Julia Child's Beurre Blanc (White Butter Sauce) Recipe on Food52 (2024)

5 Ingredients or Fewer

by: Sarah Jampel

December16,2015

4.5

13 Ratings

  • Prep time 15 minutes
  • Cook time 30 minutes
  • Makes 1 1/2 cups

Jump to Recipe

Author Notes

When I first saw "beurre blanc" on the menu of Charleston restaurant in Baltimore, I immediately assumed it fell within the cheffy parameters. It hit all the marks: (1) a member of a collection of mysterious sauces (see albufera and mousseline) and (2) real estate next to "oyster and button mushroom fricasé," plus a minimally-styled menu. Et voilà!

But when my dish came to the table—pan-fried turbot on top of creamy yet crispy sautéed mushrooms and a pool of rich, lemony yellow sauce—I abandoned my confusion over its name and its components. All I cared about was making sure the silky butter made it onto every piece of fish and every single mushroom on my plate.

And, lucky for me, beurre blanc isn't so complicated after all. "However marvelous its flavor," wrote Julia Child in Julia and Jacques Cooking at Home, "it is a butter sauce."

A classic sauce from Brittany, it looks like hollandaise "when you spoon it over your beautifully poached fish, but it is only warm flavored butter—butter emulsified, held in suspension by its strongly acid flavor base," explains Julia. White wine is reduced with white wine vinegar and shallots (and some chefs add cream for a stable, smooth sauce), then a whole lot of butter is whisked in slowly, piece by piece, and the mixture is seasoned with lemon juice.

But beyond that, beurre blanc is also better than the "butter sauce" (that is, melted butter) I used to toss with spaghetti.

As Francis Lam explains: "You make this sauce with enough tart ingredients to counteract the richness of the fat, so that it plays a trick on your tongue, where you can taste both but neither dominates."

It's a gentle dip into the rich, fatty flavors rather than a violent plunge into grease, and it's a cheffy-esque condiment with real-life applications: Use anywhere you'd like to drizzle food with (or drown it in) better-tasting butter: on roasted or steamed vegetables, on shrimp or fish, on chicken, or, on lobster or truffles.

And once you've mastered the basics, Lam has some suggestions for taking your beurre blanc game up a notch: Start with red wine instead of white (this will make even lovelier-sounding beurre rouge); use a fruit juice mixed with an aged vinegar; finish the sauce with herbs or spices or mashed anchovies.
Sarah Jampel

Test Kitchen Notes

Though beurre nantais, also known as beurre blanc (meaning "white butter"), is not one of the five French mother sauces (béchamel, espagnole, hollandaise, tomato, and velouté), it is a base recipe from which many other sauces are built. This French butter sauce in particular does not have an emulsifier and relies solely on the butter, though cream may be used to help stabilize it or at least start the emulsion.

"The original version, from Brittany, is almost always prepared with Muscadet wine," James Peterson writes in Sauces: Classic and Contemporary Sauce Making, which "has the crisp, clean flavor and the acidic edge essential to a successful beurre blanc. If Muscadet is unavailable or too expensive, other wines can be used, but if only wines containing relatively little acidity are available, it may be necessary to add a few additional drops of vinegar to wake up the sauce at the end." Appropriately, Julia Child's beurre blanc sauce recipe below calls for vinegar to ensure this acidity.

A note on holding a beurre blanc: According to Peterson, "When beurre blanc is held for any length of time, it will begin to thicken and must be thinned periodically with heavy cream, water, court-bouillon, or another appropriate liquid, either cold or hot." A broken sauce can be fixed by whisking in reduced heavy cream (heavy cream that has been boiled down)—though, Peterson writes, "this can be done only once." But all this to say, a beurre blanc sauce is not as fussy as it sounds, and learning how to make one will significantly enhance any plate of fish, steak, or vegetables.

This recipe is a part of Wine Week—seven days celebrating all things wine—presented in partnership by our friends at .Food52

  • Test Kitchen-Approved

What You'll Need

Watch This Recipe

Julia Child's Beurre Blanc (White ButterSauce)

Ingredients
  • 24 tablespoons(3 sticks) cold unsalted butter, cut into tablespoon-sized chunks
  • 1/4 cupdry white wine
  • 1/4 cupwhite wine vinegar
  • 1 tablespoonshallot, minced
  • 1/4 teaspoonkosher salt
  • 1 pinchwhite pepper
  • 1/2 teaspoonfreshly squeezed lemon juice
Directions
  1. In a medium saucepan, bring wine and vinegar to a boil. Add shallots, salt, and pepper. Lower heat to a simmer and cook until most of the liquid has evaporated. (There should be about 1 ½ tablespoons of liquid left. If you reduced it too far, add 1 tablespoon of water to re-moisten.)
  2. Remove pan from heat. Whisk 2 pieces of butter into the reduction.
  3. Set pan over low heat and continue whisking butter into sauce a chunk at a time, allowing each piece to melt before adding more. Remember to maintain low heat and never let the sauce come to a boil once the butter is added, or the sauce will separate.
  4. Remove sauce from heat and whisk in the lemon juice. Taste and adjust seasoning, then strain through a fine sieve into a bowl.
  5. Serve warm with fish, poultry, or vegetables.

Tags:

  • Condiment/Spread
  • Sauce
  • French
  • Vinegar
  • Shallot
  • Lemon Juice
  • Butter
  • 5 Ingredients or Fewer
  • Holiday
  • Christmas
  • Food52 Spirit Week
  • Food52 Pantry

See what other Food52ers are saying.

  • Rudolf Rassendyll

  • Crystalynn Hyatt

  • Sarah Jampel

  • Haris Ocampo

Popular on Food52

12 Reviews

meg December 2, 2023

Ended up with a bowl of melted butter. hopefully it won't clog the drain pipe. Going whole food plant based, so oh well.

CCBakes July 11, 2022

I love this recipe and my guests love it, too! I use it on fish and slathered it on poached asparagus. I prefer this recipe than ones that call for heavy cream. While it does make the sauce a bit more stable, if you watch the heat closely while adding the butter, than you are completely fine.

Rudolf R. April 17, 2021

Three thoughts after making this a couple times. Esp. if using cream (or ½&½ - works...), use an immersion blender rather than a whisk. (Also useful when making Hollandaise & Bearnaise sauces, but there, the egg thickens things, where in beurre blanc thickness is result of the emulsion merely.) A tea strainer is GREAT for sieving the sauce. Rather than salt & (white) pepper, i used a seasoned salt, half sea salt and half equal parts garlic powder, onion powder, oregano, coriander & dill (essentially a steak rub...) ground to a very fine powder. Also, one suspects this would be an interesting alternative to Hollandaise sauce.

Crystalynn H. December 18, 2020

I loved this! Thanks for the additional references with the recipe. I definitely modified it to use less butter and tossed my mushroom and spinach spaghetti in it! Would love to know if wanting to add cream, when and how one might do that? Will try again!

Rudolf R. April 17, 2021

After making the extract of shallts & bay leaf (or tarragon, or dill...), let it cool a bit, then just a tbsp of cream (or ½&½); you may need to add a ½tbsp more butter and you may find emulsification takes longer.

Crystalynn H. December 18, 2020

I loved this! Thanks for the additional references with the recipe. I definitely modified it to use less butter and tossed my mushroom and spinach spaghetti in it! Will try again!

tillthen May 10, 2017

I made this recipe(from Julia's red book) 45 years and as I recall there was an option to add mushrooms which I did. It was used on filet of sole. Absolutely outstanding. I'v used on white fish, shell fish, and chicken......always a hit!

tillthen May 10, 2017

.....that should read "45 years ago".

Francesca D. December 21, 2015

What do yo duo with all this beurre blanc? Can you re-heat it without it breaking?

Sarah J. December 21, 2015

You can easily halve the recipe. BUT if you do end up with lots leftover... you can reheat the sauce very slowly (some use a double boiler) and whisk in 2 to 3 tablespoons of warm liquid like cream, water, or broth. It does have a tendency to separate when rewarmed.

Haris O. December 29, 2015

Thank you for the amazing recipe Sarah

Rudolf R. April 17, 2021

Or make less. This recipe scales beautifully. Also, if you warm a slice or two of ham for breakfast, serve eith a poached egg or neatly cut hard-boiled egg, maybe just cold from the fridge and melting on the ham?

Julia Child's Beurre Blanc (White Butter Sauce) Recipe on Food52 (2024)

FAQs

Julia Child's Beurre Blanc (White Butter Sauce) Recipe on Food52? ›

Pieces of cold butter whisked into a reduction of white wine, vinegar, and shallots creates a buerre blanc sauce. If you've ever added cold butter to thicken a pan sauce, you have made a warm butter emulsion—it's the same technique used in making this sauce.

What is beurre blanc sauce made of? ›

Pieces of cold butter whisked into a reduction of white wine, vinegar, and shallots creates a buerre blanc sauce. If you've ever added cold butter to thicken a pan sauce, you have made a warm butter emulsion—it's the same technique used in making this sauce.

What is another name for beurre blanc? ›

Beurre blanc (French pronunciation: [bœʁ blɑ̃]; "white butter" in French) or Beurre Nantais ( French pronunciation: [bœʁ nɑ̃tɛ]) is a warm emulsified butter sauce made with a reduction of vinegar and/or white wine (normally Muscadet) and shallots into which softened whole butter is whisked in off the heat to prevent ...

How do you stabilize beurre blanc? ›

To stabilise a beurre blanc, once the reduction is made, add 1 tbsp double cream and reduce again by about half. Strain, then whisk the butter in. balance the cloying nature of the fat. Acidity is generally added in the form of vinegar or lemon juice.

How do you keep beurre blanc from splitting? ›

If your beurre blanc starts falling apart, the addition of a little cold butter will restore the balance. Alternatively, some folks also add heavy cream to enhance the velvety texture and stabilize the emulsification. Opt for chilled cream to bring the temperature down.

What wine is best for beurre blanc? ›

Beurre blanc tastes velvety and rich thanks to butter, but it's also slightly sweet and tangy as well. It pairs beautifully with fish and seafood. Good wines for the reduction include Chablis, sauvignon blanc or chardonnay, but any drinkable dry white will do.

What is the main difference between a beurre blanc and a beurre rouge? ›

If you have heard of beurre blanc, it is the same, only beurre rouge (literally "red butter" in French) is made with a reduction of red wine instead of white.

How long does beurre blanc last in the fridge? ›

- Heat product to 165° F (74° C). - Remove from boiling water carefully. - Product may be held under refrigeration (40° F) for no more than 5 days.

Can beurre blanc be made ahead of time? ›

In principle, a beurre blanc should be made just before being brought to the table. But in practice it's possible to make the sauce up to two hours in advance, providing you keep it in a warm place, for example over an unlit burner on the stovetop.

What is adding cold butter to finish a sauce called? ›

Monter au Beurre is a French term used to describe the process of adding or whisking in whole, cold butter into a sauce or puree at the end of the cooking process. This process, which is usually done off the heat, adds shine, flavor and richness.

How do you hold beurre blanc sauce? ›

So one way to hold beurre blanc is to just stick it in a warm place. If you want to have more control over it, though, you can submerge a metal container of beurre blanc into a larger pot or container filled with warm, but not hot, water—say around 110°F (45°C) or so.

Why does my white sauce split when I add cheese? ›

It is most likely that it is the cheese in the sauces that is causing the sauces to curdle, or split. In particular some types of Cheddar cheese can let out a fair amount of oil during cooking at higher temperatures and this won't mix very well with the sauce in the dish.

What can I do with leftover beurre blanc? ›

Any leftover beurre blanc can be spread onto grilled meat or vegetables like a compound butter. It can also be reheated and cooked to make a shallot flavored clarified butter, delicious for cooking seafood or meats.

What's the difference between beurre blanc and hollandaise sauce? ›

There is a vast difference between the two sauces, which are: Beurre Blanc – It is cooked in a pot by reducing white wine, vinegar, and shallots and then whisking in whole butter. Hollandaise – it is cooked over a double boiler and contains egg yolks, clarified butter, and lemon juice.

What is the French sauce made from milk butter and flour called? ›

In its purest form, béchamel is comprised of butter and flour that have been cooked together (a mixture that's also known as a roux) and milk, with just a bit of seasoning. The result is a silky cream sauce that can be used either on its own or as the base for countless other sauces.

Is beurre blanc a mother sauce? ›

Beurre blanc sauce is a classic butter sauce made with shallots and white wine. Although not one of the Five Mother Sauces of French cuisine, the beurre blanc sauce recipe is commonly regarded as the 6th mother sauce and can be used as the foundation for many other sauces.

What are the main ingredients in beurre manie? ›

Beurre Manié (French for “kneaded butter”) is made by mixing equals parts of softened butter and flour. This dough or paste is used to thicken sauces, soups and stews.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Jeremiah Abshire

Last Updated:

Views: 5981

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (74 voted)

Reviews: 89% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Jeremiah Abshire

Birthday: 1993-09-14

Address: Apt. 425 92748 Jannie Centers, Port Nikitaville, VT 82110

Phone: +8096210939894

Job: Lead Healthcare Manager

Hobby: Watching movies, Watching movies, Knapping, LARPing, Coffee roasting, Lacemaking, Gaming

Introduction: My name is Jeremiah Abshire, I am a outstanding, kind, clever, hilarious, curious, hilarious, outstanding person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.