Anybody know what mayonnaise is supposed to taste like?
Check out my second attempt here!
So I was only kind of exaggerating when I suggested making my own condiments. I mean I already make my own butter. Ok, so I don’t actually make the butter, but I could. I have always liked the idea of making my own condiments because 1) I think it’s healthier and 2) I can make them taste the way we like. Plus, I want my kids to understand what’s in the food they eat. I’m not the biggest hippie on the block but something about the ingredients not in mayonnaise declaration on the mayonnaise jar creeps me out.
I am of the generation that has always had a plethora of prepared condiments at our disposal. Ketchup bottles and Kraft salad dressings emerged whole on the seventh day and the only way to get them was to buy them from a store. One day, when I realized I liked cooking food with taste and that didn’t come from a box or a plastic tray, I started experimenting with mango ketchup and wasabi mayo. First ingredients? Ketchup. Mayonnaise. It took a long time for my brain to bridge the gap between understanding that these ingredient had ingredients and a recipe and somewhere out there someone knew how to make them from tomato sauce and eggs and oil. Ever since I have had a secret crush on making my own from scratch condiments. So watch out ketchup: I’ve got my eye on you.
My first foray into condiment making was mayonnaise. I really struggled with whether or not to post the recipe because I didn’t like the way it turned out. I am posting the recipe, though, with the hopes that all of you foodies can help me figure it out because I really, really want to be successful. I want to use it as a base for sauces and casseroles. I want to slather it on a delicately constructed ham sandwich and be instantly transported to a cafe in France. I refuse to believe that my tastes have been so homogenized by processed food that I no longer enjoy the real thing when I taste it.
Here’s the recipe and the problem:
Blender Mayonnaise
makes 1 1/2 cups, from the Joy of Cooking- 1 egg
- 1 tsp dry mustard
- 1 tsp salt
- dash red pepper
- 1 tsp sugar
- 1 1/4 cup oil, divided
- 3 tbsp lemon juice
- Combine the first 5 ingredients and 1/4 cup oil in the blender. Blend on high until combined.
- With the blender running add 1/2 cup oil, then lemon juice.
- Continue by slowly adding the last 1/2 cup oil. Blend until thick.
Yeah, so I cheated a little. I picked the blender recipe because while I like making things from scratch, I also like being successful and not flipping out over a recipe and I get busy. The blender recipe went great, it emulsified just fine and was easy and quick-important factors in whether I ever bother making it again. The problem: it was too tangy. I mean really tangy-unpleasantly tangy. Maybe I’m just not a huge mayo fan to begin with; I like a nice thin smear of it and I use it when called for in recipes-but’s that’s it. I’m not trying to eat it with chips or off a spoon or anything.
The question that follows is this: am I so accustomed to store-bought mayo that tastes like nothing, that I don’t recognize real mayonnaise for what it is? Or can I just adjust the recipe? Is that what mayonnaise tastes like and I just need to get used to it? Does anyone have a suggestion or a better recipe?
I might try this recipe from Wasabi Bratwurst next time since it says it can be made in the blender. -Katie
Posted in Condiments
September 30th, 2008 at 6:56 am
Hmmm…I’ve never tried homemade mayo, but now I want to. I do enjoy the tasteless jar stuff though.
September 30th, 2008 at 7:08 am
I hate store mayo as well.
I recommend reducing the amount of lemon juice and subbing in a bit of water, or possibly switching the lemon juice to rice vinegar. You could also swap the red pepper for paprika, which will give a bittersweet and slightly spicy flavor, which can offset the tang from lemon juice. You could also just add more sugar, or switch to brown sugar, which has a more heavy-handed effect on overall sweetness perception.
September 30th, 2008 at 4:48 pm
I’ve never made my own mayo so I’m afraid I can’t help. But it sounds like Frank knows what he’s talking about.
September 30th, 2008 at 7:20 pm
Making your own mayonnaise sounds like fun!
September 30th, 2008 at 10:22 pm
I’ve never tried but have wanted to make my own mayo since I saw it in Mark Bittman’s “How To Cook Everything.” He recommends:
1 egg
Dash cayenne
½ teaspoon dry mustard
S/P to taste
2 tablespoons lemon juice
1 cup oil – either all olive, or a mixture of olive and canola
I always wanted to try that exact blend, but don’t know if it would work better than what you had. You might want to check it out.
October 1st, 2008 at 7:12 am
gosh, it looks positively perfect to me. Maybe you’re disappointed b/c it’s such a different taste when tasted on it’s own. I’ve made homemade mayo but never used it on a sandwich — I used it in a homemade caesar dressing and a homemade dressing for lobster rolls, and it made all the difference. I wish I could give you a different recipe, but the one you used looks right to me.
October 1st, 2008 at 4:51 pm
I’ve heard wonderful things about the Bittman recipe too. At one point, homemade mayo made the rounds of the food blogs, and I know that maybe it was the type of oil you used? Check out the Cooking For Engineers blog for their recipe and tips.
October 1st, 2008 at 6:23 pm
I never realized making mayo was so easy!
PS I love Wasabi Bratwurst! Stumbled your post
October 5th, 2008 at 9:07 pm
Hmm, what kind of oil did you use? Perhaps something more strongly flavored, like olive oil would help balance the tartness.
Or cut back the lemon juice. Or try a sweeter lemon juice, like from a Meyer lemon. Do not buy the kind already squeezed. I bought one at the health food store from some brand whose juice I enjoyed. Yuck. I don’t think pre-squeezed lemon juice will ever fly.
When we had fries with mayo in Belgium, they mayo was a bit tart. Not as sweet at here. Keep us posted. AT least your mayo looks awesome!
January 31st, 2009 at 3:43 pm
From what I understand having watched an episode of Good Eats that focused on mayo. Once it’s made and in it’s container, it needs to age at room temp for a few hours before you refrigerate it.
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