How to prevent my roux from sticking to the bottom of the pan?
I make this soup based on a roux. I make roux the following way:
- I melt butter
- I add the same amount of flour
- After cooking it a little I start adding a stock, just a little at the time.
This is where it goes wrong. Always when i add the first but of water or stock, my roux sticks a bit to the bottem om the pan. I try stirring the hell out of it, but I never prevent a little to stick to the pan. So this is what happens: I have a roux base that does not stick to the pan, but when I add the first liquid, it immediately start sticking.
I can imagine a couple of thinks to influence this proces:
- The heat of the water/stock you add I normally have already warm/hot stock. Is it better to add cold liquid?
- The heat of the pan Maybe I should cook less hot?
- Does spices influence the stickyness? I make roux with yellow curry mixed with the flour mostly.
- Does baking onions/garlic with the butter matter while making the roux?
- From the question How to mix a roux with stock I find out I should add more water at the same time. Would this also help my current problem? Because I can not really imagine that. (Also I do not see how you would get a good roux without lumps while doing that, but that's an other questions and probably just needs some more practice)
I looked in these questions: How to make a roux? and How to mix a roux with stock but they could not really help me.
Thanks in advanced for the answer!
Best Answer
There's already a question about roux/stock temperature (as well as a recent question that's probably a duplicate). Summary: yes, adding cold liquid to hot roux is good. Additionally, most of what I'm saying is already in the answers to "How to mix a roux with stock". I've gone ahead and tried to address your specific concerns, but I really think thoroughly reading rumstcho's answer there would help you.
Yes, it's also bad if the pan is too hot, and you rapidly cook the roux and boil off excess liquid, leaving something that was briefly wet enough to spread along the bottom of the pan, then a second later dry enough to cook onto the bottom of the pan. This is also one of the reasons it's bad to add too little liquid at once. If it ever dries out, you've messed up.
And yes, you should probably be adding more liquid initially, at the very least enough to wet all of the roux. It's fine if the first batch of liquid gets you something substantially thicker than your end goal, but you shouldn't be just trying to get a slightly wet ball of roux, then a slightly wetter one, and ten steps later have a thick slurry. You want to give yourself enough liquid to work with right away.
Once you've got all that, you need to whisk well. If anything is remaining sitting on the bottom of the pan the entire time, of course it's going to stick.
With respect to your other questions: Spices shouldn't hurt you, and a roux containing significant onions and garlic isn't a normal roux, but I've certainly made tons of thick sauces with all kinds of things mixed into the roux, and had no trouble. Bits of things are just, well, extra bits of things. They don't really interact with the liquid when you add it.
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Quick Answer about "How to prevent my roux from sticking to the bottom of the pan?"
What is the best pan to make a roux?
Use a Heavy Bottomed Pot. I prefer cast iron or enamel coated cast iron pots or pans to make my roux. Cast iron is not only thick, but it heats evenly and you won't get hot spots. Thinner pots, like stock pots, are almost a guarantee you will burn the roux.Why does my roux stick together?
Too hot or too cold can both cause problems, leading to a lumpy result. The same goes for your liquid. Warm seems to work best, whether it's stock, milk, or anything else. If it's too cold it hardens the butter, and if it's too hot it can separate the roux.Is butter or oil better for roux?
There's no right or wrong to which fat you use; it just depends on what flavor you want. In a dairy-heavy sauce, like milky b\xe9chamel, butter is the common choice (and is also the more common fat in most French roux), while oil is often preferred in Creole and Cajun cooking.How do you not mess up a roux?
Whisk in the flour really, really well. It may still be a little thin in the beginning of the process, and you don't want any lumps to affect your final product. Keep whisking as the roux cooks, in order to make sure that it evenly browns and doesn't cook too quickly or stick to the bottom of the pan.How To Prevent A Burnt Bottom
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Answer 2
Of course you have to stir roux when making it, and you also have to stir with the proper utensil: a spatula with a wide flat edge. If you are stirring with a spoon, fork, whisk, or some other utensil, you are not moving the parts just above the pan bottom, and they are remaining there and burning. Also, don't stop stirring until it has thickened, else it will set and burn.
Of course the other answer (too hot a pan) is important too, but at the heat you need for making roux, it will burn quickly if not properly stirred. You need both - the correct temperature and the correct stirring spatula.
Answer 3
This goes to the point of a roux - you mix the flour with the fat to cover all the loose particulate matter on the flour grains that nt to stick together in the presence of water.
The problem is, butter has about 20% water content!
After you've melted your butter, keep it on the heat until it has completely stopped bubbling. That's when the water has completely evaporated. Only then add the flour, stir hard to coat all the grains, and then you should be able to add all the water you want :)
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