[Citation Needed] wrote:
Riku wrote:
Invented a gin and butter sauce that tastes a little bit like mustard and pairs really well with roasted chicken and vegetables. I'd imagine it probably goes with just about any "light" flavored savory food, like pork/poultry/seafood, pasta/grains, mild vegetables, probably would be a good dressing for a mixed green salad.
Definitely a special occasion, only-share-this-with-people-we-really-like food, though, because to make a decent amount of sauce, I used a cup and a half of gin, which is rather expensive (almost half a bottle of liquor, man). Like, the sauce costs more than everything I put it on, oooooops.
I adore gin. What's the recipe, if you don't mind sharing?
Of course of course. Unfortunately, it just occurred to me that I never actually measure flour when I make a roux, I just go with what looks right in the pan. So this is a guess:
1/2 cup of flour
8oz (usually 2 sticks) of butter
6 cloves garlic
1/4 red onion
3 cups of water (it cooks down while you evaporate the liquor)
1 1/2 cups gin
1/2 cup lemon juice
2Tb dried basil
salt to taste
Toast the flour on med-high heat in a large skillet/sautee pan until it's a toasty brown, then add the butter, stirring constantly so that the flour doesn't fry into hard crisps.
Add each of the following ingredients in the order they're listed, fully incorporating each one before you add the next, except hold off on the salt until the end.
Keep the sauce uncovered and bubbling as you stir it, the heat still above medium. You need to keep it moving to ensure that the butter doesn't separate and to keep the bottom from scorching.
It probably takes about 30 minutes for the sauce to cook down to a negligible alcohol content. Don't really bother trying to taste it before then, because the heat will have the alcohol vapor choke out your ability to catch any flavor other than "ACID. SO MUCH ACID."
If you feel like the sauce got too thick, gradually incorporate water until it's the texture you want.
Add your salt and put it on EVERYTHING.