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Recipe: Roux
Warning: Roux is not a sauce to pour over meat to complete a meal, instead it is a
basis for a sauce or gravy.
Roux is a
mainstay of Cajun and Creole cooking being used to flavour, thicken and
colour many dishes, e.g. Gumbo.
Traditionally roux is cooked very slowly on low heat, sometimes for hours, but
cooking times can be reduced by using higher temperatures. To achieve success you need a long handled wooden
spoon, a heavy black iron saucepan and constant attention. This recipe
makes one cup - sufficient for the basis of a typical main course - but you can
make larger quantities and store it; just place the Roux in a bowl, cover with
cling film, with the cling film touching the surface, and place in the
fridge. 1 tablespoon of roux will thicken 1 to 1½ cups of liquid.
1/2 cup vegetable oil (e.g. Canola or Peanut oil)
- Heat the oil in a heavy frying pan over a medium high heat until hot
(~180° C). It is hot enough when a bit of flour scattered on top
sizzles.
2/3 cups plain flour (traditionally equal parts oil and flour by weight; but
many authors vary it)
- Sprinkle 1/4 of the flour on top of the oil.
- Stir in with a long handled wooden spoon
- Mix the flour and oil into a smooth paste.
- Gradually mix in the remainder of the flour in the same way.
- Reduce the heat to medium
- Cook the roux, stirring constantly. The mix should be on a slow
boil, with tiny bubbles constantly breaking. You have to cook it for at least
5 minutes, but a longer cooking time gives a stronger colour and flavour
(see the table below). The mixture should be thick - about the texture of wet concrete or plaster of Paris. Add more oil or flour until it's right.
- If roux does burn it will be bitter and unusable - throw it away and start
again. Burnt roux will have black dots in it.
Shades of Roux
A longer cooking time gives a stronger colour and flavour, but means the
resulting roux has less thickening power.
If you take the risk and use a high heat then cooking times are
considerably reduced. In this case stir fast and adjust the
temperature by occasionally sliding the pan off the heat.
| Name |
Colour |
Cooking Time (min) on Medium Heat |
Cooking Time (min) on High Heat |
Suitable for |
| Blonde or golden roux |
light golden |
5-10 |
~2 |
Gravies for pork chops or cream sauces for fish and
vegetables |
| Peanut butter roux |
Deep golden brown |
10-15 |
|
Chicken and seafood dishes |
| Brown roux |
Deep brown |
20-30 |
~5 |
Gumbos and stews |
| Black roux |
Black |
60 |
20-25 |
Black roux is, apparently, favoured by Cajun cooks but is tricky to time
right without burning the roux. |
Source
All
Recipes: All About Roux
Kelly, D. (1993). Creole and Cajun Cooking. Australia: Ken
Fin Books.
Passmore, J. (1992). Step-by-Step Cajun Cooking. Sydney: Murdoch
Books. |