From Scratch Podcast: Wines and Spirits (and jus lié)

Scenes from the cooking podcast, From Scratch. Brian Polcyn and I, in my West Village apartment, make a sauce, jus lié, using a wine reduction for an episode on wines and spirits. I also talk with another chef and a wine maker, and a very special guest.



The latest podcast episode is up! On wines and spirits, cooking with them and drinking them. In this episode, I make a simple wine reduction sauce with Brian, who is an amazing cook and a better teacher. We also talk with wine producer Dave Phinney and chef Peter Kelley, and follow this with, gadzooks, a vodka martini, with an expert who had never had one!





is up! On wines and spirits, cooking with them and drinking them. In this episode, I make a simple wine reduction sauce with Brian, who is an amazing cook and a better teacher. We also talk with wine producer Dave Phinney and chef Peter Kelley, and follow this with, gadzooks, a vodka martini, with an expert who had never had one!





I promised early in the show to give a recipe for a jus lié, which is simply a thickened sauce. This one with a white wine reduction. Here it is, but casually, because it’s so easy, you can play fast and loose, if you use your common sense.





What you need is:





2 ounces bacon (optional), chopped, 1/4 cup chopped onion and 1/4 cup chopped carrot (Brian likes celery, I don’t for chicken but love with beef), some butter, 1-1/2 cups wine, 1-1/2 cups chicken stock (bay leaf and pepper if you have it), tablespoon of tomato paste, and a thickener, a corn starch slurry or beurre manié (described in podcast)–none of this in order so just have it on hand. And of course a sauteed chicken breast or a roast chicken to put the sauce on.





Cook the bacon so the fat renders. Cook the onion and carrot in the bacon fat. Brian added some butter to get everything rendering as you can hear. When things are browned, add the wine in thirds, reducing it till the pan is crackling and the sugars stuck to the pan are browning. After the wine add all the stock, reduce by half, strain it into a clean pan, bring to a simmer, adjust seasoning, then thicken with beurre manie, as we do on the podcast, or with a cornstarch slurry and you are: good to go.





It’s actually better to listen Brian describing it, or both. We’re trying to figure out in this podcast how to do audible recipes. Please let me know if it works or how we can do it better.





Then, I actually make and more or less concede to the … Vodka martini. Yep. But only because I found a really good vodka. David and I discuss it.





David Lebovitz, chef, author, bon vivant, mixing us his first ever vodka martini, less commonly known as a Kangaroo. Listen to the podcast for his verdict (and thoughts on so many topics.



Despite what Brian says, cooking is easy, if you know the basics, and remember that unless it’s burnt, mistakes are edible.





And if you listen to and like the podcast, please give it some stars BECAUSE: that’s the way more people learn about it and we want people to hear it!





Links from the show:





Peter Kelley of X2O





Slovenia Vodka





Dave Phinney, wine producer





David Lebovitz, and his books





Brian Polcyn





And my new book From Scratch: 10 Meals, 175 Recipes





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Published on November 05, 2019 21:07
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