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Substitutes For White Sauce


Silver Answer Medal for All Time! 409 Answers
July 25, 2017

Several recipes call for a white sauce, which is flour added to melted butter, then thickened with milk. I'm trying to cut down of our fat grams, so this is a way to cut out some butter and still have a great tasting white sauce.

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Instead of adding the flour to the melted butter, start by heating up the milk in a pan with just a tiny slice of butter. In a small container, shake up flour with a little cold milk or cold water. When smooth, gradually stir into the hot, simmering milk. Stir until sauce is the consistency you desire. Add salt and pepper to taste.

There, now you have a delicious white sauce without all those fat grams!

 
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4 More Solutions

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May 22, 2007

Instead of using canned soup in casserole recipes, I use frozen white sauce cubes I make from a book called "Make Your Own Groceries" by Daphne Metaxas Hartwig.

 
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November 21, 2008

The white sauce that is used in au gratin potatoes, homemade macaroni and cheese, and casseroles cooked by "foodies" can be remedied by one ingredient:

 
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September 29, 2005

My talent for making a tasty white sauce is bad, no talent. Hollandaise sauce to the rescue! It is perfect over potatoes, asparagus, chicken fingers, salmon, etc.

 
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Questions

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May 22, 2007

I remember having a recipe once for a no fat white sauce. Does anyone have that recipe? It was great because you could use it with vegetables or fish, etc. Thank you in advance!



Pat from Ajax

Answers

By Rasta. (Guest Post)
May 24, 20070 found this helpful

1 cup milk
1 heaping tblsp flour.
salt and pepper to taste
Blend with a blender or wire whip
Cook on med heat stirring until it starts to boil and thickens . Add anything to it you want depending on what you are making.

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Add cheese for Cheese sauce or chip beef for chip beef toast for breakfast or a holidaise sauce. I use this all the time. We are on a low fat diet and didn't want to give up some of our comfort food.

 

Bronze Post Medal for All Time! 213 Posts
May 24, 20070 found this helpful

Well, I make my own "No Fat white sauce".... in my recipe (which I use for soups etc) I just use non fat milk... (Caned works best, because it's concentrated, but fresh or powdered milk is also okay)...

---> To the COLD nonfat milk, simply add about 1 Tablespoon of flour per cup... stir this WELL (or better yet, put a bit of milk in a jar with the flour & shake well) add Salt & pepper to taste & heat on the stove, stirring the whole time till mixture comes to a full boil.

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*** You can substitute rice starch, but don't use cornstarch or tapioca powder or it will turn "slimy" looking & not be creamy... For a thicker constancy, you can add 1 8 oz container either non-fat sour cream or non-fat yogurt... Sometimes I'll add a small amount of extra powdered milk powder for the extra calcium while the milk is still is cold, but be careful, if you use to much milk powder, the white sauce will become "sweet" because of the extra milk sugar...

*** If you want, you can microwave it instead of using the stove... just be sure to stop the microwave & stir the mixture every few minutes...& make sure it comes to a FULL boil!

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sorry, I can't give you a better recipe, but I just sort of "fake it" as I go... The recipe above makes a great corn chowder, clam chowder, potato soup & mushroom soup. With NO fat!

 
By Rob (Guest Post)
May 25, 20070 found this helpful

Basic White Sauce (Fat Free)

3 pre-frozen cubes of reduced stock or 3 T vegetable stock
4 T unbleached flour
1 slice onion or 1 t chopped shallots

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2 cups nonfat milk
1/3 cup dry nonfat milk
1 bay leaf
1/2 t thyme, crushed
1/2 t white pepper
1 t vegetable seasoning
2 T dry sherry, sauterne, or vermouth (optional)

Heat stock in nonstick saucepan over medium heat. Add flour and
onion; blend with a wooden spoon or whisk.

Simmer over low heat for several minutes, stirring constantly. Do not
allow to brown.

Remove from heat, add milks, bay leaf, thyme, white pepper, and
vegetable seasoning. Return to heat, stirring constantly until
mixture coats the spoon. If desired, add wine and simmer 5 minutes
more to evaporate alcohol. [ahem .... this won't really get rid of all
the alcohol -mrd]

Remove onion and bay leaf.

Cover and store until used, or place in an airtight container and
refrigerate for several days, or freeze for future use.

Serving Suggestions: This sauce be used over 8 cups of steamed
vegetables such as broccoli florets, diced potatoes, quartered

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musrhooms, peas, asparagus, or sliced carrots. To serve, place
vegetables in a shallow ovenproof serving dish. Drizzel sauce over
vegetables, sprinkle with 2 T Sap Sago cheese or with Hungarian
paprika and place under broiler to brown lightly before serving.

 
May 26, 20070 found this helpful

Making a no fat white sauce is easy in the microwave. Depending on the thickness of the white sauce, whisk flour (thin sauce is 1 tablespoon, medium is 2 tablespoons, and thick is 3 tablespoons) into one cup of cold milk. Put it into a microsafe bowl, or I just whisk it together in a glass measuring cup so that I can put it directly into the microwave (without the whisk, of course). Cook on high for 1-3 minutes, stirring with the whisk every 30 seconds, until it is thickened and bubbly.

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Make sure to stir often, or you will get lumps. However, all is not lost if that happens. You can just put it in the blender, and get rid of the lumps that way. My mother is alergic to milk, so she uses water for her white sauce, and it works fine, although the taste is more bland. You can add a little salt too, and pepper (white pepper doesn't color the white sauce), to taste.

 
By Lynda (Guest Post)
May 27, 20071 found this helpful

I use :

for every cup of COCONUT MILK used, I heat it on med. high in a non-stick skillet, then watch carefully and add a MIXTURE of 1 tblsp. flour (could use most any kind of flour) dissolved VERY WELL in a little water, and reduce heat to med., stirring all the time, watching the thickness then quickly removing from all heat when desired thickness is complete, even pouring into small ceramic gravy PITCHER when ready. It can be heated in microwave on 1 min. if not ready to pour on food. The Coconut milk
gives a sweet alternative and is dairy free, which we have to use and now prefer.

Paying attention to what spices you like on what food makes the dish, in my opinion.

For me, the success is in the purposeful seasonings according to what it's going onto.

If on MEATS, and if I can afford it, I love:

Sea Kelp Salt Substitute
Monterray pepper plus a
shake of nutmeg and a sprinkle of McCormick's Bacon bits(soy)


If for VEGGIES

Sea Kelp Salt substitute
Monterray Pepper
Bouquet Garni or Herbs D'Provence
Basil
Garlic Powder

(I don't care for any white sauce PLAIN, yet can't use
plain salt. I have used Almond MIlk on sweet veggies to "cream them".)

If being used on grilled/baked FISH,

Season with Dill Weed
Celery Salt
Bouquet Garni
Lemon adn white pepper/ paprika

Good luck and God bless. : )

 
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