Sauce
Darkest Chocolate Cake With Red Wine Glaze
The plummy-berry notes of red wine are highlighted when mixed with chocolate and butter into a glaze that drips over the edges of this decadent dark chocolate cake.
Dried Chile Salsa
This smoky, fiery concoction is inspired by Bar Amá's "Bus Driver" salsa.
Braised Beef with Red Onion Gremolata
Most braises start by browning the meat. Not this one. The cooked meat is sliced, floured, and seared at the end, which lends a pro touch to this dish.
Roasted Root Vegetable Vinaigrette
Editor's Note: Use this vinaigrette with Giada De Laurentis' recipe for Chicken Salad with Roasted Root Vegetable Vinaigrette .
Sesame-Miso Vinaigrette
If the vibrancy of this dressing fades, perk it back up with more lime juice.
The Greenest Tahini Sauce
If you leave this on the thicker side, it's a great crudités dip. Or, thin it and pour onto salad.
Easy Steak Sauce with Seared Hanger Steak
A steak sauce good enough to rival the most popular brand makes this steak (or any, really) even more delicious.
Canal House Teriyaki Sauce
Breakfast is just the beginning. Use this in stir-fries, to marinate tofu, or to glaze chicken as it roasts.
Ssäm Sauce
Editor's note: Use this recipe to make Chef David Chang's Bo Ssäm.
Ssämjang—a spicy fermented bean paste sold in Korean markets—is a traditional accompaniment to grilled meats. Ssämjang is like the love child of two Korean sauces: a mix of denjang (Korea's funkier answer to Japanese miso) and kochujang, a spicy chile paste.
Anyway, rather than just thinning out the ssämjang with oil or water as is most commonly done, we've allied ssämjang with extra kochujang and added vinegar in the mix to bring up the acidity of the sauce.
Ginger Scallion Sauce
Editor's note: Use this recipe to make Chef David Chang's Bo Ssäm.
Basic Fond De Veau
This sauce is the cook's best friend and the building block of many great French dishes. The powdered stuff sold in stores is not even in the same ballpark. This fond, or foundation sauce, takes my Basic Veal Stock then flavors and reduces it to intensify its power. Fond de Veau does require a bit of preparation and is probably the most expensive sauce I use, but it is so worth it for the potent, authentic flavor it confers to something like sautéed porcini mushrooms or as literally the secret sauce in the Ragout of Lamb Shoulder with Cavatelli.
Spicy Fennel-Meyer Lemon Mignonette
Can't find Meyer lemons? Mimic their flavor by mixing half lemon zest and juice, and half orange zest and juice.
Red Wine Vinegar and Black Pepper Mignonette
You know how guests always ask what they can do to help in the kitchen? Give them this recipe.
Blackberry Syrup
The BA Test Kitchen likes Grade B maple syrup for its deep and rounded flavor.
Black Olive Aïoli
Editor's note: Serve this aïoli with Suzanne Goin's Beef Brisket with Slow-Roasted Romano Beans and Black Olive Aïoli .
Toffee Sauce
Editor's note: Use this sauce to make Suzanne Goin's Sticky Toffee Pudding with Blood Orange, Tangerine, and Whipped Crème Fraîche .
NOTE You can make the toffee sauce ahead of time and warm it up when you are ready to use it.
Classic Caramel Sauce
You will be surprised at how quick and easy it is to make real homemade caramel sauce.
Puerto Rican-Style Ají Dulce Sauce (Ajilimójili)
Editor's note: Use this with Maricel Presilla's Boiled Yuca (Yuca Hervida) .
Ajilimójili (ah-hee-lee-MOH-hee-lee) is the wonderful whimsical name for this Puerto Ricaninspired sauce. How to translate this tongue-twister? It seems that it is a composite of the words ajo (garlic) and moje (sauce), but much more can be drawn from it. In Cuba and the Mexican state of Tabasco, ajilimójili is a colloquialism for the Castilian Spanish intríngulis, a hidden reason that is suddenly revealed, or the workings necessary to pull something off, or the key to making a difficult feat look simple. Why was this sauce called ajilimójili? Perhaps because it has its own ajilimójili—the "inner workings" to make any food it touches splendid. Serve with Puerto Rican Pasteles .
Maricel's Mojo
This garlicky sauce is the traditional accompaniment to the starchy root vegetables of the Hispanic Caribbean, especially Cuba. The acidic medium is usually Seville, or bitter, orange juice, though lime juice or white vinegar can be substituted. The mojo is at its best spooned or brushed over piping-hot boiled yuca, plantains, or other starchy tropical vegetables.