Use Hard-Boiled Eggs to Keep Your Hollandaise From Breaking (2024)

Allie Chanthorn Reinmann

Use Hard-Boiled Eggs to Keep Your Hollandaise From Breaking (1)

Credit: Allie Chanthorn Reinmann

Hollandaise sauce is a pillar in the condiment community (along with its fellow mother sauces) but it can be intimidating to make. The classic method requires specific timing, specialized equipment (do I own a double boiler?), and it’s all too easy to break. Well, I’ve done some breaking of my own–breaking the rules, that is. Forget what they told you, and make life easy with reverse hollandaise.

What is hollandaise sauce?

Hollandaise is made with four ingredients: egg yolks, lemon juice, butter, and salt. The traditional method would have you whisk the yolks and lemon juice over a double boiler (here’s a makeshift one you can use at home), and whisk constantly while dribbling in melted butter to emulsify the simple mixture into a pale, smooth, and creamy sauce. Whisk, while controlling a hot bowl that’s surfing on a pot of simmering water and accurately pouring melted butter with your non-dominant hand. No wonder it’s common to ruin this sauce in its infant stages.

If you don’t whisk fast enough, or don’t pour the fat slowly enough, the fat particles can gather together and separate from the other ingredients, making the mixture “break” and look greasy. Sure, there’s the blender method to help prevent breaking, but the eggs stay raw (no, not even drizzled hot butter will actually pasteurize those yolks, maybe sous vide them first). Additionally, I find the volume isn’t quite as impressive, and some folks simply don’t vibe with raw yolks. That’s where you can rely on reverse hollandaise. The yolks are already cooked.

How to make reverse hollandaise

I love this method because you don’t have to worry about the melted butter breaking the emulsification, you end up with a seriously silky sauce, and it’s much less stressful than the double boiler method. After trying out a cooked-yolk thickened salad dressing I was confident I could make hollandaise sauce the same way. Instead of whisking the raw yolks slowly over a double boiler to cook while simultaneously suspending the particles, you start with pre-cooked yolks that get pulverized into a fine powder. Those bits still emulsify, leading you to the same end: a smooth, golden ‘daise.

Reverse hollandaise is a technique, so if you have a recipe you already like you can keep the rest of the ingredient list. I used Tyler Florence’s recipe. Start by hard boiling four eggs in whichever manner pleases you. I steam my eggs, it takes about 12 minutes, and they peel like a dream every time.

Use Hard-Boiled Eggs to Keep Your Hollandaise From Breaking (2)

Mid-way through the process, adding the softened butter.Credit: Allie Chanthorn Reinmann

Remove the yolks and add them to a food processor or blender. Add the lemon juice, salt, and half a stick of melted butter. (The other half of the butter should be very soft, and waiting in the wings.) Pulse and blend until smooth. Scrape down the sides and the bottom. Add two tablespoons of the very soft butter. Blend until smooth, and scrape down the container again before adding the last of the soft butter. Blend the heck out of it until it’s fully combined.

Use Hard-Boiled Eggs to Keep Your Hollandaise From Breaking (3)

All of the ingredients have been combined. One more scrape and blend, and the sauce is finished.Credit: Allie Chanthorn Reinmann

I start with melted butter just to get the mixture to catch in the processor but the second half of the butter should be soft. By using softened butter for the end of the recipe, you avoid breaking the emulsification.

Since hollandaise sauce is mostly butter, it’s pretty normal for it to thicken as it sits and cools down. To loosen it up for serving, stir in a small amount of hot water, about a half-teaspoon to a teaspoon will do.

Reverse Hollandaise

Ingredients:

  • 4 hardboiled egg yolks

  • 1 tablespoon lemon juice

  • ¼ teaspoon salt

  • ½ stick of butter, melted

  • ½ stick of butter, very soft

In a food processor, add the yolks, lemon juice, salt, and melted butter. Blend until smooth, scraping down the container halfway through. Add a couple tablespoons of the softened butter and blend. Scrape down the container and add the rest of the butter. Blend until thoroughly incorporated. Stir in half a teaspoon of boiling water to loosen up the sauce for serving.

Use Hard-Boiled Eggs to Keep Your Hollandaise From Breaking (4)

Allie Chanthorn Reinmann

Staff Writer

Allie has been Lifehacker’s Food Writer since 2021. She earned her bachelor’s degree at Ithaca College in drama and studied at the Institute of Culinary Education to earn her diploma in Pastry and Baking Arts. Allie worked professionally as a private chef for over a decade, honing her craft in New York at places like Balthazar, Bien Cuit, The Chocolate Room, Billy’s Bakery, and Whole Foods. She spent evenings as a chef instructor, and also earned a master’s degree at Hunter College for teaching English. Allie’s YouTube channel, Thainybites, features recipes and baking tricks. She lives in Brooklyn, NY.

Read Allie's full bio

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Use Hard-Boiled Eggs to Keep Your Hollandaise From Breaking (2024)

FAQs

Use Hard-Boiled Eggs to Keep Your Hollandaise From Breaking? ›

Reinmann suggests using hard-boiled egg yolks blended with butter and lemon juice to make a Hollandaise that is very hard to ruin. The technique can be used with your favorite Hollandaise recipe — just switch up your hot, whisked yolks for the hard-cooked ones.

How do you keep hollandaise from breaking? ›

Add 1 tsp Dijon mustard to your bowl or blender before you add in the eggs. The mustard with stabilize your sauce and will prevent it from separating.

How can you prevent eggs from scrambling in hollandaise sauce? ›

The eggs will scramble when they are exposed to too much heat. When making hollandaise over a double boiler, you have to pull the bowl of sauce off of the heat occasionally, so it can cool down a little. This will prevent the eggs from scrambling.

Why is my hollandaise sauce splitting? ›

There is nothing more frustrating than a split hollandaise, turning it from a gorgeous thick emulsion to something that looks like it was brought up by the cat. This generally happens because the melted butter is added too quickly so that the eggs, which act to emulsify the fat and liquid, cannot keep up.

How to keep hollandaise warm without breaking? ›

You can't keep hollandaise “hot” without using xanthin gum, as it will break. As for keeping it warm, the most practical way of keeping an emulsified sauce warm without breaking it, is using either a steam table, hot water bath, or double boiler. Basically, keeping it suspended in warm water or water vapor.

What are common mistakes hollandaise? ›

The most common mistake people make with Hollandaise is adding melted butter that is too hot, or adding too much too soon. When this happens, the emulsion breaks — it becomes thin and grainy. If your butter is too hot, just stop making the Hollandaise for a minute or two to allow the butter to cool.

Should eggs be room-temperature for hollandaise sauce? ›

Hollandaise sauce is not difficult to make, but you need to know what you are doing to get it right. Use room-temperature eggs rather than cold eggs. Cold eggs will be harder to keep from curdling. A lot of hollandaise sauce recipes call for clarified butter.

What precautions are necessary when making hollandaise to avoid overcooking the eggs? ›

Hollandaise should be held between 120F to 145F (49 to 63C) so it does not split or curdle. If the sauce is heated above 150F, the eggs can overcook, become grainy and the sauce can potentially split.

How to tell when hollandaise sauce is done? ›

What consistency should Hollandaise be? The perfect hollandaise sauce is smooth, slightly glossy looking, and pourable. If you notice a grainy appearance, it's a sign that your sauce is “broken”, meaning, the ingredients have separated.

Can you fix runny hollandaise? ›

How do you fix a runny hollandaise? Blenders tend to make runny hollandaise - it's usually because the butter was too cold and hasn't cooked the eggs enough to thicken them. To thicken a runny hollandaise, tip the mixture into a heatproof bowl set over simmering water and whisk over the heat until thickened.

Why do you need to constantly whisk when adding the butter to hollandaise sauce? ›

You keep whisking the mixture as you add the melted butter because you want to break it up into tiny, tiny drops. Each tiny drop ends up surrounded by emulsifiers . But to give the emulsifiers a helping hand, you need to keep the butter from gathering in a big glob.

How do you keep boiled eggs from splitting? ›

Let eggs come to room temperature before boiling by taking them out of the refrigerator 15-20 minutes before cooking. This helps reduce the temperature shock that can cause cracking. Adding a small amount of vinegar or salt to the water may help strengthen the egg whites and reduce the chances of cracking.

Why do you put a hole in a boiled egg? ›

This leaves the egg with a flattened end. Pricking the egg provides a quick escape route for the air, which gives you an egg with a smoothly rounded end. If you prick an egg, watch for a jet of air shooting from the hole as the egg cooks. Scientists disagree on the other possible benefits of pricking an egg.

How do you keep hollandaise sauce thick? ›

Hollandaise Sauce Ingredients

Lemon juice – The acid from the lemon juice helps the egg yolks absorb more fat from butter and adds a nice pop of tang. You also need it to prevent cracks and help the sauce thicken up.

How to get hollandaise sauce to thicken? ›

How do you fix a runny hollandaise? Blenders tend to make runny hollandaise - it's usually because the butter was too cold and hasn't cooked the eggs enough to thicken them. To thicken a runny hollandaise, tip the mixture into a heatproof bowl set over simmering water and whisk over the heat until thickened.

What temperature does hollandaise break? ›

Hollandaise should be held between 120F to 145F (49 to 63C) so it does not split or curdle. If the sauce is heated above 150F, the eggs can overcook, become grainy and the sauce can potentially split.

Why do you need clarified butter for hollandaise? ›

Clarified butter—butter that is liquefied and then strained until it's clear—helps stabilize the sauce so that it doesn't curdle. It is pure fat, whereas whole butter is 16 to 17 percent water, which can weaken the emulsion.

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