Jan 15, 2014 in downton abbey collection, downton abbey, entertaining, epicurious, recipes. Read the original on: Corks & Cake
Lady Mary is back in the saddle, in more ways than one.
Photo credit: Carnival Films & Television for MASTERPIECE
Those who watched Downton Abbeyâs episode 2 on Sunday know that writer Sir Julian Fellowes certainly knows how to ruin a good house party.
I wonât spoil it here for you in case you havenât watched yet.  In addition to the shocker, there were moments of comedy and drama upstairs and downstairs, including Mrs. Patmore working herself into a tither over the syllabub, the béchamel, and the lemon dill sauce for the salmon.
She wouldnât if she had a recipe for blender hollandaise. Â And an actual blender of course.
The splattered and battered cookbook from which I learned to cook the classic sauces
(with my mom by my side.)
Photo credit: Rebecca Penovich
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The sauces Mrs. Patmore frets about are known as the Mother Sauces of French cuisine:
Mrs. Patmoreâs lemon dill sauce for salmon could have been either a velouté or a hollandaise, with extra lemon and dill added.  Once youâve mastered the Mother sauces you can create almost any other sauce by adding different flavor profiles with aromatics, stocks, vinegars, vegetables and fats.
I learned to make hollandaise from my motherâs old copy of Verna Meyerâs Menu Cookbook: Dining at Home in Style, Dillon Press, Inc., Minneapolis, MN 1980.
We started with vinaigrette (which arguably could be considered a Mother or Master sauce, along with mayonnaise.) Â From there I conquered Caesar Salad Dressing and then moved on to hollandaise (my favorite.)
On a teenaged dinner date I had discovered Veal Oscar (veal cutlets topped with crabmeat, asparagus, and hollandaise) and I was immediately in love. Â With the dish if not with the boy.
Verna Meyerâs book is so splattered and battered in the Dressings and Sauces chapter that they literally stick together and I have to pry them apart when I want to refresh my memory for her Blender Hollandaise.
French chef Eric Ripert (whose recipes I love) has published his recipe for blender hollandaise and it can be found all over the internet with instructional videos and such. Â I encourage you to check it out to see the method. Â His recipe calls for 2 1/2 sticks of butter and that is a lot of sauce.
Vernaâs recipe will give you 1 cupâplenty of hollandaise to serve 6 eggs benedict with extra sauce for dipping. Â I sometimes add more lemon juice to Vernaâs when I want it citrusy and have used fresh squeezed orange juice in place of the lemon.
Undoubtedly at the Abbey, Mrs. Patmore would also have served the classic Asparagus Hollandaise.
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Mrs. Patmore, Daisy, and Ivy would have been taxed to the hilt cooking breakfast, luncheon, canapés, multi-coursed dinners, and tea (with scones, sandwiches, jams and cake) for 16 house guests throughout a weekend.
âShe will bust a gut if she keeps that up.â Ivy says.
The actual dining room at Highclere Castle
(ancestral home of the Earl of Carnavon) and setting for Downton Abbey.
Photo credit: Highclere Castle
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From what I could tell from rewinding through the episode (yes, Iâm that obsessed), Mrs. Patmoreâs menu for the first nightâs formal dinner might have been:
First course
Chilled soup, possibly vichyssoise or cold asparagus soup
Second Course
Crabmeat in pastry shells with béchamel sauce
Third Course
Poached salmon with lemon dill hollandaise
Main Course
Squab au vin with roasted mushrooms and vegetables
Dessert
Syllabub with orange peel and brandy
Presented in French, on menu cards, with the accompanying wines, which we know from Earl Granthamâs instructions to Carson included a Château Haut-Brion and a Château Margaux.  (He cavalierly let Carson choose the white wines for the fish courses.)
Interestingly in the episode, Alfred finishes the sauces and saves the dinner while Mrs. Patmore is having her anxiety attack and turns out that he wants to be a chef!
Alfred, now that you have mastered the classic mother sauces of French cuisine, you are on your way to being a chef.
Photo credit: Carnival Films & Television for MASTERPIECE
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Good on ya, Mrs. Patmore. We are glad you didnât keel over.
Photo credit: Carnival Films & Television for MASTERPIECE
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So there we have it, a very eventful Country House Party at Downton Abbey.
Tune in to your local PBS station on Sunday, January 19, 9 pm ET. Â Looks like we are going clubbing in London with Lady Rose so weâll be shaking up some cocktails 1922-style here at Corks & Cake.
Cheers!
Rebecca
Read the original on: Corks & Cake
Lifestyle blogger and Vintage Kitchen columnist