In cooking, mayonnaise is a thick, creamy sauce, usually of a white or light yellow color, which is made and eaten cold. It is a stable emulsion of vegetable oil dispersed in water, with egg yolk as the emulsifier, flavored with vinegar or lemon juice (which helps the emulsion) and frequently mustard. Other seasonings call for other names (see below).
Mayonnaise is one of the mother sauces of classic French cooking, so it is the base for many other chilled sauces and salad dressings. For example:
- Aioli is olive oil mayonnaise combined with garlic.
- Tartare sauce is mayonnaise spiced with capers and chunks of pickles.
- Russian dressing (also known as Marie Rose sauce in Europe) is mayonnaise with tomato sauce or ketchup and yoghurt or heavy cream added.
- Thousand Island dressing is Russian dressing with pickles and herbs.
Mayonnaise is commonly used as sandwich spread in North America; on French fries in northern Europe and parts of Canada; and on cold chicken or hard-boiled eggs in France.
Making mayonnaise
Mayonnaise is made by slowly adding oil to an egg yolk (sometimes mixed with mustard, to help catalyse the reaction) while whisking vigorously to disperse the oil into the liquid. The other ingredients are added later for flavor. Egg yolk contains lecithin, which acts as the emulsifier. It is then seasoned with salt or other spices.
Basic recipe for homemade mayonnaise in a mixer
These steps produce a very basic—and not very interesting—mayonnaise. The Wiki Cookbook has more elaborate varieties, and a more thorough description of the process. Mayonnaise can be made with an electric mixer, an electric blender, or a food processor, or by hand with a whisk or even a fork. Using a whisk or fork, however, is a fairly tedious physical effort. Blenders and food processors are by far the quickest means of making mayonnaise.
Ingredients
- 5 eggs
- 2/3 cup of vegetable oil
- 5 tablespoons of vinegar
- 3 teaspoon of salt
Procedure
- Separate the yolk and discard the egg white.
- Mix the yolk, vinegar, and salt in a mixer at medium speed for 30 seconds.
- Add one tablespoon of oil to the running blender, a quarter teaspoon at a time.
- Continue adding oil, still a quarter teaspoon at a time and still slowly, until about half the oil is in the mixture.
- Pour the remaining oil into the mixer in a slow but steady stream.
Check every 15 to 30 seconds to see if the mixture has emulsified by turning off the mixer. While it is still a fluid, the mixture quickly regains a smooth, flat surface. When it has emulsified, ripples on the surface remain even when the mixer is off, and a spoon dragged across the surface creates a trough that does not fill in. It may take four or five minutes of mixing before the mayonnaise is finished.
Traditional recipe
The traditional French recipe is essentially the same as the basic one described above, but it uses top-quality olive oil and vinegar. Some nouvelle cuisine recipes specify safflower oil. It is considered essential to constantly beat the mayonnaise using a whisk while adding the olive oil a tablespoon at a time, fully incorporating the oil before adding the next tablespoon. Experienced cooks can judge when the mayonnaise is done by the emulsion's resistance to the beating action. Mayonnaise made this way may taste too strong or sharp to people accustomed to commercial products: in such a case it can be made blander by blending in some non-fat yoghurt.
Adding a bit of mustard can stabilise the emulsion. This is because the small particles contained therein serve as nucleation sites for the droplets forming the product.
Composition
Homemade mayonnaise can approach 85% fat before the emulsion breaks down; commercial mayonnaises are more typically 70-80% fat). "Low fat" mayonnaise products contain starches, cellulose gel, or other ingredients to simulate the texture of real mayonnaise.
Homemade mayonnaise can also be made using raw egg whites, with no yolks at all, at least if it is done at high speed in a food processor. The resulting texture appears to be the same, and—if properly seasoned with salt, pepper, mustard, lemon juice, vinegar, and a little paprika—it tastes similar to traditional mayonnaise made with egg yolks.
Since homemade mayonnaise contains raw egg yolks, it subjects the consumer to the small risk of infection with Salmonella Enteriditis (the risks of infection from using eggs in the USA is detailed in [1]). Commercial producers pasteurize the yolks, or freeze them, and substitute water for most of their liquid, or use other emulsifiers. At home, be sure to use the freshest eggs possible. Some stores sell pasteurized eggs for home use. You can also coddle the eggs in 170°F water and remove the hot yolks, which will have cooked slightly, from the whites. Homemade mayonnaise will only keep under refrigeration for three to four days. A lower-fat version can be made with silken tofu.
Commercial mayonnaise
Commercial mayonnaise sold in jars originated in New York City, in Manhattan's Upper West Side. In 1905, the first ready-made mayonnaise was sold at Richard Hellmann's delicatessen on Columbus Avenue, between 83rd and 84th Streets. In 1912, Mrs. Hellmann's mayonnaise was mass marketed and called Hellmann's Blue Ribbon Mayonnaise.
At about the same time that Hellmann's Mayonnaise was thriving on the East Coast of the United States, a California company, Best Foods, introduced their own mayonnaise, which turned out to be very popular in the western United States. Head-to-head competition between the two brands was averted when, in 1932, Best Foods bought out the Hellmann's brand. By then both mayonnaises had such commanding market shares in their own half of the country that it was decided that both brands be preserved. To this day, Best Foods Mayonnaise is only sold west of the Rocky Mountains, while Hellmann's is sold east of the Rockies.
In the Southeastern part of the United States, Mrs. Eugenia Duke of Greenville, South Carolina founded the Duke's Product Company in 1917 to sell sandwiches to soldiers training at nearby Fort Sevier. Her homemade mayonnaise became so popular that her company began to focus exclusively on producing and selling the mayonnaise, eventually selling out to the C.F. Sauer company in 1929. Duke's Mayonnaise, still made to the original recipe, remains the most popular brand of mayonnaise in the Southeast, although it is not generally available in other markets. Of special note to diabetics, Duke's mayonnaise is the only major mayonnaise available in the United States which does not include sugar as an ingredient.
Japanese mayonnaise, typically made with rice vinegar, tastes somewhat different from mayonnaise made from distilled vinegar. Sold in squishy plastic squeeze bottles, it is complementary to sushi and Japanese cuisine. It is even used on pizza. Kewpie is one popular brand of Japanese mayonnaise, advertised with a Kewpie doll logo.
Name origin
Mayonnaise made its English-language debut in a cookbook of 1841, according to the Oxford English Dictionary. Mayonnaise is generally said to have been created by the chef of Louis François Armand du Plessis, duc de Richelieu in 1756, to celebrate the Duke's victory over the British at the port of Mahon (the capital of Minorca in the Balearic Islands). It is supposedly from that port's name that the word mayonnaise is derived. But this often-repeated story seems flawed.
Antoine Carême speculated in 1833 that the name was derived from the French word manier, meaning 'to handle, to feel, to ply,' thus possibly in this case 'to stir or blend'. Carême appears to have been straining to come up with an etymology for sauce 'Mayonnaise' . It is inconceivable that Carême—trained by the greatest pâtissier in Napoleonic Paris, creator of French haute cuisine, and chef d'hotel to the duc de Talleyrand—would not know the history of the name, had mayonnaise been created as recently as 1756. Indeed, Talleyrand himself grew up under the Ancien regime (he had already held a bishopric), was a fastidious connoisseur of the table and moved in much the same circles as the Richelieu family. The origin of 'mayonnaise' must be much older than 1756, if it was obscure to Carême.
In fact it may appear more credible that sauce Mayonnaise was originally named for Charles of Lorraine, Duke of Mayenne (in northwest France), who presided over the meeting of the Estates General in January 1593 that had been summoned for the purpose of choosing a Catholic ruler for France. The sauce may have remained unnamed until after the Battle of Arques in 1589. It may then have been christened "Mayennaise" in 'honor' of Charles de Lorraine, duc de Mayenne, because he took the time to finish his meal of chicken with cold sauce before being defeated in battle by Henri IV.
Another proposed etymology points to the French city of Bayonne, "mayonnaise" would be a corruption of bayonnaise.
External links
- Creative Cooking School website: offers several possible origins of sauce mayonnaise