senior chef
Senior Member
This delicately flavored cheese sauce is most often used with boneless chicken breast, but it may also be used for a fish dish.
Chicken Mornay, (see end notes) is a rather elegant dish sure to wow your guests.
Note: Gruyere cheese is THE cheese to use. Other cheeses COULD BE used, but that would change the delicate flavor.
Gruyere cheese is a type of swiss cheese that melts extremely well. Other Swiss cheeses may or may not melt as well AND some, IMO, are stronger flavored. (pronounced groo-YAIR.)
4 TBSLSP butter
4 TBLSP flour
1 cup milk
1 cup 1/2 and 1/2
6 TBLSP (1/3 cup of grated gruyere cheese
1/2 tsp WHITE pepper
1/4 tsp salt
Melt butter in a small pan over LOW HEAT.
Add flour and stir until it turns a very light golden brown.
NOTE: at this point it is best to use a double boiler. If you don't have a double boiler, set the small pan into a larger pan.
Bring water in bottom pan to a boil. Put the small pan, with roux, into the larger pan and add milk and 1/2 and 1/2.
Wisk until thickened.
Add gruyere cheese, WHITE pepper and salt. Continue wisking until cheese is completely melted.
Taste and adjust for salt and pepper to suit your taste.
Pour over entrée.
There are so many ways you can use this sauce. I always use it when making Chicken Breast Mornay.
(toast triangles on a plate, cover with a very small and somewhat thin ham steak, cover ham with a smallish, thin, sautéed chicken breast and top with a generous portion of Mornay Sauce.) Often served with a brightly colored green vegetable such as asparagus or broccoli florets. IMPORANT NOTE: ham should NOT be too salty. It would over-power the delicate flavor. Suggest you use a SLIGHTLY sweet ham , like maybe a honey ham.
Chicken Mornay, (see end notes) is a rather elegant dish sure to wow your guests.
Note: Gruyere cheese is THE cheese to use. Other cheeses COULD BE used, but that would change the delicate flavor.
Gruyere cheese is a type of swiss cheese that melts extremely well. Other Swiss cheeses may or may not melt as well AND some, IMO, are stronger flavored. (pronounced groo-YAIR.)
4 TBSLSP butter
4 TBLSP flour
1 cup milk
1 cup 1/2 and 1/2
6 TBLSP (1/3 cup of grated gruyere cheese
1/2 tsp WHITE pepper
1/4 tsp salt
Melt butter in a small pan over LOW HEAT.
Add flour and stir until it turns a very light golden brown.
NOTE: at this point it is best to use a double boiler. If you don't have a double boiler, set the small pan into a larger pan.
Bring water in bottom pan to a boil. Put the small pan, with roux, into the larger pan and add milk and 1/2 and 1/2.
Wisk until thickened.
Add gruyere cheese, WHITE pepper and salt. Continue wisking until cheese is completely melted.
Taste and adjust for salt and pepper to suit your taste.
Pour over entrée.
There are so many ways you can use this sauce. I always use it when making Chicken Breast Mornay.
(toast triangles on a plate, cover with a very small and somewhat thin ham steak, cover ham with a smallish, thin, sautéed chicken breast and top with a generous portion of Mornay Sauce.) Often served with a brightly colored green vegetable such as asparagus or broccoli florets. IMPORANT NOTE: ham should NOT be too salty. It would over-power the delicate flavor. Suggest you use a SLIGHTLY sweet ham , like maybe a honey ham.
Last edited: