Beurre Blanc

buerreblanc1.jpgButter and white wine…already you know this is good! Literally the French term for “white butter,” a buerre blanc is a traditional sauce with simple ingredients. Quite elegant and versatile for many dishes and full of garden flavors, this beurre blanc can become a backbone for your garden living lifestyle.

Brown an onion in some olive oil. Salt and pepper for flavor and then add garlic once the onion begins to caramelize. This is the background and foundation of your sauce, for the caramelized bits of onion and garlic are the keepers of amazing flavor. The wine will deglaze the pan, releasing the browned goodness of the onion cousins. Allow the wine to come to a simmer and reduce by a third. This step, reducing the wine, intensifies the flavor of the wine, concentrating the bouquet and natural essence of the wine. Tossing in a couple bay leaves awakens the sauce and steeps their flavor in the wine reduction.

Now for the namesake - butter. Add the cubed butter in shifts, whisking the butter into the sauce and allowing it to thoroughly melt it. Once the butter has thoroughly melted into the wine, the smooth sauce can now be livened up even more with some fresh lemon juice and zest. White pepper makes a great complement to this easy sauce as well, yet, where does the garden come into play?

buerreblance2.jpgWith the basics of this sauce under your belt, this sauce can be created year-round and then flavored with the best of each season’s goodness. Thus, the very essence of garden living itself – taking a standard or basic idea or product, and making it totally seasonal for each special time of year – can be incorporated into this classic sauce.

Whether you make your beurre blanc in the summer and infuse the sauce with summer herbs or make it with toasted pecans in the fall or rosemary in the winter or parsley and chervil in springtime, prepare this sauce as a toast to the season! From this Farmer’s garden and kitchen to yours, bon appétit!

The Farmer’s Beurre Blanc

1 large Vidalia onion
2 tablespoons of minced garlic
1 stick of good butter
Salt, cracked black and white peppers
2-3 bay leaves
1 bottle of a good white wine
Juice and zest of a lemon (or two!)

Chop the onion and brown the pieces in some good olive oil. Once caramelized, add the garlic and cook the garlic until tender. Deglaze the pan with the bottle of white wine and bring to a simmer – reduce by a third…add bay leaves as well.

Once the wine sauce has reduced, add the butter in cubes, whisking each batch of cubes into the wine so it is thoroughly melted and incorporated into the sauce. Season with salt and peppers…teaspoon of each or to taste. Add the juice of the lemon and its zest, continuing to allow the sauce to simmer and reduce a bit more.

After this mixture has reduced by about a fourth, add the basil and remove from heat. Can be made to sauce, fish, chicken, pork or vegetables.


James T. Farmer III was born and raised in Georgia, where he continues to live and work as a landscape designer. He shares his love of food, flowers and photography on his blog All Things Farmer.