🥘 Ingredients
- clarified butter 2 Tbsp
- all-purpose flour 2 Tbsp
🍳 Cookware
- medium saucepan
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1Melt in a medium saucepan over medium-low heat add 2 Tbsp clarified butter . Whisk in until well blended and smooth, about 1 ½ minutes 2 Tbsp all-purpose flour .
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2White roux, used to make white sauce, or béchamel, is cooked just until the butter and flour are evenly incorporated and should be removed from the heat before the roux begins to color, 3 to 5 minutes.
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3Blond roux, used in velouté sauces and some cream soups, is cooked until it begins to give off a faint nutty aroma and turns an ivory color, 6 to 7 minutes.
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4Brown roux, basic to Cajun and Creole cooking, is cooked the longest (15 to 20 minutes, sometimes more) until it is dark brown and has a string nutty fragrance.
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5Light sauce uses 3 oz total roux (1.5 oz each of butter and flour) for each 4 cups of liquid.
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6Medium sauce uses 4 oz total roux (2 oz each of butter and flour) for each 4 cups of liquid.
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7Heavy sauce uses 6 oz total roux (3 oz each of butter and flour) for each 4 cups of liquid.
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8The longer you cook the roux, the less it will thicken a sauce or other mixture. Heat eventually breaks down the starch in the flour.