Yahoo Answers is shutting down on May 4th, 2021 (Eastern Time) and the Yahoo Answers website is now in read-only mode. There will be no changes to other Yahoo properties or services, or your Yahoo account. You can find more information about the Yahoo Answers shutdown and how to download your data on this help page.

Eliza Acton's English Salad Sauce recipe anyone?

I have found a copy of Mrs Beeton's English Salad Cream recipe; however, I would like to see Eliza Acton's recipe.

Acton published her recipe prior to Beeton around 1850.

Difficult to find on internet. Thank you.

4 Answers

Relevance
  • 1 decade ago
    Favorite Answer

    copied and pasted unfortunately

    Almost Mayonnaise

    – Lower fat

    This is adapted from Eliza Acton’s recipe for English Salad Sauce, written in the 1840s. While hers used double cream, the recipe below uses eight per cent fat fromage frais. The vote from the team when we were testing this is that it’s every bit as good as the original.

    Serves 4-6

    Ingredients

    3 large eggs

    2 pinches cayenne pepper

    5 fl oz (150 ml) 8 per cent fat fromage frais

    4 teaspoons white wine vinegar

    salt

    First, place the eggs in a saucepan and cover completely with plenty of cold water. Bring the water up to simmering point and give them exactly 9 minutes from the time it starts boiling. Then cool them under cold, running water to stop them cooking any further. Now peel away the shells, cut the eggs in half and place the yolks only in a mixing bowl.

    Add a tablespoon of cold water and pound the yolks to a smooth paste with a wooden spoon. Then add the cayenne pepper and ¼ teaspoon salt, and stir in the fromage frais, bit by bit, mixing it smoothly as you go. When it’s all in, add the vinegar, check the seasoning and add more if it needs it. If you think the mixture’s far too runny at this stage, don’t worry. Cover the bowl and leave it for a couple of hours in the fridge, after which time it will have thickened. (It should, in any case, have the consistency of thickish cream, rather than mayonnaise.)

    Note: To make a low-fat Tartare Sauce, after chilling the Almost Mayonnaise, add 1 small garlic clove, chopped; ½ level teaspoon mustard powder; 1 dessertspoon lemon juice; 1 tablespoon chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley; 1 heaped tablespoon salted capers and 4 cornichons (baby gherkins), both chopped; and mix together.

    This recipe is taken from How to Cook Book Three.

    Per serving: 65 kcal, Fat 3.7 g, Saturates 1.1 g, Protein 6.1 g, Carbohydrate 1.8 g.

  • 5 years ago

    1

    Source(s): Modern People Paleo Cookbook - http://paleocookbook.raiwi.com/?aksw
  • 1 decade ago

    Go to www.deliaonline.com, it has many recipes. It took me quite some time to locate it using eliza acton as key words, then I had to be more specific. I am giving you the website because they have so many of her recipes that are for salads and I was unsure of exactly what you needed. Good luck. By the way: when you get to delia online do a search for recipes using eliza acton for your key words, it will include several pages.

  • ?
    Lv 4
    4 years ago

    2

Still have questions? Get your answers by asking now.