I cooked french onion soup last night and I was curious about one of the steps. After the onions have been caramelized, the recipe says to cook them with flour on medium heat for 3 minutes. What is the purpose of this?
We are happy to be able to to present a very special Carmina for Styleforum GMTO boot made using an exclusive leather: black, hatch grain shell cordovan. This will include shoe trees and a special stamp just for us, Please do check it out (and vote!) if you are interested in a pair of high quality boots that you will not be able to get anywhere else. Save yourself from the regret of missing out!
STYLE. COMMUNITY. GREAT CLOTHING.
Bored of counting likes on social networks? At Styleforum, you’ll find rousing discussions that go beyond strings of emojis.
Click Here to join Styleforum's thousands of style enthusiasts today!
Styleforum is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.
I cooked french onion soup last night and I was curious about one of the steps. After the onions have been caramelized, the recipe says to cook them with flour on medium heat for 3 minutes. What is the purpose of this?Originally Posted by GQgeek
What he ^ said. Otherwise you'll have too much oil float to the surface. A few glistening drops is okay, but if it's a film then people will have to eat through the fat before they get to the stockOriginally Posted by horton
What he ^ said. Otherwise you'll have too much oil float to the surface. A few glistening drops is okay, but if it's a film then people will have to eat through the fat before they get to the stockOriginally Posted by horton
But the next step is to pour in excess water which you then reduce over a period of an hour as you cook the onions with the broth and bouquet garni... Surely this counteracts any thickening the flour has done?Originally Posted by GQgeek
You probably already figured this out...but the water will mix with the base to create the soup...and the roux will thicken all of that to get the consistancy you want.Originally Posted by spence
Be careful when scaling down...the ratio's don't always stay linear!Originally Posted by spence
Ya... I've noticed that with other recipes but it's something you have to consider on a case-by-case basis.. I only started to cook "seriously" around november so i've still got a lot to learn through experience.Originally Posted by GQgeek
Ya... I've noticed that with other recipes but it's something you have to consider on a case-by-case basis.. I only started to cook "seriously" around november so i've still got a lot to learn through experience. It's too bad scaling-down isn't as simple as maintaining molar ratios in chemistry though. That would make cooking easy.Originally Posted by GQgeek
No, the other answers are correct. As the liquid simmers over time the roux thickens the liquid and the fat and impuruties in the flour rise to the top to be skimmed off. All that remains of the flour is the pure starch. Nowadays roux is rarely used anymore, but Onion Soup is not a nowadays recipe.Originally Posted by iammatt