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 Food Guide - Thickening Agents

Thickening Agents - Roux

Roux has been used in the Culinary industry for a long period of time up to date. Not only it's practical to its usage, roux is also very useful in terms adding flavor to soups or sauces. There are many stipulations to Roux as there is with politics today, as this long-time French thing is found so useful that many practice this product, use it differently and sometimes, perceive it differently.

What roux can bring to you today is its basic understanding and use. Nothing could be further from roux-truth than to practice this concept of using roux:

Warm Liquid --> Hot Roux

Warm Roux --> Hot Liquid

Typically, what Chefs need to understand in the kitchen is that, Roux isn't just one type of thickening agent or emulsifier, if you want to put it that way. There are many other alternatives to roux also, such as potato starch, tapioca starch, corn flour, etc. These starches have their own strengths and weaknesses, therefore increasing the likelihood of a particular menu to 'vary' of a thickening agent or an emulsifier's usage.

Other thickening agents such as corn, potato, arrowroot, tapioca, and wheat are particularly special themselves, and the below explains their properties.

Thickening Agents' Properties

There are many sorts of thickening agents out there in the market - Food Central uses only a few by far, due to costing and practicality factors. For certain kitchens, it's advisable to use certain things, and also, depending on its properties, thickening agents can work well under certain conditions and vice versa.

  1. Stability

    How stable is that particular thickening agent when it's mixed into the liquid - Whether the liquid will be thick when it's hot, or will be thin when it's cold, or vice versa. Temperature is the core of your thickening agent's stability. Also, it also covers thick, long cooking process. Will long cooking thin out (separation of molecules) your thick liquid?

  2. Consistency

    Consistency as in when starch is incorporated into the liquid, what would probably be the texture of the soup? Use a spoon, scoop up some liquid and pour it back in - Does it have a smooth flow, or does it come close to a stringy-like texture or is it forming lump-like texture of sorts?

  3. Flour-flavor

    Will the thickening agent I use contaminate the soup or sauce that I'm using with its uncooked flour smell, or will my strong flavored soup cover the uncooked flour-smell? Take into consideration volume and thickening agent strength when you're deciding which thickening agent to use.

  4. Holding Strength

    How much of the mixture of flour and water do I need to incorporate into my liquid before it thickens out to the consistency that I'm looking for? Do I need two tablespoons of corn starch for this amount of liquid to get there or two tablespoons of potato starch?

  5. Transparency, Opacity and Color

    After the thickening has been mixed into a liquid, will it be transparent or will it yield a little sight of cloudy, opaque-like color over the liquid?

 

Roux
Roux is the one best thing to add when you're cooking it for small dishes or soup. They come in powdered formats now, and you can get them if they are available in your local store.

 

 

Potato Starch
Potato starch is known to be one of the most expensive among other flours here in Malaysia. It has:

 

 

Potato starches are great for quick thin sauces that requires only a small amount of cooking time or remaking of it. Keep in mind that in order to get a consistent thickening agent, ensure that your ratio of flour to water is at least 1:5. Mix them well - Because after leaving it for long, the starch will fall off and you'll see water on top of the flour.

Corn Starch
Corn flour is known to be one of the most important flours to have in a kitchen other than just the regular cake and bread flour, or superfine and Rex Milano (flour mixed with seasoning and herbs, used for Pizza dough). Not only used as coating or flour mixture in the hot kitchen, it also has its uses in the Pastry kitchen, for example; Pavlova.

 

  • Medium strength - Corn starch is not very strong compared to Tapioca or Potato starch. Due to its natural properties, corn flour is used more for stabalizing rather than thickening. (Although we don't deny that there are a lot of us who use corn flour as a thickening agent)
  • Medium-weak stability - Corn starch also has the potential to break down if you cook it too long, or when your temperature is not high enough (medium-high simmer). Always bring your liquid to a close boil before attempting to add corn starch into it.
  • Very strong flavor - Apprentices usually make a mistake here: They replace roux with cornstarch which is totally acceptable, but only at a certain degree/extent and depending on what we're thickening. Be sure that for a 1 quart pot of water, you have no more than 4 tbsps of this.
  • Color - Cloudy, medium high in opacity.
  • Consistency - Smooth. Your liquid should be streaming in a very straight line, thick but not lumpy. It should not bounce back up to the spoon. Too much will result in lumps.

 

Tapioca Starch
Tapioca starch holds stronger than corn starch, and is particularly used as an alternative choice in the kitchen or to bake breads and pastries. Also, tapioca starch smoothens clothes (used by old-timers) during washing by soaking clothes into the tapioca starch solution first before hand-washing them.

 

 

Although it has no odour, care must be taken as too much of it will result in a jelly-like lump - Avoid that at all costs.

Always keep in mind that thickening agents are useful tools to help you thicken your sauce. However, it's always advisable to bring your liquid to a near boil to achieve any thickening at all. Simply adding it in the sauce when it's warm or cold will not yield results - But they will when it's hot. And that's when everything will spoil.

Von Cook is the Chef de Partie and writer of Food Central, a busy kitchen in Malaysia cooking for Royalties. Von Cook has ventured to almost everything of 10 Head Chef's 20 or more years of food and cooking experience and is sharing his food knowledge now with you.

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http://foodcentral.wordpress.com/

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