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Café de Paris butter – sauce for steak Posted: 02 Aug 2021 01:21 AM PDT Café de Paris butter is a flavoured butter for steak that’s infused with an tantalising mix of herbs, spices and savoury condiments. Top sizzling-hot steaks with slices of this classic French compound butter and watch as it melts into an incredible butter sauce that oozes over the meat! Café de Paris butter – sauce for steakDespite its name, Café de Paris butter was actually born in Switzerland, at Restaurant Café de Paris in Geneva back in 1941. It is traditionally an emulsified butter sauce that’s poured over steak, and the original secret recipe is still served today at restaurants such the L’Entrecote group’s steakhouses in France, Switzerland and elsewhere. These days you’ll find versions of Café de Paris sauce more often served instead as convenient, flavoured butter rounds, like this recipe. Either way the fundamentals are a good balance of aromatic herbs, careful spicing and a savoury boost from a secret ingredient: anchovies! A pat of this butter on a steak with a side of thinly cut fries, and you’ve instantly got a classic steak frites worthy of a swanky French bistro. Its use doesn’t end there either. The flavours also go brilliantly with seafood, poultry and steamed vegetables too! Ingredients in Café de Paris butterCafé de Paris butter is all about great balance! No single flavour should dominate, it should taste of a complex whole.
How to make Café de Paris butter for steakTo make Café de Paris, it’s as simple as mixing, shaping into a log then refrigerating until firm so it can be sliced.
The classic French way to serve steak with Cafe de Paris butter is steak frites – a bistro steak with shoestring fries and a simple green salad. Simplicity at its best. Otherwise, while ordinarily I’d suggest classic steakhouse sides of buttered herb baby potatoes with some warm greens, today I’m going with bread. Because there ain’t nothing like warm crusty bread to mop a plate clean of butter, amirite?!? – Nagi x PS. The bread I linked above is the most popular bread recipe on my website, a famous No Knead Crusty Artisan Bread based on a New York Times recipe. But if you don’t have yeast – or don’t have time to wait for dough to rise – try this No Yeast Loaf instead. For a loaf made without yeast, it is outstandingly convincing! Watch how to make itCafé de Paris – Steak butter sauceRecipe video above. Café de Paris is a butter for steak flavoured with a mix of herbs, spices and savoury condiments. Despite the name, it originates from Switzerland, popularised by a restaurant called "Café de Paris". Now a staple steak sauce around the world (including in Paris!), slices of this compound butter are placed on hot steaks so they melt to form a butter sauce. It's so simple, yet so incredibly good!Makes enough for 4 to 6 steaks, depending on how much butter you want on your steaks. Keeps for 2 months in the fridge, also excellent over seafood, poultry and hot steamed veg! Servings 4 – 6 steaks Calories 196cal Ingredients
Steak:
InstructionsCafé de Paris butter:
Steak:
Notes1. Eschalots – Also known as French onions, and are called "shallots" in the US. They look like baby onions, but have purple-skinned flesh, are finer and sweeter. Not to be confused with what some people in Australia call "shallots" ie the long green onions. 2. Anchovies – This is an essential ingredient for a really great, authentic Café de Paris. It adds depth of flavour and salt to the butter. It does not make the butter taste fishy, it just blends in as a background flavour. It makes this butter GREAT, don’t skip it! 3. Curry powder – Any curry powder is fine here because it’s a complimentary rather than dominant flavour. I use Keens or Clives of Indian, both sold at Woolworths, Coles and other large grocery stores in Australia. 4. Tarragon – A common soft herb used in French cooking with a mild aniseed flavour. 5. Steaks – Key to cooking steak well is getting a great deep golden crust. To achieve this, you must not crowd the pan. So unless you’re cooking small eye fillet steaks (aka tenderloin steak / filet mignon), don’t cook more than 2 steaks at a time. 6. Nutrition – For butter only, per 25g portion. NutritionCalories: 196cal | Carbohydrates: 3g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 21g | Saturated Fat: 13g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 5g | Trans Fat: 1g | Cholesterol: 56mg | Sodium: 618mg | Potassium: 100mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 1g | Vitamin A: 803IU | Vitamin C: 2mg | Calcium: 31mg | Iron: 1mg Life of DozerHe was banished outside until I could wash him because he rolled in duck poo while out on a walk. Hard to resist that forlorn face. He’s used to total freedom – coming and going as he pleases! (Confession – one pitiful wail and I ditched work to go outside to bathe him. #sucker) The post Café de Paris butter – sauce for steak appeared first on RecipeTin Eats. |
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