
đ„© LâEntrecĂŽte Sauce (CafĂ© de Parisâstyle compound butter)
This is a take of the legendary lâEntrecĂŽte sauce, inspired by the iconic Parisian steak houses where simplicity meets obsession.A deeply aromatic butter sauce loaded with fresh herbs, Dijon mustard, anchovies, capers, spices, and just enough acidity to cut through a perfectly seared ribeye.Itâs not a poured sauce â itâs a butter that becomes a sauce, melting slowly over hot steak and mixing with resting juices to create something rich, savoury, and unmistakably French.Paired with entrecĂŽte and fries, this sauce doesnât need reinvention â only respect.
Ingrédients
Ăquipement
Méthode
Sweat the shallots
- In a small pan, gently cook shallots in a tiny knob of butter or neutral oil.
- No colour. Let cool completely.
Build the butter
- In a bowl, cream the soft butter with Dijon until smooth.
Fold everything in
- Add shallots, garlic, herbs, anchovy paste, capers, spices, Worcestershire, cognac, lemon juice + zest.
- Mix gently â do NOT whip air into it.
Taste & adjust
- It should be: Herbal đż, Savoury đ, Slightly tangy đ, Deeply buttery đ§
Rest (non-negotiable)
- Wrap in parchment or plastic, roll into a log.
- Refrigerate at least 2 hours (overnight is better).
đ„ To serve (this is the magic)
- Grill or pan-sear entrecĂŽte / ribeye hard.
- Rest steak properly.
- Slice a thick coin of the butter on top.
- Let it melt with steak juices â instant sauce.
- Serve ideally with fries or mash. No discussion.
Remarques
đĄ Chef notes (very French, slightly judgmental)
If your butter melts into oil â it was too warm or overmixed
If it tastes flat â you forgot acidity
If it tastes salty â congratulations, anchovies did their job
If your butter melts into oil â it was too warm or overmixed
If it tastes flat â you forgot acidity
If it tastes salty â congratulations, anchovies did their job
