The 5 Mother Sauces in French Cuisine & Cooking Recipes
The 5 Mother Sauces in French Cuisine & Cooking Recipes
The 5 Mother Sauces in French Cuisine & Cooking Recipes
You can click on any of the mother sauces below to discover the sauce that most interests you, read on to
explore them all, or jump ahead to our five mother sauces chart.
1. Hollandaise Sauce
2. Tomato Sauce (sauce tomat)
3. Bechamel Sauce
4. Espagnole Sauce
5. Veloute Sauce
A mother sauce is a foundational sauce that serves as the basis for a variety of derivative sauces. A
derivative sauce is a sauce that adds ingredients and flavors to a mother sauce. Chefs also refer to derivative
sauces as daughter sauces, small sauces, or secondary sauces. French cuisine claims that there are five
foundational mother sauces from which we form all other sauces. Each mother sauce has a unique liquid,
thickening agent, and distinct flavorings. Three of the five mother sauces use a roux as their thickening
agent.
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Use our informative list of the five mother sauces as your guide to their flavor profiles, ingredients, popular
derivatives, and common uses.
1. Hollandaise Sauce
Hollandaise offers the rich flavor of buttered cream laced with lemon and is the most well-known mother
sauce. While some mother sauces are less famous than their derivatives, hollandaise is the star of its sauce
family tree. Hollandaise sauce is an emulsion (meaning its ingredients don’t combine naturally). The word
hollandaise is French, and it translates to “Dutch sauce” in English. While its name suggests otherwise,
hollandaise is a definitively French sauce hailing from a small Norman town renowned for its butter and
cream.
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Hollandaise Sauce Tastes Like - buttery cream laced with lemon
Hollandaise Ingredients - egg yolks, unsalted butter, lemon juice, water, cayenne pepper, salt, freshly
ground black peppercorns
Uses for Hollandaise Sauce - eggs Benedict, poached salmon, flowering vegetables
Hollandaise Sauce Derivatives - bearnaise sauce, maltaise sauce, choron sauce
Hollandaise Recipe
Note: If your hollandaise becomes too thick, whisk a few drops of warm water into the sauce before serving
it.
2. Tomato Sauce
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Tomato sauce, or sauce tomat in French, is a tomato-based sauce that serves as one of the five mother
sauces. Tomatoes have high water content and tender flesh that cooks into thick sauces without
emulsification. Tomato sauce is popular in Italian cuisine, which uses an array of secondary tomato sauces for
pasta and pizza (https://www.webstaurantstore.com/blog/3322/pizza-sauce-pasta-sauce.html). In his
publication, Auguste Escoffier didn’t signify a particular tomato variety, leaving room for seasonal availability
and flavor preference. We provide the ingredients for Escoffier’s sauce tomat below.
Tomato Sauce Tastes Like - pleasantly acidic tomatoes imbued with garlic, onion, and herbs
Tomato Sauce Ingredients - white veal stock, butter, all-purpose flour, tomatoes, salt pork, carrots,
white/yellow onion, bay leaf, thyme, garlic, salt, pepper, sugar
Uses for Tomato Sauce - pasta, pizza, shakshouka
Tomato Sauce Derivatives - vodka sauce, BBQ sauce, arrabbiata sauce
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Tomato Sauce Recipe
While not the simplest version of tomato sauce, Escoffier's sauce tomat is as decadent as it is famous. Learn
how to make the traditional tomato-based mother sauce below.
To Achieve a Smoother Sauce: we recommend blending the sauce tomat before passing it through the
chinois.
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3. Bechamel Sauce
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Bechamel is the original cream sauce and serves as the foundation for every cheese sauce you know and
love. In its simplest form, bechamel is a combination of milk and white roux. Traditional French, Greek, and
Italian bechamel recipes incorporate salt and nutmeg into their sauces. Bechamel was originally an Italian
sauce, Balsamella, that became a hit in the French royal court of King Louis XIV where it was renamed
‘bechamel’ after his chief steward. Escoffier standardized the name bechamel when he published his list of
mother sauces.
Bechamel Sauce Tastes Like - velvet cream with a lingering, buttery essence
Bechamel Sauce Ingredients - butter, flour, whole milk, salt, nutmeg
Uses for Bechamel Sauce - mac and cheese, lasagna, croque monsieur
Derivatives of Bechamel Sauce - Alfredo, mornay, cheddar cheese sauce
4. Espagnole Sauce
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Espagnole is a brown sauce thickened with a roux composed of brown stock, mirepoix, and tomatoes.
Mirepoix (https://www.webstaurantstore.com/blog/3960/what-is-mirepoix.html) is a French aromatic flavor
base of onion, celery, and carrot cooked together in butter or oil over low heat, so they release their flavors
without browning. Espagnole is the most complex mother sauce. It has a potent flavor that easily overpowers,
so you will rarely directly apply it to your meals. Subsequently, Espagnole sauce is far more popular in its
reduced, derivative forms.
Espagnole Sauce Tastes Like - rich stock lightened with the mild acidity of tomatoes and saturated with
earthy spices
Espagnole Sauce Ingredients - butter, flour, brown stock, tomato puree, carrot, onion, celery, garlic,
peppercorns, bay leaf
Espagnole Sauce Uses - steak + French fries, braised beef short ribs + mashed potatoes, roasted lamb
shanks + creamy polenta
Derivatives of Espagnole Sauce - demi-glace, sauce bourguignon, red wine reduction
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Espagnole Sauce Recipe
Easily create the most complex mother sauce with our Espagnole recipe.
5. Veloute Sauce
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Veloute sauce is a versatile white sauce made by blending a white roux and white stock
(https://www.webstaurantstore.com/blog/2842/stock-and-broth-differences.html). There are three types of
veloute (chicken, fish, and veal) depending on the variety of white stock used. The most common variety is
chicken veloute. Veloute is the most neutral of the five mother sauces, serving as a clean canvas to layer a
diverse array of flavors onto. You’ll find veloute sauce as the base in a variety of chicken dishes, creamy
soups, and other comfort food staples.
Note: Veloute sauce thickens as it cools. If you aren't using it immediately, you can thin the sauce by adding
more hot stock before serving.
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What Is a Sauce?
A sauce is a liquid combined with a thickening agent and flavorings. You can vary your thickening agent to
create a sauce that is fluid, semi-solid, or anywhere in between. Sauces enhance the texture, flavor, and
aesthetic appeal of other foods. You can incorporate sauces during the cooking process, add them after you
plate your food, or serve them on the side.
What Is a Roux?
A roux is a thickening agent made from equal parts flour and fat. You will thicken three of the five mother
sauces with a roux. To make a roux, blend flour into melted fat on the stovetop. Cook the mixture between
350-375 degrees Fahrenheit until it reaches your preferred level of browning. You can stop or extend the
browning process (https://www.webstaurantstore.com/blog/3514/what-is-the-maillard-reaction.html) to
make a white, blonde, or brown roux.
Published by esteemed chef Auguste Escoffier in the 19th century, the five mother sauces are the branches
of the sauce family tree, and all other sauces are leaves growing from their branches. However, the mother
sauces were not always as we know them today. In the 1800s, French chef Marie-Antoine Carême classified
veloute, bechamel, allemande, and Espagnole as the foundational (mother) sauces. In the 19th century,
Auguste Escoffier revolutionized the culinary world by updating traditional haute cuisine and redefining the
mother sauces, making him the father of modern French cuisine. Escoffier identified allemande as a
derivative of veloute and removed it from the list of mother sauces. He then added tomato sauce (sauce
tomat) and hollandaise to the list of foundational sauces, solidifying the five mother sauces we still recognize
today.
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Mother sauces are the matriarchs of the five major sauce families. Perfecting the mother sauces will allow you
to venture on your own sauce journey with a solid foundation of time-tested flavor as your guide. If you’re
ready to get started, check out our saucepan buying guide
(https://www.webstaurantstore.com/guide/928/which-saucepan-should-you-use.html) and discover the
right saucepan for your needs.
Posted in: Kitchen & Cooking Tips (/blog/kitchen-cooking-tips/58/) | Menu Tips (/blog/menu-tips/50/) | By Corrinn McCauley
The information provided on this website does not, and is not intended to, constitute legal advice. Please refer to our Content Policy (/policies.html#Product_Policies) for more details.
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