Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Vinaigrette

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Type
  
Salad dressing, sauce, or marinade

Main ingredients
  
Oil (soybean oil, canola oil, olive oil, corn oil, sunflower oil, safflower oil, peanut oil, or grape seed oil), vinegar, optionally herbs and spices

Similar
  
Balsamic vinegar, Salad dressing, Vinegar, Mustard, Caesar salad

Gordon ramsay how to make a classic vinaigrette youtube


Vinaigrette (/vɪnəˈɡrɛt/ vin-ə-GRET) is made by mixing an oil with something acidic such as vinegar or lemon juice. The mixture can be enhanced with salt, herbs and/or spices. It is used most commonly as a salad dressing, but can also be used as a marinade. Traditionally, a vinaigrette consists of 3 parts oil and 1 part vinegar mixed into a stable emulsion, but the term is also applied to mixtures with different proportions and to unstable emulsions which last only a short time before separating into layered oil and vinegar phases.

Contents

Vinaigrette Creamy Avocado Vinaigrette Wholefully

How to make a basic vinaigrette


Name

Vinaigrette Bacon Vinaigrette Recipe Cooking Add a Pinch Robyn Stone

"Vinaigrette" is the diminutive form of the French word "vinaigre" ("vinegar"). It was commonly known as "french dressing" in the 19th century.

Preparation

Vinaigrette Greek Vinaigrette Little Broken

In general, vinaigrette consists of 3 parts of oil to 1 part of vinegar whisked into an emulsion. Salt and pepper are often added. Herbs and shallots are added, especially when it is used for cooked vegetables or grains. Sometimes mustard is used as an emulsifier and to add flavour. Some vinaigrettes use a small amount of sweetener, such as maple syrup.

Varieties

Vinaigrette Vinaigrette Recipes Bon Apptit Recipe Bon Appetit

Vinaigrette may be made with a variety of oils and vinegars. Olive oil and neutral vegetable oils such as soybean oil, canola oil, corn oil, sunflower oil, safflower oil, peanut oil, or grape seed oil are all common.

Vinaigrette Greek Vinaigrette Little Broken

In northern France, it may be made with walnut oil and cider vinegar and used for Belgian endive salad.

Vinaigrette Vinaigrette BBC Good Food

In the United States, vinaigrettes may include a wide range of additions such as lemon, truffles, raspberries, sugar, garlic, and cherries. Cheese, parmesan or blue cheese being the most common, may also be added. Commercially bottled versions may include emulsifiers such as lecithin.

In Southeast Asia, rice bran oil and white vinegar are used as a foundation with fresh herbs, chili peppers, nuts, and lime juice.

Different vinegars, such as raspberry, create different flavors, and lemon juice or alcohol, such as sherry, may be used instead of vinegar. Balsamic vinaigrette is made by adding a small amount of balsamic vinegar to a simple vinaigrette of olive oil and wine vinegar.

In Brazil, a mix between olive oil, alcohol vinegar, tomatoes, onions and sometimes bell peppers is called vinagrete. It is served on Brazilian churrasco, commonly on Sundays.

Uses

In classical French cuisine, a vinaigrette is used as a salad dressing and, as a cold sauce, accompanies cold artichokes, asparagus, and leek.

Russian vinaigrette or vinegret

Vinaigrette gave its name to a salad in Russian cuisine called vinegret.

References

Vinaigrette Wikipedia