List of sauces

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

A cook whisking a sauce
Hollandaise sauce on asparagus
Sweet rujak sauce. Made of palm sugar, tamarind, peanuts, and chilli.

The following is a list of notable

food service
.

General

Steak au poivre with a peppercorn sauce
Spaghetti being prepared with tomato sauce

Prepared sauces

Ketchup
  • A.1. Sauce – Brand of brown sauce condiment
  • Alfredo sauce
     – Creamy pasta dish with butter and cheese
  • Baconnaise – Brand of bacon-flavored condiment
  • Cheez Whiz – Trademarked processed cheese
  • Daddies – Brand of ketchup and brown sauce
  • HP sauce – British sauce made with tamarind
  • Ketchup – Sauce used as a condiment
  • Maggi – International food brand
  • Magic Shell – Dessert topping
  • McDonald's sauces
  • Mustard (condiment) – Condiment made from mustard seeds
  • OK Sauce – Brand of brown sauce
  • Pickapeppa Sauce – Jamaican sauce
  • Salsa Lizano
     – Costa Rican condiment
  • Salsa (prepared)
     – Condiment used in Mexican cuisine
  • Tapatío hot sauce – American hot sauce
  • Prego – American pasta sauce brand

By type

Brown sauces

Pork fillet with Bordelaise sauce

Brown sauces – Sauce made with brown meat stock include:

  • Bordelaise sauce – French wine sauce
  • Chateaubriand sauce
     – Front cut of a beef tenderloin
  • Charcutiere sauce
     – Compound French sauce
  • Chaudfroid sauce – French culinary sauce[6]
  • Demi glace – Sauce in French cuisine
  • Gravy – Sauce made from the juices of meats
  • Mushroom gravy
  • Romesco sauce
     – Catalan sauce of tomatoes, garlic, and nuts
  • Sauce Africaine
     – French sauce, consisting of sauce espagnole with tomatoes, onions, peppers and herbs
  • Sauce au Poivre
  • Sauce Robert – French sauce consisting of onions, white wine, pepper, demi-glace, and mustard[7]

Butter sauces

Seared ahi tuna in a beurre blanc sauce
  • Beurre blanc – Emulsified butter sauce
  • Beurre manie
     – Thickening agent
  • Beurre monté – Melted butter sauce – Butter emulsified with water
  • Beurre noisette – Brown butter sauce
  • Café de Paris – Butter-based sauce
  • Meuniere sauce
     – French brown butter, parsley, and lemon sauce

Emulsified sauces

Remoulade seaweed sauce
  • Aioli – West Mediterranean sauce of garlic and oil
  • Béarnaise sauce – Sauce made of clarified butter and egg yolk
  • Garlic sauce – Sauce with garlic as a main ingredient
  • Hollandaise sauce – Sauce made of egg, butter, and lemon[8]
  • Mayonnaise – Thick cold sauce
  • Remoulade – Mayonnaise-based cold sauce[9]
  • Salad cream – Dressing similar to mayonnaise
  • Tartare sauce – Mayonnaise-based cold sauce(w/ chilli)[10]

Fish sauces

Green sauces

Tomato sauces

  • Tomato sauces
     – Sauce made primarily from tomatoes
  • Ketchup – Sauce used as a condiment

Hot sauces

  • Pepper sauces
Pique sauce
  • Mustard sauces
    • Mustard – Condiment made from mustard seeds
  • Chile pepper-tinged sauces
Phrik nam pla is a common hot sauce in Thai cuisine
  • Hot sauce – Condiment made from chili pepperss include:
    • Buffalo Sauce
       – American dish of spicy chicken wings
    • Chili sauce
       – Condiment prepared with chili peppers
    • Datil pepper – Variety of chili pepper sauce
    • Enchilada – Corn tortilla rolled around a filling and covered with a sauce sauce
    • Pique Sauce
    • Sriracha sauce
       – Thai hot sauce
    • Tabasco sauce – American hot sauce brand

Meat-based sauces

Neapolitan ragù sauce atop paccheri

Pink sauces

  • See
    Pink sauce

Sauces made of chopped fresh ingredients

pesto sauce, prepared with a mortar and pestle
  • Chimichurri – Uncooked sauce for meat
  • Gremolata – Condiment for ossobuco
  • Mujdei – Spicy Romanian sauce made mostly from garlic and vegetable oil
  • Onion sauce
  • Persillade – Sauce or seasoning mix
  • Pesto – Sauce made from basil, pine nuts, parmesan, garlic, and olive oil
  • Pico de gallo – Mexican condiment
  • Latin American
    Salsa cruda
    of various kinds
  • Salsa verde – Spicy Mexican sauce based on tomatillos
  • Sauce gribiche – Cold egg sauce
  • Sauce vierge – French sauce
  • Tkemali – Georgian plum sauce

Sweet sauces

Crème anglaise over a slice of pain d'épices
Pork with peach sauce

White sauces

Mornay sauce poured over an orecchiette pasta dish
  • Alfredo sauce
     – Creamy pasta dish with butter and cheese
  • Béchamel sauce – Sauce of the French cuisines[11]
  • Caruso sauce – Cream sauce for pasta
  • Mushroom sauce – White or brown sauce prepared with mushrooms
  • Mornay sauce – Type of béchamel sauce including cheese[12]
  • Sauce Allemande – Sauce used in classic French cuisine
  • Sauce Américaine – sauce from classic French cuisine[13]
  • Suprême sauce – Classic French sauce[14]
  • Velouté sauce – Classic French sauce
  • Yogurt sauce – Food produced by bacterial fermentation of milk

By region

Africa

Maafe sauce is based upon peanuts and calvados

Sauces in African cuisine include:

  • Chermoula – Relish from Maghrebi cuisine
  • Harissa – North African hot chili pepper paste
  • Maafe
     – Stew in West African cuisine
  • Moambe – Ingredient made from palm nuts
  • Shito – Ghanaian hot black pepper sauce

Asia

East Asian sauces

Sauces in East Asian cuisine include:

ganjang (a Korean soy sauce made with fermented soybeans) and vinegar
  • Doubanjiang – Chinese spicy bean paste
  • Doenjang – Korean fermented bean paste
  • Gochujang – Spicy fermented Korean condiment
  • Hoisin sauce – Sauce commonly used in Chinese cuisine
  • Mala sauce
     – Spicy Chinese seasoning
  • Mirin – Type of rice wine used in Japanese cuisine
  • Oyster sauce – Condiment made by cooking oysters
  • Plum sauce – Chinese condiment (Chinese; see umeboshi paste below for Japanese pickled plum sauce)
  • Ponzu – Japanese citrus-based condiment
  • Soy sauce – East Asian liquid condiment
    • Sweet soy sauce – Sweetened aromatic soy sauce, originating from Java, Indonesia
  • Ssamjang – Spicy soybean paste used in Korean cuisine
  • Tentsuyu – tempura dipping sauce
  • Umeboshi paste
     – Sour, pickled Japanese fruit, or Japanese pickled plum sauce, a thick sauce from a fruit called a plum in English but which is closer to an apricot
  • XO sauce – Spicy seafood sauce from Hong Kong
Cooked sauces
  • Lobster sauce – type of sauce used in American-Chinese and Canadian-Chinese cuisine, made of chicken broth, garlic, ginger, fermented black beans, eggs, and cornstarch; does not contain any lobster, despite the name
  • Shacha sauce – Chinese condiment
  • Siu haau sauce – thick, savory, slightly spicy sauce generally known as the primary barbecue sauce used within Chinese and Cantonese cuisine
  • Sweet and sour sauce
     – Cooking method
  • Sweet bean sauce
    , also known as Tianmianjiang – Sweet savory sauce in China and Korea
  • Teriyaki – Japanese marinade – a way of cooking in Japan, a branch of sauces in North America

Southeast Asian sauces

Sauces in Southeast Asian cuisine include:

terasi
served on stone mortar with garlic and lime
A bowl of Nước chấm
  • Budu – Fish sauce originating from east coast of Peninsular Malaysia
  • Fish sauce – Condiment made from fish
  • Mắm nêm – Condiment
  • Nam chim – Thai sauce
  • Nam phrik – Thai chili sauce
  • Nước chấm – Vietnamese dipping sauce
  • Padaek – Traditional Lao condiment made from pickled or fermented fish that has been cured
  • Pecel – Indonesian vegetable dish
  • Pla ra – Southeast Asian fermented fish seasoning
  • Sambal – Indonesian spicy relish or sauce
  • Peanut sauce, also known as Satay sauce – Indonesian sauce made from ground roasted or fried peanuts
  • Saus cabai
     – Condiment prepared with chili peppers
  • Sriracha sauce
     – Thai hot sauce
  • Sweet soy sauce – Sweetened aromatic soy sauce, originating from Java, Indonesia
  • Tương – Condiment made from soybeans

Caucasus

Sauces in

Caucasian cuisine
include:

Mediterranean

Sauces in Mediterranean cuisine include:

An historic Garum (fermented fish sauce) factory at Baelo Claudia in the Cádiz, Spain
  • Garum – Historical fermented fish sauce [15]

Middle East

Commercially prepared red Sahawiq, a Middle Eastern hot sauce

Sauces in Middle Eastern cuisine include:

  • Muhammara – Hot pepper dip from Syrian cuisine
  • Sahawiq – Yemeni hot sauce
  • Toum – Garlic sauce common in the Levant
  • cacık – Yogurt sauce or dip found in Turkey, Iran, and Greece

South America

Sauces in South American cuisine include:

  • Ají (sauce) – Ají-based condiment traditional in Andean cuisine
  • Caruso sauce – Cream sauce for pasta
  • Chancaca – Sweet sauce traditional to southern Andean cuisine
  • Chimichurri – Uncooked sauce for meat
  • Hogao – Colombian style sofrito
  • Tucupi – Sauce used in Brazilian cuisine, extracted from the Cassava root

By country

Argentina

Salsa golf served at a "taste-off" in Buenos Aires

Sauces in Argentine cuisine include:

Barbados

Sauces in the cuisine of Barbados include:

Belgium

Sauces in Belgian cuisine include:

  • Andalouse sauce – a mildly spiced sauce made from mayonnaise, tomatoes and peppers
  • Brasil sauce – mayonnaise with pureed pineapple, tomato and spices[18]
  • Zigeuner sauce
     – cuisine 'gypsy style' – A "gypsy" sauce of tomatoes, paprika and chopped bell peppers, borrowed from Germany

Bolivia

Llajwa

Sauces in Bolivian cuisine include:

  • Llajwa
     – Bolivian spicy sauce

Brazil

Sauces in Brazilian cuisine include:

  • Vinagrete – Typical Brazilian condiment
  • Tucupi – Sauce used in Brazilian cuisine, extracted from the Cassava root

Canada

Sauces in Canadian cuisine include:

Chile

Sauces in Chilean cuisine include:

  • Pebre – Chilean condiment
  • Salsa Americana
    – Chilean relish made of pickles, pickled onions, and pickled carrots

China

Soy sauce
Soy sauce
  • Light soy sauce (生抽) – a lighter-colored salty-flavored sauce used for seasoning and not as a dipping sauce
  • Dark soy sauce (老抽) – a darker-colored sauce used for color
  • Seasoned soy sauce – usually light soy sauce seasoned with herbs, spices, sugar, or other sauces
  • Sweet bean sauce
    (甜面酱) – a thick savory paste
  • Oyster sauce (蚝油)
  • Fermented bean curd (腐乳) – usually cubes of tofu, and sometimes other spices and seasonings, which are used as a condiment or marinade along with some of the brine
  • Douchi (豆豉) – fermented black beans, usually in a brine
  • Cooking wine (料酒)
  • Black vinegar (陈醋)
  • Cha Shao sauce (叉烧酱, Cantonese: Char Siu)
  • Duo Jiao (剁椒) - chili sauce.
  • Ci Ba La (糍粑辣) - a chili sauce.
  • Zao La (糟辣) - a chili sauce.
  • Lao Guo La (烙锅辣) - a chili sauce. One famous brand is Lao Gan Ma.
  • Rib sauce (排骨酱)
  • Chili oil (红油) – usually made by pouring hot oil that's been seasoned with spices onto ground chili flakes and left to steep
  • Doubanjiang (豆瓣酱) – a mix of fermented beans, chilis, salt, and flour used for flavor and color
  • Soy bean Paste / Yellow bean paste (黄酱)
  • Fish sauce (鱼露)
  • Garlic chive flower sauce (韭花酱)
  • Guaiwei (怪味)
  • Haixian sauce (海鲜酱, Cantonese: Hoisin)
  • Plum sauce (苏梅酱)
  • Sesame oil (香油)
  • Sesame Paste
    (麻酱)
  • Mala
    (麻辣)
  • Shao Kao sauce (烧烤酱, Cantonese: Siu Haau) – a thick, savory, slightly spicy BBQ sauce generally known as the primary barbecue sauce used within Chinese and Cantonese cuisine.
  • Shacha sauce (沙茶酱) – A sauce or paste that is used as a base for soups, hotpot, as a rub, stir fry seasoning and as a component for dipping sauces.
  • Soy sauce paste
  • White vinegar
    (白醋)
  • XO sauce (XO酱) – a spicy seafood sauce that originated from Hong Kong.[19]
  • Yongfeng chili sauce (永丰辣酱)
  • Yuxiang (魚香)

Colombia

Sauces in Colombian cuisine include:

  • Hogao – Colombian style sofrito
  • Ají (sauce) – Ají-based condiment traditional in Andean cuisine

Denmark

Sauces in Danish cuisine include:

  • Persillesovs – cream sauce seasoned with parsley – a key ingrediant in the Danish national dish Stegt flæsk med persillesovs
  • Brun sovs – Sauce made with brown meat stock

England

Sauces in English cuisine include:

France

Sauces in French cuisine include:

Beef with espagnole sauce and fries
Rouille sauce
  • Allemande – Veal stock, veal velouté, lemon juice, mushrooms and egg yolks.[20]
  • Américaine – Mayonnaise, blended with puréed lobster and mustard.[21]
  • Béarnaise – Reduction of chopped shallots, pepper, tarragon and vinegar, with egg yolks and melted butter.[22]
  • Bercy – Chopped shallots, butter and white wine, with either fish stock or meat stock.[22]
  • Béchamel – milk-based sauce, thickened with a white roux. [23]
  • Beurre blanc – Reduction of butter, vinegar, white wine and shallots.[24]
  • Beurre maître d'hôtel – Fresh butter kneaded with chopped parsley, pepper and lemon juice.[25]
  • Beurre noir – Browned butter with lemon juice/vinegar and parsley; traditionally served with raie (Skate).[26]
  • Beurre noisette – Lightly browned butter with lemon juice.[27]
  • Beurre vert – Butter mixed with the juice extracted from spinach.[28]
  • Bordelaise – Chopped shallots, pepper, herbs, cooked in red wine and mixed with demi-glace.[29]
  • Bourguignonne – Chopped shallots, herbs and mushroom trimmings reduced in red wine and meat stock.[30]
  • Bigarade sauce – an orange sauce, commonly for duck à l'orange. [31]
  • Bretonne – Two forms: (i) chopped onions, butter, white wine tomatoes, garlic and parsley; (ii) julienne of leeks, celery, mushrooms and onions cooked slowly in butter and mixed with fish velouté.[32]
  • Charcutière – Sauce Robert (below) garnished with gherkins.[32]
  • Chasseur – Minced mushrooms, butter, shallots and parsley with red wine and demi-glace.[32]
  • Demi-glace – A brown sauce, generally the basis of other sauces, made of beef or veal stock, with carrots, onions, mushrooms and tomatoes.[33]
  • Espagnole sauce – a fortified brown veal stock sauce.[34]
  • Gribiche – Mayonnaise with hard-boiled eggs, mustard, capers and herbs.[35]
  • Hollandaise – Vinegar, crushed peppercorns, butter, egg yolks and lemon juice.[36]
  • Lyonnaise – Fried onions with white wine and vinegar reduced and mixed with demi-glace.[37]
  • Mayonnaise – Egg yolks with vinegar or lemon juice, beaten with oil.[37]
  • Nantua – Diced vegetables, butter, fish stock, white wine, cognac and tomatoes.[38]
  • Périgueux – Demi-glace, chopped truffles and madeira.[39]
  • Poivrade – Diced vegetables with herbs, with demi-glace.[40]
  • Ravigote – Reduction of white wine and vinegar with velouté and shallot butter, garnished with herbs.[41]
  • Rémoulade – Mayonnaise seasoned with mustard and anchovy essence, garnished with chopped capers, gherkins, tarragon and chervil.[42]
  • Robert – Chopped onions in butter, with white wine, vinegar, pepper, cooked in demi-glace and finished with mustard.[41]
  • Rouennaise – Thin bordelaise mixed with puréed raw duck livers, gently cooked, finished with a reduction of red wine and shallots.[43]
  • Rouille – Garlic, pimento and chilli pepper sauce, traditionally served with fish soup.[44]
  • Soubise – Onion sauce. Versions include (i) béchamel and cooked chopped onions and (ii) onions and rice in white stock, reduced to paste and blended with butter and cream.[43]
  • Tartare – Cold sauce of mayonnaise with hard-boiled egg yolks, with onions and chives.[43]
  • Tomate – a tomato-based sauce.[45]
  • Velouté – white stock-based sauce, thickened with a roux or a liaison. [46]
  • Vénitienne – White wine with a reduction of tarragon vinegar, shallots and chervil, finished with butter.[43]

Georgia

Chicken in satsivi sauce

Sauces in Georgian cuisine include:

Germany

Sauces in German cuisine include:

Greece

Tzatziki

Sauces in Greek cuisine include:

  • Skordalia – Thick garlic sauce in Greek cuisine
  • Tzatziki – Cold cucumber–yogurt dip, soup, or sauce
  • Avgolemono – Egg-lemon sauce or soup
  • Melitzanosalata
  • Taramasalata – Roe-based meze common to Turkey and Greece

India

Sauces in Indian cuisine include:

Indonesia

Sauces in Indonesian cuisine include:

  • Dabu-dabu – Indonesian spicy condiment
  • Colo-colo – Indonesian hot and spicy condiment
  • Peanut sauce – Indonesian sauce made from ground roasted or fried peanuts
  • Pecel – Indonesian vegetable dish
  • Sambal – Indonesian spicy relish or sauce
  • Sweet soy sauce – Sweetened aromatic soy sauce, originating from Java, Indonesia

Iran

Sauces in Iranian cuisine include:

  • Mahyawa – Iranian cuisine tangy sauce made out of fermented fish

Italy

Pizza marinara – a simple pizza prepared with marinara sauce
Sauces at a family run parilla (grill) in Palermo, Sicily, Italy

Sauces in Italian cuisine include:

  • Agliata – Savory and pungent garlic sauce and condiment in Italian cuisine
  • Agrodolce
     – Cooking method
  • Arrabbiata sauce – Spicy tomato sauce for pasta
  • Bagna càuda – Italian hot dish made from garlic and anchovies
  • Bolognese ragù
  • Checca sauce – Uncooked tomato sauce used with pasta
  • Genovese sauce – Meat sauce
  • Marinara sauce – Tomato sauce with herbs[47]
  • Neapolitan sauce – Tomato-based sauce derived from Italian cuisine
  • Pearà – Traditional Veronese sauce
  • Pesto alla Genovese
     – Sauce made from basil, pine nuts, parmesan, garlic, and olive oil
  • Ragù – Meat-based sauce in Italian cuisine[48]
  • Neapolitan ragù – Italian meat sauce
  • Ragù alla salsiccia – Tomato-based sauce with sausage
  • Savore Sanguino – Florentine sauce
  • Sugo all'amatriciana
     – Traditional Italian pasta sauce
  • Sugo alla puttanesca – Neapolitan pasta dish
  • Vincotto – Italian dessert paste

Jamaica

Sauces in Jamaican cuisine include:

  • Jerk sauce
     – Style of cooking native to Jamaica

Japan

Sauces in Japanese cuisine include:

  • Shottsuru – Japanese fish sauce
  • Tare sauce – Family of Japanese sauces
  • Ponzu – Japanese citrus-based condiment
  • Umeboshi paste
     – Sour, pickled Japanese fruit, or Japanese pickled plum sauce
  • Tonkatsu sauce – Japanese seasoning sauce

Korea

Traditional Korean soy sauce

Sauces in Korean cuisine include:

Libya

Sauces in Libyan cuisine include:

  • Filfel chuma – Israeli chilli-garlic paste[50]

Malaysia

Sauces in Malaysian cuisine include:

  • Cincalok – Malay salted shrimp condiment

Mexico

mole
sauce

Sauces in Mexican cuisine include:

Netherlands

Sauces in Dutch cuisine include:

  • Fritessaus – Dutch condiment, usually served with French fries[53]
  • Joppiesaus – sauce made from mayonnaise, onions and curry powder

Peru

Sauces in Peruvian cuisine include:

  • Huancaina
     – Peruvian appetizer
  • Ocopa

Crema de Rocoto Llatan Mayonesa de aceitunas (black olive mayonnaise)

Philippines

Cassava suman with Latik

Sauces in Filipino cuisine include:

  • Bagoong – Type of Philippine condiment[54]
  • Banana ketchup – Sauce made from bananas
  • Latik – Filipino dessert garnishing and condiment
  • finadene
    .
  • Liver sauce
     – Filipino condiment spread – used primarily as a dipping sauce for lechon or whole roasted pig. Flavour is savoury, sweet and piquant, vaguely reminiscent of British style brown sauces but with a coarser texture.

Poland

Sauces in Polish cuisine include:

Portugal

Sauces in Portuguese cuisine include:

  • Cebolada – An onion sauce of Portuguese origin used for fish and game.
  • Cervejeira sauce – A beer sauce predominantly used for steaks.
  • Escabeche sauce – A vinegar-based sauce predominantly used for fish.
  • Francesinha sauce – Portuguese sandwich – A red or orange sauce, often tomato-based, that includes beer along with a variety of other possible ingredients.

Puerto Rico

Sauces in Puerto Rican cuisine include:

Chicken with Ajilimójili, rice, and salsa
Mojito Isleño
  • Adobo Mojado – Iberian culinary style
  • Ajilimójili – Chili sauce from Puerto Rico
  • chicken gizzard
    , and fish
  • Ají de leche de coco – Spicy thick coconut milk and lime sauce
  • sour orange
    , Worcestershire sauce, and mayonnaise
  • Mojito Isleño – Puerto Rican condiment
  • Mojo Criollo – Several types of sauces
  • Pique
  • Pique Verde – Puerto Rican green hot sauce
  • Recaíto
  • Sofrito – Cooked vegetable foundation for cooking

Romania

Sauces in Romanian cuisine include:

  • Mujdei – Spicy Romanian sauce made mostly from garlic and vegetable oil[56]

Russia

Khrenovina sauce, a spicy horseradish sauce originating from Siberia

Sauces in Russian cuisine include:

Spain

Sauces in Spanish cuisine include:

Canary Islands

Sauces used in the cuisine of the Canary Islands include:

  • Mojo – Several types of sauces

Catalonia

Romesco ingredients and sauce

Sauces in Catalan cuisine include:

  • Salvitxada – Sauce from Catalan cuisine
  • Xató – Sauce in Catalan cooking
  • Romesco – Catalan sauce of tomatoes, garlic, and nuts
  • Alioli
     – Mediterranean sauce made of garlic and olive oil, optionally egg yolks and seasonings

Sweden

Sauces in Swedish cuisine include:

  • Brunsås – Sauce made with brown meat stock
  • Hovmästarsås - made with mustard and dill
  • Lingonberry sauce
  • Skagen sauce - made with shrimp, mayonnaise and other ingredients

Switzerland

Sauces in Swiss cuisine include:

Thailand

Nam chim chaeo sauce

Sauces in Thai cuisine include:

  • Nam chim – Thai sauce
  • Nam phrik – Thai chili sauce
  • Sriracha sauce – Thai hot sauce[58]
  • Sweet chili sauce – Condiment primarily used as a dip

United Kingdom

Homemade apple sauce being prepared
Mint sauce

Sauces in British cuisine include:

  • Albert sauce – British sauce, made of grated horseradish in a clear bouillon, thickened with cream and egg yolks, and spiced with a little prepared mustard diluted in vinegar
  • Apple sauce – Purée made from apples
  • Bread sauce – Sauce made with milk and bread crumbs
  • Brown sauce – Condiment served with food in the UK and Ireland
  • Cheddar sauce – Type of sauce made with cheddar cheese
  • Cumberland sauce – Fruit sauce (Oxford sauce)
  • Gravy – Sauce made from the juices of meats
  • Horseradish sauce
     – Species of flowering plants in the cabbage family Brassicaceae
  • Marie Rose sauce – British condiment
  • Mint sauce – Sauce made of chopped mint
  • Mushroom sauce – White or brown sauce prepared with mushrooms
  • Onion gravy – Type of sauce
  • Parsley sauce – cream sauce seasoned with parsley
  • Redcurrant sauce – English condiment
  • Shrewsbury sauce – English savoury sauce
  • Tewkesbury mustard
  • Whisky sauce
  • White sauce
     – Sauce of the French cuisines
  • Worcestershire sauce – English fermented condiment
  • Wow-Wow sauce, also known as Bow Wow Sauce

United States

Sausage gravy served atop biscuits

Sauces in the

cuisine of the United States
include:

  • Alfredo sauce – Creamy pasta dish with butter and cheese
  • Barbecue sauce – Sauce used as a marinade, basting, topping, or condiment
  • Brown gravy – Sauce made from the juices of meats
  • Buffalo sauce – American dish of spicy chicken wings
  • Cincinnati chili – Spiced meat sauce used as a topping for spaghetti
  • Coffee sauce – Culinary sauce that includes coffee
  • Comeback sauce – Sauce for fried food from Mississippi
  • Coney sauce – American fast food item[59]
  • Cranberry sauce – Sauce or relish made from cranberries
  • Duck sauce – American Chinese condiment with a translucent orange appearance
  • Étouffée sauce – American seafood and rice dish
  • Henry Bain sauce – American condiment for meats
  • Huli-huli sauce – Hawaiian chicken dish
  • Lobster sauce – type of sauce used in American-Chinese and Canadian-Chinese cuisine, made of chicken broth, garlic, ginger, fermented black beans, eggs, and cornstarch; does not contain any lobster, despite the name
  • Mumbo sauce – American regional sauce
  • Michigan sauce – Style of hot dog
  • Old Sour
  • Red-eye gravy – Type of gravy
  • Remoulade – Mayonnaise-based cold sauce
  • Sausage gravy – Breakfast dish from the Southern United States
  • Tomato sauce – Sauce made primarily from tomatoes
  • Vodka sauce
     – Pasta dish with vodka, cream and tomato sauce

Vietnam

Sauces in Vietnamese cuisine include:

Dipping sauces are a mainstay of many Vietnamese dishes. Some of the commonly used sauces are:

better source needed
]

See also

References

  1. .
  2. ^ Dictionnaire Larousse Gastronomique (in French). p. 334-335.
  3. ^ "Here's a Classic Cream Sauce for Fish and Seafood". The Spruce Eats.
  4. . Retrieved December 16, 2020.
  5. . Retrieved December 16, 2020.
  6. ^ Whitehead, J. (1889). The Steward's Handbook and Guide to Party Catering. J. Anderson & Company, printers. p. 273. Retrieved June 15, 2017.
  7. ^ Escoffier, Auguste (1969). The Escoffier Cookbook. Crown Publishers, Inc.
  8. .
  9. . Retrieved April 16, 2012.
  10. ^ Beck, Bertholle and Child, pp. 94−95
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