Mignonette sauce for oysters

Mignonette is a classic sauce for serving with oysters. A classic, proper one is made with just red wine vinegar and eschalots (called shallots in the US). No messing around with oil, no sugar, no salt. It’s meant to be clear and pink and pure, not sweet, oily and brown. It’s sharp – being that it’s just made with vinegar. So it’s just like squeezing fresh tangy lemon juice on oysters, with the extra flavour from the eschalots! It just goes so well with creamy, briny oysters.

What you need for mignonette for oysters

Here’s all that goes into a classic mignonette.

Red wine vinegar – This is the classic vinegar used for mignonette. With only 2 ingredients in this sauce, the better the quality, the better the flavour. Aged vinegars made from good grapes will have a smoother, more rounded, complex flavour whereas economical ones will be sharper with less flavour.Feel free to play around with other vinegars such as white wine vinegar, champagne vinegar, sherry vinegar. Eschalots – Also known as French onions, and called “shallots” in the US. They look like baby onions, but have purple-skinned flesh, are finer and sweeter. Not to be confused with what some people in Australia call “shallots” ie the long green onions.Ordinarily I say that red onion can be substituted but for mignonette, it’s just too chunky. Pepper? We don’t put pepper in the mignonette because it sinks. If you want pepper (and personally, I don’t miss it), serve it separately in a pinch bowl so people can sprinkle it on their oyster themselves.

How to make Mignonette for oysters

I feel almost silly having this section in this post!! You just combine the vinegar and eschalots and mix. Make this at least a couple of hours ahead of serving, if you can, to give the flavours a chance to meld. Feel free to play around with other vinegars such as white wine vinegar, champagne vinegar, sherry vinegar. Ordinarily I say that red onion can be substituted but for mignonette, it’s just too chunky.

How much mignonette to use per oyster

Speaking of the eating part though! This sauce is sharp – don’t eat spoonfuls of it plain. But it works with creamy oysters. There’s no rule about quantity to use because it comes down to personal taste. But as a guide, a typical amount would be 1/2 teaspoon for small oysters and 3/4 teaspoon for large. Some people will use more liberally! No video today. It’s an easy recipe! Also, I shared 2 more oyster recipes today – see them here. Love to know what you think if you try it. – Nagi x

Life of Dozer

We did a wreath making session for a team-building event (I know, not very RecipeTin, but somehow the team managed to corrupt an innocent crafting session). Are you at all surprised that one ended up on Dozer?

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