Tuesday, 18 August 2009

Poached Eggs over Spinach with Sauce Velouté (Ravigote)



















This might not look the most appetizing in photos, and the 1980s, haute-cuisine-style plating doesn't help, but, trust me, this tasted delicious.

Ravigote sauce has this sort of cryptic and scary entry in La Rousse:
Ravigote. A spicy sauce served hot or cold but always highly seasoned. Cold ravigote is a vinaigrette mixed with capers, chopped herbs, and chopped onion. The hot sauce is made by adding velouté sauce to equal quantities of white wine and wine vinegar, reducing with chopped shallots; it is finished with chopped herbs and served particularly with calf's head and brains and boiled fowl.
Essentially, the cold version is a herbed vinaigrette that lends itself to mussels, veggies,, and salad in general.

We couldn't find a more exact recipe for warm ravigote anywhere, so we used this opportunity to practice a velouté and then go crazy with some leftover spinach and eggs and a package of smoked salmon I accidentally carried with me in my bag all the way to London and back while British-Librarying the whole day.

Velouté Ingredients
75 g butter
75 g flour
1.5 litres chicken stock

Cooking procedure
1. Melt butter with flour in a pan to make a blond roux.
2. Add chicken stock and bring to a boil, cooking for up to 30 minutes.



If I could do it again, I'd halve the white wine vinegar and put in a bit more white wine to compensate for the lost flavor. The sauce ended up very tart, and although I liked it a lot (sauerkraut, pickled beets, and mustard being some of my favorite foods), I don't that many people would.

Ravigote Ingredients
75 ml white wine vinegar
75 ml white wine
5 shallots
2 cloves garlic
1 T Herbs de Provence
pepper

Ravigote Procedure
1. Chop the shallots and garlic and let sweat in some butter for about 5 minutes.
2. Add white wine and vinegar to a stockpot, and simmer to reduce a bit.
3. Combine shallots and garlic to liquid, and add herbs.
4. Reduce to ~50% the original volume, and add to the velouté.
5. Reduce slightly more if desired, and add pepper to taste.

1 comment:

Lois said...

It looks delicious to me. The poached egg is nicely poofy too.;-)