podcast Episode: FCS Episode 11| Sauce Tomat

Sauce Espagnole (AKA Sauce Brune or Brown Sauce)

Hollandaise Sauce

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{ 17 comments… read them below or add one }

Cobourg Restaurants December 26, 2008 at 2:50 am

Bechamel is so easy to make but is so useful. I use it all of the time when making lasagna and macaroni and cheese!

Jacob January 18, 2009 at 6:47 pm

Sometimes the simplest, most classic sauces are still the best.

Chef Fuzz May 25, 2009 at 7:11 pm

Lol! Dude! =-) Man-to-man, I absolutely LOVE the work you are doing here. I, so thankfully, stumbled across your sight by Googling “Mother Sauces” for a research paper. I’m presently in a “self-actualization” period in my life. (Buzz words, gotta love’em.) I’m too old and damaged to be a rockstar and am exploring the chemistry and artistry of food. I figure, may as well earn a living, while doing something I love. I truly enjoy your approach to this much needed ministry. For you are TRULY an answer to my prayers. I hope so0n to contribute toward more of your training episodes online. If your training is not part of some college curriculum, I recommend you explore that option. I’m back in school after 20+ years and find your works great for review. I also loved your knife sharpening instruction video. Do you have more that match up with your audio broadcasts? Soups are next, right? Seriously, thank you Chef Jacob.

RACHIDA July 10, 2009 at 10:54 am

I just want to say thank you for all this informations. i am in a culinary school now, with all those recipes i feel like a pro. thanks again!

NASSER MOHAMED July 25, 2009 at 2:26 pm

A very nice site and Ihop to be one of your members or some thing like this thank you

Jacob July 28, 2009 at 1:41 am

@ Rachida,

Glad I can be of service. I know that there are a lot of people over on the Free Culinary School Forum who would love to know about your experiences in culinary school. If you get a chance, head over to the forum and let people know about your culinary school experiences.

Connor Roche December 15, 2009 at 6:08 am

Hello, my name is Connor Roche, I am a student at NCKTC (North Central Kansas Technical Collage). I am one of their culinary studens, and verry interested in foods. Writing a report, and I would like to say verry nice job =)

Jacob Burton December 22, 2009 at 12:15 pm

Hi Connor. Glad you’re enjoying the website and podcast. Good luck with culinary school. Talk soon.

ivan January 14, 2010 at 7:55 pm

hi this is very nice stuff for knowledge can u mail me a site where ican get nice reciepes for trade test

rachida January 15, 2010 at 5:43 pm

Hi Ivan,
There are a lot of nice sites with awsome recipes. But one that i never been disappointed with the results is cook.com. enjoy and let me know. Good luck.

Geoffrey Grigg January 17, 2010 at 3:34 am

Terrific site.

Thank you.

Geoffrey

Saroj Sedhain January 26, 2010 at 9:16 am

Hi,I am impressed visiting this site and I heartly thanks to you for providing such a great knowledge.I have one dought regarding basic sauces.I have learned that there are six basic/mother sauces but you have mentioned that there are five mother sauces.I want to know that which one is correct.five or six?
Thanks
saroj

rachida January 28, 2010 at 4:27 pm

Hi saroj:
A lot of chefs didn’t agree on that, some say 5 basis sauces, and some say five plus one. for some reason they dont say six but five plus one. But most agree there are only five sauces: espagnole, tomato, bachamel, hollandaise and veloute.
i hope i help!
rachida

joseph January 29, 2010 at 10:09 pm

hi chef,you’ve just made my day.
thank u so much..more power.
Godspeed!
joseph

manzoor February 23, 2010 at 2:47 am

first &formost thank u 4 d knowledge plz tell me d difference between charred & charring?

Dominic Parson March 5, 2010 at 9:48 am

Awesome frickin site, man! There is nothing better out there. The way you present things is just so perefect. I love your site. Please keep up the most awesome work ever!

kabbarkhan March 10, 2010 at 7:02 am

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