List of sauces
The following is a list of notable culinary and prepared sauces used in cooking and food service.
General
- Anchovy essence – Thick, oily sauce of pounded anchovies and spices
- Avgolemono – Egg-lemon sauce or soup
- Avocado sauce – Sauce prepared using avocado as a primary ingredient
- Barbecue sauce – Sauce used as a marinade, basting, topping, or condiment [1]
- Bread sauce – Sauce made with milk and bread crumbs
- Capital sauce
- Cocktail sauce – Condiment served usually with seafoods
- Coffee sauce – Culinary sauce that includes coffee
- Corn sauce
- Coulis – Thin sauce made from vegetables or fruits
- Duck sauce – American Chinese condiment with a translucent orange appearance
- Egusi sauce
- Fry sauce – Condiment for French fries
- Halvaytar
- Mahyawa – Iranian cuisine tangy sauce made out of fermented fish
- Mignonette sauce – Condiment served with oysters
- Mint sauce – Sauce made of chopped mint
- Mushroom ketchup – Style of ketchup
- Normande sauce
- Pan sauce – Cooking technique to create a sauce
- Peppercorn sauce – Culinary cream sauce
- Rainbow sauce – Type of culinary sauce
- Ravigote sauce – Classic, lightly acidic sauce in French cuisine
- Romesco – Catalan sauce of tomatoes, garlic, and nuts
- Salad dressing – Food mixture, served chilled or at room temperature
- Salsa – Condiment used in Mexican cuisine (salsa roja)
- Satzibeli
- Sauce andalouse – Belgian sauce
- Sauce aurore
- Sauce bercy – French sauce
- Sauce poulette
- Sauce vin blanc
- Sofrito – Cooked vegetable foundation for cooking
- Sour cream sauce
- Steak sauce – Brown sauce for seasoning of steaks
- Sweet chili sauce – Condiment primarily used as a dip
- Tomato sauce – Sauce made primarily from tomatoes
- Vinaigrette – Sauce made from oil and vinegar and commonly used as a salad dressing
- Wine sauce
- Worcestershire sauce – English fermented condiment
By type
Brown sauces
Brown sauces – Sauce made with brown meat stock include:
- HP sauce – British sauce made with tamarind
- Bordelaise sauce – French wine sauce
- Chateaubriand sauce – Front cut of a beef tenderloin
- Charcutiere sauce – Compound French sauce
- Chaudfroid sauce – French culinary sauce [2]
- Demi glace – Sauce in French cuisine
- Gravy – Sauce made from the juices of meats
- Mushroom gravy – Type of sauce
- Romesco sauce – Catalan sauce of tomatoes, garlic, and nuts
- Sauce Africaine – French sauce, consisting of sauce espagnole with tomatoes, onions, peppers and herbs
- Sauce au Poivre
- Sauce Robert – French brown mustard sauce [3]
Butter sauces
- Beurre blanc – Emulsified butter sauce
- Beurre manie – Thickening agent
- Beurre monté – Melted butter sauce
- Beurre noisette
- Café de Paris – Butter-based sauce
- Meuniere sauce – French brown butter, parsley, and lemon sauce
Emulsified sauces
- Aioli – West Mediterranean sauce of garlic and oil
- Béarnaise sauce – Sauce made of clarified butter and egg yolk
- Garlic sauce – Sauce with garlic as a main ingredient
- Hollandaise sauce – Sauce made of egg, butter, and lemon [4]
- Mayonnaise – Thick cold sauce
- Remoulade – Mayonnaise-based cold sauce [5]
- Salad cream – Dressing similar to mayonnaise
- Tartar sauce – Mayonnaise-based cold sauce(w/ chilli) [6]
Fish sauces
- Bagna càuda – Hot dish made from garlic and anchovies
- Garum – Historical fermented fish sauce
Green sauces
- See Green sauce – Sauce made from chopped herbs
Tomato sauces
- Tomato sauces – Sauce made primarily from tomatoes
- Ketchup – Sauce used as a condiment
Hot sauces
- Pepper sauces
- Mustard sauces
- Mustard – Condiment made from mustard seeds
- Chile pepper-tinged sauces
- Hot sauce – Condiment made from chili pepperss include:
- Buffalo Sauce – American dish of spicy chicken wings
- Chili sauce – Condiment prepared with chili peppers
- Datil pepper – Variety of chili pepper sauce
- Enchilada – Corn tortilla rolled around a filling and covered with a sauce sauce
- Pique Sauce
- Sriracha sauce – Thai hot sauce
- Tabasco sauce – American hot sauce brand
Meat-based sauces
- Amatriciana sauce – Italian pasta sauce
- Barese ragù – City in Apulia, Italy
- Bolognese – Meat-based Italian pasta sauce
- Carbonara – Italian pasta dish
- Cincinnati chili – Spiced meat sauce used as a topping for spaghetti
- Neapolitan ragù – Italian meat sauce
- Picadillo – Ground meat and tomato dish popular in Latin America and the Philippines
- Ragù – Meat-based sauce in Italian cuisine
Pink sauces
- See Pink sauce
Sauces made of chopped fresh ingredients
- Chimichurri – Green, uncooked sauce for meat
- Gremolata – Condiment for ossobuco
- Mujdei – Spicy Romanian sauce made mostly from garlic and vegetable oil
- Onion sauce
- Persillade – Sauce or seasoning mix
- Pesto – Sauce made from basil, pine nuts, Parmesan, garlic, and olive oil
- Pico de gallo – Mexican condiment
- Latin American Salsa cruda of various kinds
- Salsa verde – Spicy Mexican sauce based on tomatillos
- Sauce gribiche – Cold egg sauce
- Sauce vierge – French sauce
- Tkemali – Georgian plum sauce
Sweet sauces
- Apple sauce – Purée made from apples
- Blueberry sauce – Compote or savory sauce made with blueberries
- Butterscotch sauce – Type of confectionery
- Caramel – Confectionery product made by heating sugars
- Chocolate gravy – Gravy made with cocoa powder
- Chocolate syrup – Chocolate-flavored condiment used as a topping or ingredient
- Cranberry sauce – Sauce or relish made from cranberries
- Crème anglaise – Light sweetened pouring custard
- Custard – Semi-solid cooked mixture of milk and egg
- Fudge sauce – Chocolate-flavored condiment used as a topping or ingredient
- Hard sauce – Dessert sauce of sugar, butter, and spirits – not liquid, but called a sauce nonetheless
- Mango sauce – Species of fruit
- Peach sauce
- Plum sauce – Chinese condiment
- Strawberry sauce
- Syrup – Thick, viscous solution of sugar in water
- Tkemali – Georgian plum sauce
- Zabaione – Italian dessert made with egg, sugar, and wine
White sauces
- Alfredo sauce – Creamy pasta dish with butter and cheese
- Béchamel sauce – French white sauce based on roux and milk [7]
- Caruso sauce – Cream sauce for pasta
- Mushroom sauce – White or brown sauce prepared with mushrooms
- Mornay sauce – Type of béchamel sauce including cheese
- Sauce Allemande – Sauce used in classic French cuisine
- Sauce Américaine – Sauce from classic French cuisine
- Suprême sauce – Classic French sauce
- Velouté sauce – Classic French sauce
- Yogurt sauce – Food produced by bacterial fermentation of milk
By region
Africa
Sauces in African cuisine include:
- Chermoula – Relish from Maghrebi cuisine
- Harissa – North African hot chili pepper paste
- Maafe – Stew in West African cuisine
- Moambe – Ingredient made from palm nuts
- Shito – Ghanaian hot black pepper sauce
Asia
East Asian sauces
- Prepared sauces
- Doubanjiang – Chinese spicy bean paste
- Hoisin sauce – Sauce commonly used in Chinese cuisine
- Mala sauce – Spicy Chinese seasoning
- Mirin – Type of rice wine used in Japanese cuisine
- Oyster sauce – Condiment made by cooking oysters
- Plum sauce – Chinese condiment (Chinese; see umeboshi paste below for Japanese pickled plum sauce)
- Ponzu – Japanese citrus-based condiment
- Soy sauce – East Asian liquid condiment
- Sweet soy sauce – Sweetened aromatic soy sauce, originating from Java, Indonesia
- Sriracha sauce – Thai hot sauce
- Ssamjang – Spicy soybean paste used in Korean cuisine
- Sweet bean sauce – Sweet savory sauce in China and Korea
- Tentsuyu – Tempura dipping sauce
- Umeboshi paste – Sour, pickled Japanese fruit , or Japanese pickled plum sauce, a thick sauce from a fruit called a plum in English but which is closer to an apricot
- XO sauce – Spicy seafood sauce from Hong Kong
- Cooked sauces
- Lobster sauce – type of sauce used in American-Chinese and Canadian-Chinese cuisine, made of chicken broth, garlic, ginger, fermented black beans, eggs, and cornstarch; does not contain any lobster, despite the name
- Shacha sauce – Chinese condiment
- Siu haau sauce – thick, savory, slightly spicy sauce generally known as the primary barbecue sauce used within Chinese and Cantonese cuisine
- Sweet and sour sauce – Cooking method
- Sweet bean sauce, also known as Tianmianjiang – Sweet savory sauce in China and Korea
- Teriyaki – Japanese marinade – a way of cooking in Japan, a branch of sauces in North America
Southeast Asian sauces
- Budu – Fish sauce originating from east coast of Peninsular Malaysia
- Fish sauce – Condiment made from fish
- Nam chim – Thai sauce
- Nam phrik – Thai chili sauce
- Nước chấm – Vietnamese dipping sauce
- Padaek – Traditional Lao condiment made from pickled or fermented fish that has been cured
- Pecel – Indonesian vegetable dish
- Pla ra – Southeast Asian fermented fish seasoning
- Sambal – Indonesian spicy relish or sauce
- Peanut sauce, also known as Satay sauce – Indonesian sauce made from ground roasted or fried peanuts
- Saus cabai – Condiment prepared with chili peppers
- Sriracha sauce – Thai hot sauce
- Sweet soy sauce – Sweetened aromatic soy sauce, originating from Java, Indonesia
- Tương – Condiment made from soybeans
Caucasus
Sauces in Caucasian cuisine (the Caucasus region) include:
Mediterranean
- Garum – Historical fermented fish sauce
Middle East
Sauces in Middle Eastern cuisine include:
- Muhammara – Red pepper dip from Lebanese cuisine
- Sahawiq – Yemeni hot sauce
- Toum – Garlic sauce common in the Levant
South America
Sauces in South American cuisine include:
- Ají (sauce) – Ají-based condiment traditional in Andean cuisine
- Caruso sauce – Cream sauce for pasta
- Chancaca – Sweet sauce traditional to southern Andean cuisine
- Chimichurri – Green, uncooked sauce for meat
- Hogao – Colombian style sofrito
- Tucupi – Sauce used in Brazilian cuisine, extracted from the Cassava root
By country
Argentina
Sauces in Argentine cuisine include:
- Caruso sauce – Cream sauce for pasta
- Chimichurri – Green, uncooked sauce for meat
- Mostaza La Pasiva
- Salsa golf – Cold sauce of mayonnaise and tomatoes [8]
- Salsa criolla – Type of salad or relish found in Latin American cuisine
- Picantina
- [[::es:Tuco|Tuco]]
Barbados
Sauces in the cuisine of Barbados include:
- Bajan pepper sauce – type of condiment [9]
Belgium
Sauces in Belgian cuisine include:
- "Bicky" sauce – a commercial brand made from mayonnaise, white cabbage, tarragon, cucumber, onion, mustard and dextrose
- Brasil sauce – mayonnaise with pureed pineapple, tomato and spices[10]
- Sauce "Pickles"– a yellow vinegar based sauce with turmeric, mustard and crunchy vegetable chunks, similar to Piccalilli.
- Zigeuner sauce – cuisine 'gypsy style' – A "gypsy" sauce of tomatoes, paprika and chopped bell peppers, borrowed from Germany
Bolivia
Sauces in Bolivian cuisine include:
- Llajwa – Bolivian spicy sauce
Brazil
- Vinagrete – Typical Brazilian condiment
- Tucupi – Sauce used in Brazilian cuisine, extracted from the Cassava root
Canada
Sauces in Canadian cuisine include:
- Donair sauce – Canadian restaurant chain
- Honey garlic sauce
Chile
- Pebre – Chilean condiment
- Salsa Americana – Chilean relish made of Pickles, Picked Onions and Pickled Carrots
- Chancho en piedra
China
Colombia
- Hogao – Colombian style sofrito
England
France
In the late 19th century, and early 20th century, the chef Auguste Escoffier consolidated Carême's list to five mother sauces in French cuisine. They are:
- Sauce Béchamel – French white sauce based on roux and milk – milk-based sauce, thickened with a white roux.
- Sauce Espagnole – One of the basic sauces of classic French cuisine – a fortified brown veal stock sauce.
- Sauce Velouté – Classic French sauce – white stock-based sauce, thickened with a roux or a liaison.
- Sauce Hollandaise – Sauce made of egg, butter, and lemon – an emulsion of egg yolk, butter and lemon or vinegar.
- Sauce Tomate – Sauce made primarily from tomatoes – tomato-based
Additional sauces of French origin include:
- Allemande sauce – Sauce used in classic French cuisine
- Au jus – Meat gravy made from cooking juices
- Sauce bourguignonne – French sauce, consisting of red wine, onions or shallots, bouquet garni, and espagnole sauce
- Breton sauce – French compound sauce
- Beurre noir – French butter dish
- Beurre noisette – Sauce used in French cuisine
- Sauce Américaine – Sauce from classic French cuisine
- Sauce charcutière – Compound French sauce
- Chasseur – French sauce
- Nantua sauce – French sauce
- Ravigote – Classic, lightly acidic sauce in French cuisine
- Sauce Robert – French brown mustard sauce
- Rouennaise sauce – Bordelaise sauce with the puréed duck liver added to it
- Rouille – French garnish sauce
- Sauce gribiche – Cold egg sauce
- Sauce lyonnaise – French sauce
- Sauce poivrade
- Soubise sauce – Onion sauce based on béchamel
- Venetian sauce – classical French herb sauce used to accompany fish; consists of a velouté and fish fumet base, equal quantities of tarragon vinegar and white wine, reduced with chopped shallots and chervil
Georgia
Sauces in Georgian cuisine include:
Germany
Sauces in German cuisine include:
- Duckefett – Regional cuisine in Germany
- Frankfurt green sauce – Sauce made from chopped herbs
Greece
Sauces in Greek cuisine include:
- Skordalia – Thick garlic sauce in Greek cuisine
- Tzatziki – Cold cucumber–yogurt dip, soup, or sauce
- Avgolemono – Egg-lemon sauce or soup
- Melitzanosalata
- Taramasalata – Roe-based meze common to Turkey and Greece
India
Sauces are usually called Chatni or Chutney in India which are a part of almost every meal. Specifically, it is used as dip with most of the snacks.
- Coconut chutney (South India)
- Garlic chutney (South India)
- Coriander (North India)
- Mint chutney (North India)
- Tomato chutney
- Imli (North India)
- Green chillies
- Aloobukhara (North India)
- Khajoor (North India)
Indonesia
Sauces in Indonesian cuisine include:
- Babi panggang sauce – Indonesian grilled pork dishes
- Dabu-dabu – Indonesian spicy condiment
- Colo-colo – Indonesian hot and spicy condiment
- Peanut sauce – Indonesian sauce made from ground roasted or fried peanuts
- Pecel – Indonesian vegetable dish
- Sambal – Indonesian spicy relish or sauce
- Sweet soy sauce – Sweetened aromatic soy sauce, originating from Java, Indonesia
Iran
Sauces in Iranian cuisine include:
- Mahyawa – Iranian cuisine tangy sauce made out of fermented fish
Italy
Sauces in Italian cuisine include:
- Agliata – Savory and pungent garlic sauce and condiment in Italian cuisine – a garlic sauce in Italian cuisine
- Agrodolce – Cooking method
- Alfredo – Creamy pasta dish with butter and cheese
- Arrabbiata sauce – Spicy tomato sauce for pasta
- Bagna càuda – Hot dish made from garlic and anchovies
- Bolognese sauce – Meat-based Italian pasta sauce
- Checca sauce – Uncooked tomato sauce used with pasta
- Fra diavolo sauce – Spicy Italian-American sauce for pasta, seafood or chicken
- Genovese sauce – Meat-based Italian pasta sauce
- Marinara sauce – Tomato sauce with herbs [11]
- Neapolitan sauce – Tomato-based sauce derived from Italian cuisine
- Parma Rosa - A blend of marinara and alfredo.
- Pesto – Sauce made from basil, pine nuts, Parmesan, garlic, and olive oil
- Ragù – Meat-based sauce in Italian cuisine [12]
- Neapolitan ragù – Italian meat sauce
- Ragù alla salsiccia – Tomato-based sauce with sausage
- Savore Sanguino – Florentine sauce
- Sugo all'amatriciana – Italian pasta sauce
- Sugo alla puttanesca – Neapolitan pasta dish
- Vincotto – Italian dessert paste
- Vodka sauce – Pasta dish with vodka, cream and tomato sauce
Japan
Sauces in Japanese cuisine include:
- Shottsuru – Japanese fish sauce
- Tare sauce – Family of Japanese sauces
- Ponzu – Japanese citrus-based condiment
- Umeboshi paste – Sour, pickled Japanese fruit , or Japanese pickled plum sauce
- Tonkatsu sauce – Japanese seasoning sauce
Korea
Sauces in Korean cuisine include:
- Korean soy sauce – East Asian liquid condiment [13]
Libya
Sauces in Libyan cuisine include:
- Filfel chuma – Israeli chilli-garlic paste [14]
Malaysia
Sauces in Malaysian cuisine include:
- Cincalok – Malay salted shrimp condiment
Mexico
Sauces in Mexican cuisine include:
- Guacamole – Mexican avocado-based dip, spread, sauce, or salad [15]
- Mole – Mexican sauce and marinade [16]
- Pico de gallo – Mexican condiment
- Salsa Macha
- Salsa Verde
- Salsa Roja
- Salsa Borracha
Netherlands
Sauces in Dutch cuisine include:
- Fritessaus – Dutch condiment, usually served with French fries [17]
- Joppiesaus – Type of sauce from the Netherlands
Peru
Crema de Rocoto Llatan Mayonesa de aceitunas (black olive mayonnaise
Philippines
Sauces in Philippine cuisine include:
- Bagoong – Type of Philippine condiment [18]
- Banana ketchup – Sauce made from bananas
- Latik – Filipino dessert garnishing and condiment
- Chilli soy lime – a mixture of soy sauce, chopped bird's eye chillies, chopped onions, and calamansi lime juice—a traditional dipping sauce for grilled meats and seafood. The island of Guam has a similar sauce called finadene.
- Liver sauce – Filipino condiment spread – used primarily as a dipping sauce for lechon or whole roasted pig. Flavour is savoury, sweet and piquant, vaguely reminiscent of British style brown sauces but with a coarser texture.
Portugal
Sauces in Portuguese cuisine include:
- Cebolada – an onion sauce of Portuguese origin used for fish and game.
- Francesinha sauce – Portuguese sandwich
Puerto Rico
Sauces in Puerto Rican cuisine include:
- Adobo Mojado – Iberian culinary style
- Ajilimójili – Chili sauce from Puerto Rico
- Mojito Isleño – Puerto Rican condiment
- Mojo Criollo – Several types of sauces
- Pique
- Pique Verde – Puerto Rican green hot sauce
- Recaíto – Cooking base made of pureed aromatics
- Sofrito – Cooked vegetable foundation for cooking
Romania
Sauces in Romanian cuisine include:
Russia
Sauces in Russian cuisine include:
Spain
Sauces in Spanish cuisine include:
- Alioli – Mediterranean sauce made of garlic and olive oil, optionally egg yolks and seasonings
Canary Islands
Sauces used in the cuisine of the Canary Islands include:
- Mojo (sauce) – Several types of sauces
Vasque
Catalonia
Sauces in Catalan cuisine include:
- Salvitxada – Sauce from Catalan cuisine
- Xató – Sauce in Catalan cooking
- Romesco – Catalan sauce of tomatoes, garlic, and nuts
Sweden
Sauces in Swedish cuisine include:
- Brunsås – Sauce made with brown meat stock
- Hovmästarsås - made with mustard and dill
- Lingonberry sauce
- Skagen sauce - made with shrimp, mayonnaise and other ingredients
Switzerland
Sauces in Swiss cuisine include:
- Café de Paris sauce – Butter-based sauce [20]
Thailand
Sauces in Thai cuisine include:
- Nam chim – Thai sauce
- Nam phrik – Thai chili sauce
- Sriracha sauce – Thai hot sauce [21]
- Sweet chili sauce – Condiment primarily used as a dip
- Nam chim seafood
- Prik nam pra
- Nam chim gai
United Kingdom
Sauces in British cuisine include:
- Albert sauce – British sauce, made of grated horseradish in a clear bouillon, thickened with cream and egg yolks, and spiced with a little prepared mustard diluted in vinegar
- Apple sauce – Purée made from apples
- Bread sauce – Sauce made with milk and bread crumbs
- Brown sauce – Condiment served with food in the UK and Ireland
- Cheddar sauce – Type of sauce made with cheddar cheese
- Cumberland sauce – Fruit sauce (Oxford sauce)
- Gravy – Sauce made from the juices of meats
- Horseradish sauce – Species of flowering plants in the cabbage family Brassicaceae
- Marie Rose sauce – British condiment
- Mint sauce – Sauce made of chopped mint
- Mushroom sauce – White or brown sauce prepared with mushrooms
- Onion gravy – Type of sauce
- Parsley sauce – Cream sauce seasoned with parsley
- Redcurrant sauce – English condiment
- Shrewsbury sauce – English savoury sauce
- Tewkesbury mustard – Type of mustard
- Whisky sauce
- White sauce – French white sauce based on roux and milk
- Worcestershire sauce – English fermented condiment
- Wow-Wow sauce, also known as Bow Wow Sauce
United States
Sauces in the cuisine of the United States include:
- Cincinnati Chili – Spiced meat sauce used as a topping for spaghetti
- Comeback sauce – Sauce for fried food from Mississippi
- Coney sauce – American fast food item[22]
- Henry Bain sauce – American condiment for meats
- Mumbo sauce – American regional sauce
- Old Sour – Fermented key lime juice used in sauces
- Red-eye gravy – Type of gravy
- Sausage gravy – Breakfast dish from the Southern United States
- Barbecue Sauce – Sauce used as a marinade, basting, topping, or condiment
- Brown Gravy – Sauce made from the juices of meats
- Remoulade – Mayonnaise-based cold sauce
Prepared sauces
- A.1. Sauce – Brand of brown sauce condiment
- Alfredo sauce – Creamy pasta dish with butter and cheese
- Baconnaise – Brand of bacon-flavored condiment
- Cheez Whiz – Trademarked processed cheese dip
- Daddies – Brand of ketchup and brown sauce
- HP sauce – British sauce made with tamarind
- Ketchup – Sauce used as a condiment
- Maggi – International food brand
- Magic Shell – Dessert topping
- Mustard (condiment) – Condiment made from mustard seeds
- OK Sauce – Brand of brown sauce
- Pickapeppa Sauce – Jamaican sauce
- Salsa Lizano – Costa Rican condiment
- Salsa (prepared) – Condiment used in Mexican cuisine
- Prego – American pasta sauce brand
See also
- Chutney – South Asian condiments made of spices, vegetables, and fruit
- Compound butter – Butter mixed with other ingredients
- Condiment – Substance added to food for flavour
- Deglazing (cooking) – Cooking technique to create a sauce
- Dipping sauce – Type of sauce
- List of dips – Type of sauce
- Fermented bean paste – Fermented foods made from ground soybeans
- Fondue – Swiss melted cheese dish
- Gastrique – Caramelized sugar, deglazed with vinegar
- List of condiments
- List of dessert sauces
- List of fish sauces
- List of hot sauces
- List of meat-based sauces
- List of syrups
- Marination – Process of soaking foods in a seasoned, often acidic, liquid before cooking
- Outline of food preparation – Art form and applied science to make food ingredients palatable and fit to eat
- Reduction (cooking) – Cooking process
- Relish – Cooked, pickled, or chopped vegetable or fruit used as a condiment
- Sauce boat – Low lipped vessel in which sauce is served
- Saucery – Medieval office of sauce preparation
- Saucier – Type of chef
- Soup – Primarily liquid food
- Spread (food) – Food that is spread onto bread
- Sweet bean paste – Bean paste used in Asian cuisines
References
- ^ Bruce Bjorkman (1996). The Great Barbecue Companion: Mops, Sops, Sauces, and Rubs. p. 112. ISBN 0-89594-806-0.
- ^ Whitehead, J. (1889). The Steward's Handbook and Guide to Party Catering. The Steward's Handbook and Guide to Party Catering. J. Anderson & Company, printers. p. 273. Retrieved June 15, 2017.
- ^ Escoffier, Auguste (1969). The Escoffier Cookbook. Crown Publishers, Inc.
- ^ Corriher, Shirley (1997). "Ch. 4: sauce sense". Cookwise, the Hows and Whys of Successful Cooking (1st ed.). New York: William Morrow & Company, Inc. ISBN 0-688-10229-8.
- ^ Prosper Montagné (1961). Charlotte Snyder Turgeon; Nina Froud (eds.). Larousse gastronomique: the encyclopedia of food, wine & cookery. Crown Publishers. p. 861. ISBN 0-517-50333-6. Retrieved April 16, 2012.
- ^ Louisette Bertholle; Julia Child; Simone Beck (2011). Mastering the Art of French Cooking. Vol. 1. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 978-0-307-95817-4.
- ^ "Béchamel definition". Merriam-Webster.
- ^ Victor Ego Ducrot (1998), Los sabores de la Patria, Grupo Editorial Norma. (in Spanish)
- ^ Carrington, Sean; Fraser, Henry C. (2003). "Pepper sauce". A~Z of Barbados Heritage. Macmillan Caribbean. p. 150. ISBN 0-333-92068-6.
- ^ D&L Archived August 19, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, La William
- ^ Elizabeth David, Italian Food (1954, 1999), p 319, and John Dickie, Delizia! The Epic History of the Italians and Their Food, 2008, p. 162.
- ^ Accademia Italiana della Cuisine, La Cucina - The Regional Cooking of Italy (English translation), 2009, Rizzoli, ISBN 978-0-8478-3147-0
- ^ Jung, Soon Teck; Kang, Seong-Gook (2002). "The Past and Present of Traditional Fermented Foods in Korea". Archived from the original on December 23, 2007. Retrieved January 7, 2008.
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suggested) (help) - ^ Gur, Jana; (et al.) (2007). The Book of New Israeli Food: A Culinary Journey. Schocken Books. pg. 295. ISBN 9780805212242
- ^ Smith, Andrew F. (May 1, 2007). The Oxford companion to American food and drink. Oxford University Press. p. 29. ISBN 978-0-19-530796-2. Retrieved March 14, 2012.
- ^ Hall, Phil (March 19, 2008). "Holy Mole". The Guardian. London. Retrieved August 20, 2010.
- ^ John B. Roney (2009). Culture and Customs of the Netherlands. ABC-CLIO, LLC. p. 133. ISBN 978-0-313-34808-2. Retrieved May 21, 2012.
- ^ Eve Zibart (2001). The Ethnic Food Lover's Companion: A Sourcebook for Understanding the Cuisines of the World. Menasha Ridge Press. p. 270. ISBN 978-0-89732-372-7.
- ^ "Definition of mujdei" (in Romanian). DEX online.
- ^ "John Lichfield: Our Man In Paris: Revealed at last: how to make the French queue". The Independent. July 2, 2007. Retrieved September 5, 2012.
- ^ Edge, John (May 19, 2009). "A Chili Sauce to Crow About". New York Times. Retrieved May 20, 2009.
- ^ Cameron, J.N. (2015). Seven Neighborhoods in Detroit: Recipes from the City. Beneva Publishing. p. 148. ISBN 9780996626101.
Further reading
- Sokolov, Raymond (1976). The Saucier's Apprentice. Knopf. ISBN 0-394-48920-9.
- Corriher, Shirley (1997). "Ch. 4: sauce sense". Cookwise, the Hows and Whys of Successful Cooking (1st ed.). New York: William Morrow & Company, Inc. ISBN 0-688-10229-8.
- Murdoch (2004) Essential Seafood Cookbook Seafood sauces, p. 128–143. Murdoch Books. ISBN 9781740454124
- Brandau, Mark (August 30, 2012). "Restaurant chains experiment with sauces to add flavor". Nation's Restaurant News magazine. Retrieved September 5, 2012.
- "Emerging Sauces". Foodservice Research Institute. 2011. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved September 5, 2012.