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Demi-Glace

Demi-Glace

Rich French Demi-Glace

This is the sauce that transforms good cooking into restaurant-quality cooking. Two simple liquids — brown sauce and beef stock — slowly concentrate into something silky and intensely flavorful that coats the back of a spoon. It takes patience, but the result is pure liquid gold.

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Most home cooks never attempt demi-glace because they think it requires days of work and professional training. The truth is simpler: if you have good brown sauce and quality beef stock, you're already halfway to restaurant-caliber sauce mastery. What transforms these two liquids into something extraordinary isn't complicated technique — it's reduction and time.

Demi-glace sits at the heart of French cooking, the sauce that elevates a simple steak into something memorable or turns pan drippings into liquid silk. It's essentially concentrated flavor, where every impurity gets strained away and what remains coats your spoon with glossy perfection. The name literally means "half-glaze," a nod to how it reduces by half during cooking, concentrating all those deep, savory notes into something that tastes like hours of careful work.

This version builds on Espagnole sauce, taking that foundation and pushing it further through reduction and careful straining. The result is a sauce that keeps in your refrigerator for days and transforms anything it touches — from roasted vegetables to grilled meats — into something that tastes like it came from a serious kitchen.

Prep10 min
Cook45 min
Total55 min
Servings
Difficultymedium

Ingredients

  • 1 leafbay leaf
  • 3 sprigfresh thyme sprigs
  • 3 stemsfresh parsley stems (save the leaves for something else)
  • 7 whole black peppercorns
  • 2 cupbrown sauce (Espagnole sauce)
  • 2 cuprich beef stock
  • salt
  • freshly ground black pepper

Instructions

  1. Bundle the bay leaf, thyme, parsley stems, and peppercorns in a square of cheesecloth. Twist the corners together and tie with kitchen twine, but leave one string long — you'll tie this to your pot handle so you can easily fish it out later.
  2. Pour both the brown sauce and beef stock into a heavy-bottomed saucepan. Crank the heat to medium-high and bring everything to a rolling boil, then immediately drop it to a gentle simmer. You want steady, lazy bubbles.
  3. Drop in your herb bundle and tie the long string to the pot handle. Now comes the waiting game — let this reduce by exactly half, which takes about 45 minutes. Stir occasionally and watch for the sauce to coat a spoon when you lift it out.
    45 min
  4. Pull the pot off the heat and immediately remove the herb bundle using the string. The herbs have done their job — discard the whole sachet.
  5. Set a fine-mesh strainer over a clean bowl and line it with a fresh piece of cheesecloth. Pour the sauce through slowly — this removes any remaining solids and gives you that perfect, glossy finish.
  6. Taste and adjust with salt and pepper. The sauce should be rich and coating, with a deep, concentrated flavor that speaks of hours of cooking even though you made it in less than an hour.

Notes

This is a child recipe of Espagnole sauce.

Tips & Tricks
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I make this without brown sauce?

No, brown sauce (Espagnole) is essential here — it provides the thickening and complex flavor base that makes demi-glace work. You'll need to make or buy brown sauce first.

How do I know when it's reduced enough?

The sauce should coat a spoon and hold its shape briefly when you draw your finger across the back of the spoon. It will have a glossy, syrup-like consistency but still pour smoothly.

Can I freeze demi-glace?

Yes, it freezes beautifully for up to three months. Pour into ice cube trays for convenient portions, then transfer the frozen cubes to a freezer bag.

What if my sauce breaks or looks grainy?

This usually means it reduced too quickly or got too hot. Whisk in a tablespoon of cold butter off the heat, or strain it through finer mesh — sometimes that saves it.

How much demi-glace should I use per serving?

A little goes a long way — 2-3 tablespoons per person is usually plenty. It's meant to enhance, not drown, whatever you're serving it with.