Part of the classical French mother sauce canon formalised by Marie-Antoine Carême in the 19th century and later systematised by Auguste Escoffier. The name describes the finished texture rather than any one ingredient.
Velouté — meaning 'velvety' in French — is the second of the classical mother sauces and arguably the most elegant in its logic: a pale roux extended with a light, flavoured stock rather than milk. Chicken velouté uses chicken stock, fish velouté uses fish stock (fumet), and veal velouté uses veal stock. Each creates a base sauce that carries the flavour of the stock while achieving a silky, coating consistency from the roux. The distinction from béchamel is fundamental: where béchamel is neutral and creamy, velouté is defined by the stock's character. A properly made chicken stock gives the velouté depth and savour; a weak or commercial stock gives a thin, flavourless result that no roux can rescue. This is why velouté demands good stock — it exposes the quality of your foundation immediately. Derivative sauces from velouté include Suprême (chicken velouté finished with cream and butter), Allemande (velouté with egg yolk liaison and lemon), Bercy (fish velouté with shallots and white wine), and Normande (fish velouté with cream, mushroom, and oyster liquor). The sauce allemande, sometimes called 'parisienne,' uses an egg yolk liaison to enrich and further thicken without additional flour, producing an unctuous finish. The roux for velouté is cooked longer than for béchamel — until it reaches a pale blonde stage — which gives a slightly nuttier flavour and reduces the raw starch taste. The stock must be hot and added in stages. The final sauce should coat a spoon cleanly and be completely smooth. Straining is essential for a fine finish. Unlike béchamel, velouté is rarely used alone — it is almost always enriched and flavoured before service, making it the chassis of the sauce rather than the finished vehicle.
Silky, savoury, and stock-forward — a neutral-rich base that carries the character of the stock it is built on
Use a high-quality, well-flavoured stock — the velouté will only be as good as the stock Cook the roux to a pale blonde stage before adding stock Add stock gradually and in stages, whisking constantly to avoid lumps Strain the finished sauce through a fine sieve for a professional finish Always enrich and season before service — velouté is a base, not a final sauce
Velouté is the base for Sauce Suprême — add 150ml cream per litre and finish with cold butter For fish velouté, use a court-bouillon reduction as part of the fumet for extra depth A liaison of egg yolk and cream added off-heat transforms velouté into Allemande without curdling For a more intense flavour, reduce the stock by 25% before adding to the roux Velouté can be frozen successfully — freeze before enrichment and add cream/butter after reheating
Using weak or commercial stock — produces a flavourless, insipid result Cooking the roux too dark — creates an off-colour sauce and bitter notes Adding stock too quickly — causes lumping and uneven consistency Serving velouté without enrichment — it is a base sauce, not complete Not straining — leaves fibrous particles that compromise the velvety texture