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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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"Andy Katz" > wrote in message
... > I know, I ought to know this, but today's hollandaise came out right, > bright and very light. Temp control was good (the owner wanted me to > use glass because her last chef did and what the did was golden and > don't even get me started ....). Asserting my independence I went back > to metal. > > One odd thing was yolks breaking today. Three or four out of nine. The > sauce came out quite good, but, as I wrote, lighter than it's ever > been after adding lemon juice (but no water, wouldn't take it). Do egg > whites lighten the hollandaise? As in the other posted reply, Hollandaise uses yolks only. The sign of fresh eggs is firm high-standing yolks. If they are "old" the yolks get flat and often break. Whole eggs don't whip (hold air) well, which is why a soufflé and many other whipped whole egg recipes call for you to whip yolks and whites separately and then recombine by folding. |
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