Beurre rouge is the red wine sibling of beurre blanc — a broken butter emulsion built on a reduction of red wine, shallots, and a splash of red wine vinegar. Where beurre blanc is the sauce for white fish, beurre rouge belongs with salmon, duck breast, and red meat preparations that want butter's richness without the heaviness of a demi-glace-based sauce. The reduction is identical in method to beurre blanc: mince 3 shallots very finely (brunoise, not sliced — the shallots must nearly dissolve). Combine with 250ml of dry red wine (Pinot Noir or Cabernet Franc — avoid heavily tannic wines like Cabernet Sauvignon, whose tannins concentrate during reduction and turn bitter) and 2 tablespoons of red wine vinegar. Reduce over medium heat until nearly dry — you should have approximately 2 tablespoons of intensely purple, syrupy liquid. This is the fond of the sauce. Over the lowest possible heat, whisk in 250g of cold unsalted butter, cut into 2cm cubes, one piece at a time. Each cube must emulsify before the next is added. The temperature is critical: too hot and the butterfat separates; too cold and the butter solidifies rather than emulsifying. The target zone is 58-62°C — warm enough to melt the butter, cool enough to keep the milk solids, water, and fat in a stable suspension. The finished beurre rouge should be opaque, deep crimson-purple, glossy, and pourable. It should taste of wine and butter in equal measure, with the shallots providing a savoury depth and the vinegar providing lift. Strain through a fine chinois if you want a perfectly smooth sauce; leave unstrained for a more rustic character. Beurre rouge is inherently unstable — it is an emulsion held together by willpower and temperature. It cannot be held above 65°C or below 50°C. In restaurant service, it lives on the side of the stove, in a warm spot, whisked occasionally, and used within 30 minutes of completion.
1. Reduce the wine until nearly dry — the concentration is everything. 2. Cold butter, added one piece at a time. 3. Temperature zone: 58-62°C — this is the emulsion's survival range. 4. Avoid tannic wines — tannins concentrate and turn bitter. 5. The sauce cannot be held above 65°C or reheated.
If the sauce begins to break, remove from heat immediately and whisk in a tablespoon of cold heavy cream — the cream's casein proteins act as an emergency emulsifier. For colour stability, add the vinegar reduction separately at the end rather than reducing it with the wine — the vinegar's acid helps maintain the anthocyanin pigments that give the sauce its crimson colour.
Using a heavily tannic red wine, which produces bitterness after reduction. Adding butter too fast, overwhelming the emulsion's capacity to absorb fat. Letting the sauce get too hot, which breaks it into purple oil and milk solids. Trying to hold it in a standard bain-marie at 80°C, which destroys the emulsion.
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