Posts Tagged ‘emulsions’

Emulsions

When two not-so-friendly-with-each-other liquid joins together

when eggs become mayonnaise

when eggs become mayonnaise

In the simplest terms, an emulsion is a stable mixture of two liquids—such as oil and water—that normally separate from each other. Emulsions can be temporary (measured in seconds or minutes), semi permanent (hours), or relatively permanent (days, months, and sometimes years).

Mayonnaise is the best known and most widely consumed emulsified sauce. Basically, it is an emulsion comprising oil, egg yolks, and either lemon juice or vinegar. Related sauces include chantilly (mayonnaise mixed with whipped cream), gribiche (a piquant mayonnaise made with hard-boiled yolks), and rémoulade (mayonnaise plus chopped pickles, mustard, and other flavoring agents).

Hollandaise is the most celebrated emulsified sauce. It is an emulsion consisting of butter, egg yolks, and lemon juice combined with a little water, salt, and cayenne pepper.  Well-known derivatives include béarnaise (hollandaise enlivened with shallots, tarragon, and vinegar),choron (flavored with tomato), maltese (infused with orange), and mousseline (combined with whipped cream). Other world-renowned emulsified sauces include beurre blanc and sabayon (zabaglione).

Sauces are not the only emulsions. Whole milk, for example, is one, too. If milk fresh from the cow is left to stand, the emulsion breaks down and the cream (butterfat) rises to the top. Homogenization, a process that creates a relatively stable emulsion, prevents this separation.

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September 2010
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