How much flavor do you lose when you clarify a stock with an egg raft?
I have heard conflicting things with stock clarification. One thing I have heard is that your stock will maintain its same depth of flavor but with clarity. Another source says that you have to start with a really high quality stock or your clarified stock will come out tasting like water.
I have noticed that while some clarification methods use just egg whites, others use egg whites, mirepoix, and ground meat. This leads me to think that in addition to clarification, the method is trying to put something back into the stock that is being lost.
My motivation for the question is that I just finished a gallon and a half of stock that came out perfect. While most of the things it will be going into won't need clarification, there are a few dishes that would look nicer with a clarified stock. If it doesn't affect the flavor, my instinct would be to just put in a couple extra hours and clarify the whole batch before storing it.
Best Answer
I'm open to correction, but in my opinion,the main reason for clarifying a stock, assuming gross impurities have been removed, is aesthetic. Not forgetting that the the appearance of food does change the impression of flavor. Floating ingredients can be shown off in clear soups - a sufficiently concentrated consommé, made with a large amount of meat per helping, can have knock-your-head-off intensity. In my experience, I have never clarified a stock, by whatever method, without a sort of 'thinning' or 'flattening' of the flavor. Not so much a loss of intensity or aroma (that has more to do with the reduction) as a loss of 'roundness' I think that is probably due to a loss of fat in suspension.
If I'm clarifying a stock by the egg-white method, I add a mirepoix (celery, carrots, leek are obvious candidates) but I shred or grate the vegetables rather than dicing them. This means that they can create a sort of fibrous mat with the egg-white when it rises, holding it together in quite a strong raft. You can then make a hole in the middle of the raft. At a very low simmer, convection then causes the stock to rise through the hole, spread across the raft, and sink again at its edges. If you're very careful, the raft can be removed in large pieces.
An alternative is Heston Blumenthal's freezing method, which he claims does not reduce flavor at all ( who am I to disagree? ... but I do..). It is very convenient. Chill the stock, remove solidified fat, freeze the stock, and then let it thaw through coffee filter, or tripled muslin. There is less waste, so you could clarify part of your stock that way, without so much of the loss that follows from clarifying small quantities by the egg-white method.
If it was me, I would clarify only the amount I needed clear stock for, and I'd go for the second method. That way, if you freeze your stock anyway, you can make your mind up whether or not you want it clear closer to the time you use it.
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What is the purpose of adding egg whites to the raft?
Here's a simple way to clarify a stock: Stir beaten egg whites into simmering broth. Stop stirring and the egg whites will rise to the surface, forming\u2014you guessed it\u2014a raft. As it bubbles, the raft attracts all stray particles.Can you clarify a cloudy stock?
Stir \xbc cup of cold water and egg whites in a bowl. Use two eggs and separate your egg whites into a bowl and beat them. Once you are done with that, stir in \xbc cups of cold water. The egg whites will bind any remaining particles, which will enable you to achieve a clearer stock.Can eggs be used as a clarifying agent?
Eggs, especially whites, can clarify or clear various fluid products, including consomm\xe9, broth and even wine. When the fluid is heated, added egg white coagulates, capturing and holding minute particles.How does a clarification of a stock work what is a raft?
Referring to a raft, the clarification begins directly after the raft because the raft combines all the particles within the stock and after that is when one clarifies.Clarifying Stock - with an egg raft
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