Béarnaise Sauce is considered by many to be one of the finest sauces to serve with steaks. A variation of Hollandaise sauce, one of the 5 “mother sauces” in classical French cookery, it’s notoriously difficult to make by hand. But this recipe uses a much easier method that yields exactly the same result – in 2 minutes flat!
It’s so fast, you could even make the Béarnaise while your cooked steak is resting!
Béarnaise Sauce
Béarnaise Sauce is a stunning French sauce usually served with steak at fine dining restaurants and high-end steakhouses.
Traditionally it’s made by hand. Yolks are combined with a herb-infused vinegar reduction over a double boiler, then melted butter is carefully and slowly drizzled in while whisking. Too fast and the sauce will split. Too hot and the eggs will scramble. Too cool and it won’t thicken properly. Tricky!
Bicep stamina aside (we’re talking 10 minutes of vigorous whisking here), it can be quite challenging, even for the most capable cooks.
The good news? There’s an easy and foolproof way to make Béarnaise sauce using a stick blender. While traditionalists will turn their nose up at the thought of employing a 20th-century appliance, the reality is that the end result is exactly the same as hand-whisked – but in a fraction of the time, and with a fraction of the risk!
In fact, it takes less than 2 minutes. So you could even make Béarnaise sauce while your steak is resting after cooking!
What goes in Béarnaise Sauce
To make Béarnaise Sauce, you need: white wine vinegar, white wine, butter (which we clarify – more on this below), egg yolks, tarragon, chervil and eschalots/shallots (the small sweet onions sometimes called French eschalots.)
Clarified Butter
The best way to make Béarnaise Sauce is to use clarified butter instead of just melted butter. And just what is clarified butter?
Clarified butter is simply butter minus the dairy solids and water content which accounts for about 15% of ordinary butter. Clarified butter is actually the same thing as ghee which is the main fat used in Indian cooking, though different methods are used to make them.
Using clarified butter gives you a purer, more intense, and slightly nuttier butter flavour in your Béarnaise.
Options for getting your hands on clarified butter:
a) Buy it (clarified butter or Ghee) – Clarified butter is more widely available in Europe than Australia or US. But Ghee is quite common these days in Australia – Indian or oil aisle at large grocery stores (Coles, Woolies), Harris Farms, large Asian stores and Indian grocery stores;
b) Make it the proper way – 10 minutes simmering unsalted butter, then straining. It keeps in the pantry for months. Recipe here; or
c) Make it the quick n’ easy way – The method I use in this recipe, depicted below. Melt the butter and let the white milk solids settle at the bottom. The gold liquid remaining is clarified butter (about 90% of the total). Measure out ¾ cup and use. Easy!
Here in Australia, it’s much cheaper to make rather than buy ghee or clarified butter.
What’s the difference between Proper vs Quick method for clarified butter? The quick method is not as thorough at getting milk solids out so it’s not shelf-stable, meaning you cannot store it in your pantry at room temperature.
Other ingredients
White wine vinegar – Less sharp than standard white vinegar;
White wine – Any dry white wine is fine here. Just avoid really sweet ones, fruity or woody ones;
Tarragon and chervil – The two herb flavourings in Béarnaise Sauce that gives it a distinctly French and classy flavour;
Eschalot / shallot – Small onion-like root vegetables but with a sweeter, more delicate flavour than normal large onions. Can’t find them? Just sub with a small amount of finely sliced normal onions; and
Egg yolks – What emulsifies the butter and other liquids to create a thick, glossy sauce.
Leftover egg whites – Here’s my list of what I do with them and all my egg white recipes can be found in this recipe collection.
How to make Béarnaise Sauce
Part 1: Infused vinegar
Infuse vinegar: Simmer the vinegar, white wine, herbs and shallot in a (very!) small pan over medium low heat for 2 minutes. Remove from stove then let it stand for 5 minutes to infuse the vinegar with flavour;
Strain, pressing out as much liquid as you can, then cool. You should have around 1 – 1½ tbsp of vinegar. If you have too much, reduce it a bit further on the stove; this won’t take long. If you have too little, just top it up with water.
Part 2: Quick clarified butter
Here’s how to make clarified butter, the quick way, for use immediately in this recipe:
Melt butter: Place cubes of butter in a heatproof jug and microwave until melted (do it in 20 sec bursts or the butter can explode everywhere!) ;
Separate milk solids: Leave the melted butter for 30 seconds or so, and you’ll notice that white sediment settles at the bottom of the jug. The top 90% or so left is a lovely clear gold ,which is clarified butter. The white stuff are the milk solids which we do not want to use because it (technically!) clouds our Béarnaise Sauce. We just want to use the liquid gold;
Measure out ¾ cup of the Clarified Butter to use for Béarnaise Sauce. Discard the milky white solids.
Part 3: Making Béarnaise Sauce – in 2 minutes flat!
Separate yolks, leave to de-chill – Do this first while the eggs are fridge-cold because they’re easier to separate. The whites of warm eggs are runnier and the yolks are softer, which makes them a bit harder to separate neatly.
I find it easiest to pass the yolks back and forth between the cracked shells and let the whites slide out (see recipe video below for demo). Otherwise, just crack the egg into your fingers and let the whites slip through.
Once you have the yolks in a bowl, leave them to de-chill for around 15 minutes so it incorporates better with the butter.
Blitz yolks – Place egg yolks, infused vinegar and salt in a tall vessel that fits the stick blender then blitz to combine;
Drizzle in butter – With the stick blender going, start drizzling the clarified butter in slowly. It should take around 1 minute to add it all. It’s important to add it slowly so the sauce properly emulsifies (binds and thickens) rather than splitting, which is what would happen if you dumped the butter in one go;
Keep blitzing – Once all the butter is added, give it a good blitz for another 10 seconds, moving up and down, to make it smooth;
Adjust thickness with water – You’ll find that the sauce is quite thick at this stage, like mayonnaise. So if you were to dollop it onto something, it would stay in a mound rather than spreading, which is not what we want for our sauce. So we need to thin it a bit using water.
Start with 1 tablespoon of water, give it a quick blitz to incorporate, then slowly add a bit more at a time. Be careful here – you can always thin out a sauce, but you can’t undo a thin sauce!
Desired thickness – Béarnaise Sauce should be fairly thick but thin enough so it still oozes slowly across the surface of steaks. It’s ideally thicker than Hollandaise Sauce but thinner than mayonnaise;
Add fresh herbs – Stir in the fresh tarragon and chervil at the end;
Done! And there you have it! Perfect Béarnaise, in 2 minutes flat. 🙌🏻
How to keep Béarnaise Sauce warm for serving
One thing that used to prevent me from making things like Hollandaise and Béarnaise Sauce at dinner parties was the inevitable stress of making these sauces just before serving. Though they can be made ahead, refrigerated and then reheated, it’s quite risky and easily prone to splitting. And Béarnaise more so than Hollandaise, I’ve found.
Restaurants never, ever make Béarnaise Sauce ahead, I keep getting told!
So anyway, there’s two easy solutions:
Prep everything ahead and make while protein is resting – I did this last weekend with salmon and it really was a no-brainer. Just have the butter cut and in a jug ready to melt, the vinegar already infused, herbs chopped, jug and stick blender out and ready to use. Then it really was a 2 minutes job to blitz it all up while the salmon was resting; or
Keep finished sauce warm in a thermos – Admittedly I haven’t done this for a gathering, but I did it when taking the photos. It was as good as new 1 hour later as if it were freshly made!
What to serve with Béarnaise Sauce
Béarnaise is a very traditional sauce for steak, one that you almost always see at higher-end steakhouses and classic French bistros. And it is exceptional with steak, for sure.
But try it with salmon. It’s Incredible – with a capital I!! The luxurious mouthfeel and the fresh tarragon flavour is a dead set perfect match with the rich oily flavour of salmon.
I want to tell you that Salmon with Béarnaise Sauce is one of the best things I’ve eaten this year, but that’s not really a grand statement given it’s only early February! 😂
But really, it is that good. I’d choose salmon over steak any day! – Nagi x
Complete your plate
Recipes featured in this post:
Steak – Cooked the cheffy way, basted with garlic butter;
Crispy Skin Salmon – Else just pan sear skinless salmon, or any white fish will be great with Béarnaise too, for that matter. Salt, pepper, 3 minutes each side;
Creamy Mashed Potato and Creamy Cauliflower Mash (low carb option); and
Green Bean Salad – Minus the tomato and onion.
Watch how to make it
Hungry for more? Subscribe to my newsletter and follow along on Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram for all of the latest updates.
Béarnaise Sauce – Fast, easy, foolproof method
Ingredients
Infused Vinegar :
- 1 1/2 tbsp white wine , dry, not too fruity, sweet or woody (Note 1)
- 1 1/2 tbsp white wine vinegar (Note 2)
- 1/4 tsp black pepper , coarsely crushed
- 1 eschallot (small), peeled and finely sliced (Note 3)
- 2 sprigs tarragon (Note 6)
Béarnaise Sauce:
- 3 egg yolks , at room temperature (Note 4)
- 1/4 tsp salt , kosher/cooking salt
- 225g / 16 tbsp unsalted butter , cut into 1cm / 1" cubes – 2 US sticks (Note 5)
- 1/2 tbsp tarragon leaves , finely chopped (Note 6)
- 1/2 tbsp chervil , finely chopped (Note 6)
Instructions
Infused Vinegar:
- Place Infused Vinegar ingredients in a small saucepan over medium low heat.
- Simmer for 2 minutes, then remove from stove and let it stand for 5 minutes to infuse.
- Strain, pressing to extract as much liquid as possible. You should have around 1 tbsp of liquid. Cool 5 minutes before use.
Quick Clarified Butter:
- Place butter in a jug and microwave until melted (1 – 1½ minutes on high, but watch it carefully so it doesn't explode!).
- Stand for 30 seconds until the milky whites settle at the bottom (this is the milk solids) and clarified butter (golden part) sits above it.
- Pour off 175g / 3/4 cup of the clarified butter, discard the milky whites remaining. Use in this recipe while hot.
- Alternative: Just melt 175g / 3/4 cup ghee, which is the same thing as clarified butter.
Béarnaise Sauce:
- Place egg yolks, infused vinegar and salt in a tall, narrow container that the blender stick fits in all the way to the base. Blitz briefly to combine.
- With the stick blender going on high, slowly drizzle the butter in over about a minute.
- After all the butter is in, blitz for a further 10 seconds, moving the stick up and down.
- Thickness: Add 1 tablespoon water, then blitz to incorporate. Add more water as needed, 1 teaspoon at a time, until the Bearnaise Sauce is a thick sauce but loose enough to ooze across a steak, coating it thickly.
- Fresh herbs: Stir in tarragon and chervil.
- Using: Use immediately, or keep warm until required. I use a thermos – a good one will keep it warm for at least 1 hour. Use warm or at room temperature. See note for storing and reheating.
Recipe Notes:
- Prep everything ahead then make it fresh while your cooked protein is resting (it really does take 2 – 3 minutes flat); or
- Make up to an hour or so ahead and keep warm in thermos.
Nutrition Information:
Life of Dozer
No dogs allowed on the surf beaches in this area.
This is the beach in question that he’s yearning to get down to – Mona Vale Beach, my local. And occasionally he does get away from me, oops. 🤷🏻♀️
Lisa says
Absolutely divine. I put the left over sauce in the fringe and used it as butter on toasted sandwiches.
Justin Reehl says
This was very good, and I’ll even give it foolproof, but it is in no way fast. I supposed if you clarified the butter and made the infusion ahead of time then it would be fast, but this is not really something the average cook can do “while the meat is resting”.
Eva says
This is pretty much how I’ve been making bearnaise sauce since immersion blenders became widely available (anyone remember the old Bamix?)…anyhow my only thing to add is that if you, like me, grow tarragon in your herb garden, you can vastly increase the vinegar/wine reduction process by making loads of it when your tarragon is at its peak in summer, thereby giving you the key flavour base throughout the year when needed – just save in the freezer! I generally cook it down in a big pot on the BBQ to keep the vinegar fumes out of the house. After you’ve reduced your bulk quantity just save 1-3 TBSP (depending on the quantity of bearnaise sauce you usually make) in snack-size ziploc bags and pop them all in a container in the freezer. Then you only need to grab eggs and butter (plus more tarragon from the garden if desired) to finish making a batch when steak is on the menu! Super convenient at the end of winter when tarragon dies right off in the garden. Thanks Nagi for confirming my method of making this amazing sauce is the best way!
Eva says
PS: my recipe has fresh lemon juice added at the end (when adjusting for salt) for a hit of fresh acid and aromatics.
Kate says
I did this but it didn’t thicken at all. Maybe my stick blender is not good enough 😢
Susan says
Can I substitute herbs with lemon thyme
Teresa says
Amazingly easy and absolutely delicious!
Phoebe says
This was super easy and was lovely. I couldn’t get tarragon so used sage but I’ll be sure to find tarragon next time.
Patrick says
This turned out perfectly. Unfortunately I decided to be an idiot and nuke it just a bit since it was only at room temp and I wanted it a bit warmer. It separated. Badly. Lesson learned. Stick to the recipe.
Allison Farcus says
Absolutely perfect! Thank you.
Patricia Yohn says
Made this awesome sauce today for Easter, as I had a center cut beef tenderloin in my freezer and wasn’t going to waste that. It is just my Husband and myself, so I do have leftovers.
This was a very easy recipe to follow and I have never made Béarnaise myself and my Husband has never eaten it before, He did need to help me drizzling the clarified butter while I manned the stick blender while holding onto the container, it came together beautifully and my Husband loved it as did I. There was also enough to use for the roasted cauliflower, which my Husband greatly appreciated since he doesn’t like most vegetables. His Mother really wasn’t much of a cook and since we have been married, I have introduced him to foods he never knew existed. He gave your Béarnaise sauce two thumbs up. I only needed to add about a tablespoon of water at the end for the perfect consistentancy.
While I may not make this often, your recipe and instructions were spot on. I feel sure that it would also be absolutely delicious on Eggs Benedict and that would definitely be the quintessential stick to your ribs breakfast.
I still have some left in the refrigerator and may try using it as a sandwich spread tomorrow for a cold filet mignon BLT sandwich on toast. I could not find fresh tarragon or chervil in my area so I had purchased a fresh jar of dried tarragon and I purchased fresh curly parsley. Just fantastic taste and creamy texture.
Thank you for your great recipe and instructions.
rosanne says
i’ve always made my sauce by hand, so i thought i would try this shortcut. i couldn’t figure out why it was favorless, then realized there was no lemon juice. a few squeezes brightened it up and produced the correct flavor
Elisabeth Selby says
It’s my first time making bearnaise and it was so easy and absolutely fabulous
Laura says
Great recipe, and so convenient for preparing during the course of a dinner. Thanks for all the information about clarifying the butter, too – worked like a charm.
Den M. says
Nagi, I did a test run, followed your steps, it was perfect. My question is for Christmas I will need more sauce. Can this recipe and technique be doubled or more? I was so pleased with my test results but now am concerned re the need to accommodate more company.
Mike Goodin says
I had a craving for steak frites with Bearnaise sauce like I had this Summer in France.
This recipe NAILED it and was surprisingly easy and quick. Absolutely delicious. Had enough leftover to put on some some scrambled eggs and sweet potato hash browns this morning- darn good and I will make again and again!
Stephanie says
My new ‘22 stick blender made the sauce in < 30 seconds. Thinned the sauce using my whisk attachment. May use it from the beginning next time. Phenomenal results. C’est si bon!!
Linda S Camp says
But you don’t cook it ever. the eggs remain raw ?
Steph says
The heat from the butter is generally sufficient to “cook” the eggs. Lots of blender recipes published using this method, but none are as scrumptious and easy as this.
Irene Magurany says
Wow….amazing…. Going to look up your cauliflower mash recipe now…
Liz says
I have always done this sauce the “traditional”, way for years, but as all of your recipes that I have tried have worked brilliantly I gave it a go. Bloody delicious and so easy. Held very well in a thermal drink cup.
Ann Baker says
Absolute perfection. I struggled with this sauce in culinary school, but your method seems foolproof. Great tips! Perfect with our grilled steaks. Also motivated me to plant some chervil. Parsley is a good sub, but the chervil would make it even more special!