Recipe video above. From steaks to chicken, chops to pasta, this creamy Mushroom Sauce is one you'll make over and over again. See in post for more uses!Luxurious yet simple, the key here is getting complexity into the sauce using wine, parmesan and broth. See note for how to lighten this up.Makes around 3 cups - enough to generously smother 4 to 5 pieces of protein, or toss through pasta for 3 to 4 people.
Prep Time8 minutesmins
Cook Time12 minutesmins
Total Time20 minutesmins
Course: Sauce
Cuisine: Western
Keyword: Mushroom Sauce
Servings: 4
Calories: 337cal
Author: Nagi
Ingredients
2tbspunsalted butter
1/2tbspolive oil
300g / 10 oz mushrooms, sliced (Note 1)
Pinchof salt and pepper
2garlic cloves, minced
1/4 cup (65 ml)white wine or rose, dry (Note 2 subs)
Heat oil and melt butter in a skillet over medium high heat. Add mushrooms and leisurely cook until golden brown - takes about 4 to 5 minutes. No need to stir constantly.
Just before they're done, add the garlic and a pinch of salt and pepper. Cook until garlic is golden (~ 1 minute).
Add white wine - it will sizzle! Stir, scraping the bottom of the skillet, for 1 minute or until mostly evaporated.
Add broth, cream and parmesan. Stir, then lower heat to medium so the sauce is simmering - do not boil rapidly, cream may split.
Stir occasionally and simmer for 2 - 3 minutes until it thickens. It shouldn't be super thick, this is a rich sauce.
Stir through thyme, adjust salt and pepper to taste. Remove from stove.
Serve over steak or other cooked protein. Toss through pasta, stuff into baked potatoes, serve with roast beef, chicken or pork, smothered omelettes. See in post for more ideas!
Notes
1. Mushrooms - any mushrooms are fine here. I used standard white button mushrooms in the photos, and brown button mushrooms in the video (Swiss Brown / Cremini). Can use MORE mushrooms if planning to stuff into something like baked potatoes.2. Wine - any dry white is fine here, avoid woody / oaky ones (eg Chardonnay) and sweet ones. I like Sauvignon Blanc and related varieties, Pinot Gris, and rose wines are terrific too (which is what I used in the video).Wine sub: Use extra 1/4 cup broth and do not skip the parmesan! Essential for flavour :)3. Cream - If you can't find thickened or heavy cream, just use a high fat % cream (30%+, check carton). See below for how to use light cream.4. Parmesan - important to grate your own using a fine grater to ensure it melts into the sauce. Do not use store bought shredded or sandy parmesan, it doesn't melt into the sauce properly - the parmesan helps thicken the sauce as well as adding terrific flavour, doesn't taste cheesy just adds savouriness.5. Uses - Use as sauce for proteins, pasta, baked potatoes, steamed vegetables. See in post for full list of ideas, including links to recipes where relevant.6. LIGHTEN IT UP by using low fat thickened cream (eg Bulla, sold in Australia). If using normal low fat cream (ie not thickened cream), adjust recipe as follows: Mix 1 tsp of cornflour/cornstarch with a splash of low fat cream. Once dissolved, mix in remaining cream. The cornstarch will act as a thickener to compensate for using light cream. Nutrition will reduce by 100 calories per serving.7. Serving size: Makes enough to spoon over 4 - 5 steaks or other pieces of protein. Or 250g / 1/2lb uncooked long strand pasta, or about 300g/10oz of uncooked short pasta (ziti, penne, orchiette). Will stuff 2 - 3 large sweet potatoes generously.8. Nutrition per serving, assuming 4 servings.