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Mayonnaise

Mayonnaise (UK: /ˌməˈnz/;[1] US: /ˈməˌnz, ˈmæˌnz/[2]), colloquially referred to as "mayo" (/ˈm/),[2] is a thick, cold, and creamy sauce or dressing commonly used on sandwiches, hamburgers, composed salads, and French fries. It also forms the base for various other sauces, such as tartar sauce, fry sauce, remoulade, salsa golf, and rouille.[3]

Mayonnaise
A jar of mayonnaise
Alternative namesMayo
TypeCondiment
Place of originFrance, Spain
Main ingredientsOil, egg yolk, and vinegar or lemon juice
  • Cookbook: Mayonnaise
  •   Media: Mayonnaise

Mayonnaise is an emulsion of oil, egg yolk, and an acid, either vinegar or lemon juice;[4] there are many variants using additional flavorings. The color varies from near-white to pale yellow, and its texture from a light cream to a thick gel.

Commercial eggless imitations are made for those who avoid chicken eggs because of egg allergies, to limit dietary cholesterol, or because they are vegans.[5]

History

 
Standard ingredients and tools to make mayonnaise

Mayonnaise is a French cuisine appellation that seems to have appeared for the first time in 1806. The hypotheses invoked over time as to the origin(s) of mayonnaise have been numerous and contradictory. Most hypotheses do however agree on the geographical origin of the sauce, Mahón, in Menorca, Spain.[6][7][8] Other theories have been dismissed by some authors as being somewhat a retrospective invention aiming to credit the sauce as an invention of south-western France, when most likely, its origin can be found in the port city of Menorca.[9]

According to Émile Littré, it may have come from Mahón, capital of Menorca, in the Balearic Islands, Spain, occupied by the English at the time and then conquered by the Duc de Richelieu in 1756. His cook would have presented him with this sauce, called the "mahonnaise", made with the only two ingredients he had: egg and oil. Nevertheless, this sauce was starting to be described a little before this event while several versions of similar sauces existed in France and in Spain.

Mayonnaise sauce may have its origins in the ancient remoulade. Another hypothesis is that mayonnaise is derived from aioli.[6] Finally, the process of emulsifying egg yolk was known for a long time to pharmacists, who used it to prepare ointments and salves. Some have pointed out that it would make sense that mayonnaise originated in Spain given its requirement of olive oil, a liquid produced and consumed mostly there at the time.[10] This hypothesis is similar to another that places the origins of French fries in Spain using the same rationale.[11][12][13]

Remoulade sauce was known for a long time and there were hot and cold versions of it. In both cases, the base was oil, vinegar, salt, herbs, often other ingredients such as capers or anchovies, and then mustard; in short, it was an enriched vinaigrette.

In the early 18th century, Vincent La Chapelle had the idea of incorporating "velouté", based on roux, a mixture of flour and fat, to bind it. In 1742, François Marin published in the Suite des Dons de Comus a recipe called "beurre de Provence" which contains garlic cloves cooked in water, crushed with salt, pepper, capers and anchovies, then mixed with oil. This recipe is also close to the aioli, the egg yolk appearing later.

In 1750, Francesc Roger Gomila, a Valencian friar, published a recipe for a sauce similar to mayonnaise in Art de la Cuina ('The Art of Cooking'). He calls the sauce aioli bo.[14] If he does not describe precisely the recipe—suggesting that it was known by everyone on the island—the way it is used, the preparations for which it is used as a base and the dishes with which it is associated are most often inconceivable with an aioli. Earlier recipes of similar emulsified sauces, usually containing garlic, appear in a number of Spanish recipe books dating all the way back to the 14th century Llibre de Sent Soví, where it is called all-i-oli, literally 'garlic and oil' in Catalan.[15][16] This sauce had clearly spread throughout the Crown of Aragon, for Juan de Altamiras gives a recipe for it in his celebrated 1745 recipe book Nuevo Arte de Cocina ('New Art of Cooking').[17]

On April 18, 1756, the Duke of Richelieu invaded Menorca and took the port of Mahon. A theory states that the aioli bo sauce was thereafter adopted by the cook of the Duke of Richelieu, who upon his return to France made the sauce famous in the French court.[18] which would have been known as mahonnaise .[19][20][21] A number of legends arose relating how the Duke of Richelieu first tried the sauce, including his discovery of the sauce in a local inn of Mahon where he would have allegedly asked the innkeeper to make him some dinner during the siege of Mahon,[22] and even that he invented it himself as a quick garnish.[20]

Another version is Grimod de La Reynière's 1808 bayonnaise sauce which is a sort of aspic: "But if one wants to make from this cold chicken, a dish of distinction, one composes a bayonnaise, whose green jelly, of a good consistency, forms the most worthy ornament of poultry and fish salads."[23][non-primary source needed]

In 1806, André Viard, in Le Cuisinier impérial, transformed this recipe for remoulade by replacing the roux with egg yolk.[24] In another recipe, an Indian remoulade, without mustard, he specifies that the binding is facilitated by incorporating the oil little by little. This is the first modern mention of a stable cold emulsified sauce.[25] In the same book, he also proposes a sauce called mayonnaise (the first recorded attestation of the name) but which is not an emulsion but a sauce linked to velouté and jelly.

It is only in 1815 that Antonin Carême mentions a cold "magnonaise" emulsified with egg yolk. The word "mayonnaise" is attested in English in 1815.[26]

Auguste Escoffier wrote that mayonnaise was a French mother sauce of cold sauces,[27] like espagnole or velouté.

Etymology

The origin of the name mayonnaise is unclear, though some records indicate its introduction to the early 1800s,[citation needed] with numerous suggested, sometimes contradictory suggestions.[citation needed]

A common theory is that it is named for Port Mahon (Maó in Menorcan), itself named after its founder Mago Barca,[28][29] in Menorca, in honor of the 3rd Duke of Richelieu's victory over the British in 1756, and in fact the name mahonnaise is used by some authors. But the name is only attested several decades after that event.[30][31] One version of this theory says that it was originally known as salsa mahonesa in Spanish,[32][33] but that spelling too is only attested later.[31]

Alexandre Balthazar Laurent Grimod de La Reynière, a lawyer by qualification who acquired fame during the reign of Napoleon for his sensual and public gastronomic lifestyle, rejected the name mayonnaise because the word "is not French". He also rejected the name mahonnaise because Port Mahon "is not known for good food", and thus he preferred bayonnaise, after the city of Bayonne, which "has many innovative gourmands and... produces the best hams in Europe."[34][31] Indeed , the city of Bayonne (sauce à la Bayonnaise) could also have given its name to this type of sauce, by spelling deformation. This form would seem to be confirmed by the fact that there is no written record of the sauce à la mayonnaise before the beginning of the 19th century, long after the capture of the city of Mahón.[35]

Another hypothesis is based, according to Marie-Antoine Carême, a famous contemporary French chef, on a derivative of magnonaise (from the verb magner, or manier) or, according to Prosper Montagné, of moyeunaise (or moyennaise), based on moyeu(x) (or moyen) which means 'egg yolk', in Old French. It has also been suggested that the word be linked to the old verb mailler, meaning 'to beat'.[36]

Joseph Favre, for his part, states in his memoirs that mayonnaise is an alteration of the word magnonnaise, derived from Magnon (Lot-et-Garonne), and that a cook from Magnon would have popularized it first in the South of France; he notes that this sauce has been variously named mahonnaise, bayonnaise and mayonnaise.[37]

A more controversial hypothesis, put forward by the linguist and historian Nicolas Lepreux, suggests that mayonnaise originated in the Mayenne region, and that the "e" would have changed into an "o" over time: the apocryphal story tells that the Duke of Mayenne, on the day before the Battle of Arques, overindulged on chickens seasoned with a remarkable sauce, so that the next day he fell off his horse and lost the battle.[citation needed]

Preparation

Recipes for mayonnaise date to the early nineteenth century. In 1815, Louis Eustache Ude wrote:

No 58.—Mayonnaise. Take three spoonfuls of Allemande, six ditto of aspic, and two of oil. Add a little tarragon vinegar, that has not boiled, some pepper and salt, and minced ravigotte, or merely some parsley. Then put in the members of fowl, or fillets of soles, &c. Your mayonnaise must be put to ice; neither are you to put the members into your sauce till it begins to freeze. Next dish your meat or fish, mask with the sauce before it be quite frozen, and garnish your dish with whatever you think proper, as beet root, jelly, nasturtiums, &c.[38]

In an 1820 work, Viard describes something like the more familiar emulsified version:

This sauce is made to "take" in many ways: with raw egg yolks, with gelatine, with veal or veal brain glaze. The most common method is to take a raw egg yolk in a small terrine, with a little salt and lemon juice: take a wooden spoon, turn it while letting a trickle of oil fall and stirring constantly; as your sauce thickens, add a little vinegar; put in too a pound of good oil: serve your sauce with good salt: serve it white or green, adding green of ravigote or green of spinach. This sauce is used for cold fish entrees, or salad of vegetables cooked in salt water.[39]

Modern mayonnaise can be made by hand with a whisk, a fork, or with the aid of an electric mixer or blender. It is made by slowly adding oil to an egg yolk, while whisking vigorously to disperse the oil. The oil and the water in the yolk form a base of the emulsion, while lecithin and protein from the yolk is the emulsifier that stabilizes it.[40][41][page needed] A combination of van der Waals interactions and electrostatic repulsion determine the bond strength among oil droplets. The high viscosity of mayonnaise is attributed to the total strength created by these two intermolecular forces.[42] Addition of mustard contributes to the taste and further stabilizes the emulsion, as mustard contains small amounts of lecithin.[43] If vinegar is added directly to the yolk, it can emulsify more oil, thus making more mayonnaise.[44]

For large-scale preparation of mayonnaise where mixing equipment is being employed, the process typically begins with the dispersal of eggs, either powdered or liquid, into water. Once emulsified, the remaining ingredients are then added and vigorously mixed until completely hydrated and evenly dispersed. Oil is then added as rapidly as it can be absorbed. Though only a small part of the total, ingredients other than the oil are critical to proper formulation. These must be totally hydrated and dispersed within a small liquid volume, which can cause difficulties including emulsion breakdown during the oil-adding phase. Often, a long agitation process is required to achieve proper dispersal/emulsification, presenting one of the trickiest phases of the production process.[45] As food technology advances processing has been shortened drastically, allowing about 1000 liters to be produced in 10 minutes.[46]

Imitations

Miracle Whip was developed as a less expensive imitation of mayonnaise.[47] Because it doesn't meet the legal definition of mayonnaise, it is marketed as salad dressing.[48]

 
A vegan sandwich with egg-free variety of mayonnaise

Egg-free imitations of mayonnaise are available for vegans and others who avoid eggs or cholesterol, or who have egg allergies. In the U.S., these imitations cannot be labelled as "mayonnaise" because the definition of mayonnaise requires egg.[49][50] Egg-free imitations generally contain soya or pea protein as the emulsifying agent to stabilize oil droplets in water.[51] Well-known brands include Nasoya's Nayonaise, Vegenaise and Just Mayo in North America, and Plamil Egg Free in the United Kingdom.[52][53][54]

Uses

 
Mayonnaise from the Zaan district, North Holland, Netherlands and potato fries

Mayonnaise is used commonly around the world, and is also a base for many other chilled sauces and salad dressings. For example, sauce rémoulade, in classic French cuisine, is a mix of mayonnaise and mustard, gherkins, capers, parsley, chervil, tarragon, and possibly anchovy essence.[55]

Chile

Chile is the world's third major per capita consumer of mayonnaise and first in Latin America.[56] Commercial mayonnaise became widely accessible in the 1980s.[56] It is a common topping for completos.[citation needed]

Europe

Guidelines issued in September 1991 by Europe's Federation of the Condiment Sauce Industries recommend that mayonnaise should contain at least 70% oil and 5% liquid egg yolk. The Netherlands incorporated this guideline in 1998 into the law Warenwetbesluit Gereserveerde aanduidingen in article 4.[57] Most available brands easily exceed these targets.[58] In countries influenced by French culture, mustard is also a common ingredient that acts as an additional emulsifier.[59]

Japan

 
Kewpie mayonnaise

Japanese mayonnaise is typically made with rice vinegar, which gives it a flavor different from mayonnaise made from distilled vinegar.[60][61] Apart from salads, it is popular with dishes such as okonomiyaki, takoyaki and yakisoba and may also accompany katsu and karaage.[62] It is most often sold in soft plastic squeeze bottles. Its texture is thicker than most Western commercial mayonnaise.[63] Kewpie (Q.P.) is the most popular brand of Japanese mayonnaise,[64] advertised with a Kewpie doll logo. The vinegar is a proprietary blend containing apple and malt vinegars.[65] The Kewpie company was started in 1925 by Tochiro Nakashima, whose goal was to create a condiment that made eating vegetables more enjoyable.[66]

Russia

Mayonnaise is very popular in Russia, where it is made with sunflower oil and soybean oil. A 2004 study showed that Russia is the only market in Europe where more mayonnaise than ketchup is sold. It is used as a sauce in the most popular salads in Russia, such as Olivier salad (also known as Russian salad), dressed herring, and many others. Leading brands are Calvé (marketed by Unilever) and Sloboda (marketed by Efko).[67]

United States

Commercial mayonnaise marketed in jars originated in Philadelphia in 1907 when Amelia Schlorer began marketing a mayonnaise recipe originally used in salads sold in her family's grocery store. Mrs. Schlorer's mayonnaise was an instant success with local customers and eventually grew into the Schlorer Delicatessen Company.[68] Around the same time in New York City, a family from Vetschau, Germany, at Richard Hellmann's delicatessen on Columbus Avenue, featured his wife's homemade recipe in salads sold in their delicatessen. The condiment quickly became so popular that Hellmann began selling it in "wooden boats" that were used for weighing butter. In 1912, Mrs. Hellmann's mayonnaise was mass-marketed and was trademarked in 1926 as Hellmann's Blue Ribbon Mayonnaise. After numerous corporate iterations, Hellmann's is now marketed in the Eastern United States and as Best Foods Mayonnaise in the Western United States.[69] Mayonnaise sales are about US$1.3 billion per year in the U.S.[70]

Nutritional information

A typical formulation for commercially made mayonnaise (not low fat) can contain as much as 80% vegetable oil, typically soybean, rapeseed, sunflower, or corn oil,[71] depending on region of production, but, in specialty products, sometimes olive or avocado oil. Water makes up about 7% to 8% and egg yolks about 6%. Some formulas use whole eggs instead of just yolks. The remaining ingredients include vinegar (4%), salt (1%), and sugar (1%). Low-fat formulas will typically decrease oil content to just 50% and increase water content to about 35%. Egg content is reduced to 4% and vinegar to 3%. Sugar is increased to 1.5% and salt lowered to 0.7%. Gums or thickeners (4%) are added to increase viscosity, improve texture, and ensure a stable emulsion.[45] Mayonnaise is prepared using several methods, but on average it contains around 700 kilocalories (2,900 kJ) per 100 grams, or 94 kilocalories (Cal) per tablespoon. This makes mayonnaise a calorically dense food.[72]

The nutrient content of mayonnaise (> 50% edible oil, 9–11% salt, 7–10% sugar in the aqueous phase) makes it suitable as a food source for many spoilage organisms. A set of conditions such as pH between 3.6 and 4.0, and low water activity aw of 0.925, restricts the growth of yeasts, a few bacteria and molds.[73] Yeasts of the genus Saccharomyces, Lactobacillus fructivorans, and Zygosaccharomyces bailii are the species responsible for the spoilage of mayonnaise. The characteristics of spoilage caused by Z. bailli are product separation and a "yeasty" odor. A study suggests that adding encapsulated cells of Bifidobacterium bifidum and B. infantis prolongs the life of mayonnaise up to 12 weeks without microorganism spoilage.[citation needed]

Salmonella

Mayonnaise, both commercially processed and home-made, has been associated with illnesses from Salmonella globally. The source of the Salmonella has been confirmed to be raw eggs.[74] Several outbreaks with fatal cases have been recorded, with a few major incidents. In a 1955 outbreak in Denmark, 10,000 people were affected by Salmonella from contaminated mayonnaise made by a large kitchen. The pH of the mayonnaise was found to be 5.1, with Salmonella counts of 180,000 CFU/g. The second outbreak, also in Denmark, caused 41 infections with two fatalities. The pH of the contaminated mayonnaise was 6.0, with Salmonella counts of 6 million CFU/g. In 1976 there were serious salmonellosis outbreaks on four flights to and from Spain which caused 500 cases and 6 fatalities. In the US, 404 people became ill and nine died in a New York City hospital due to hospital-prepared mayonnaise.[75] In all salmonellosis cases, the major reason was inadequate acidification of the mayonnaise, with a pH higher than the recommended upper limit of 4.1, with acetic acid as the main acidifying agent.[76] Some brands use pasteurized eggs which would reduce this risk factor.[77]

See also

References

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External links

  • Science Channel's The Making Series: #2 Making of Mayonnaise (video in Japanese)
  • NPR's Report on the 250th Birthday of Mayonnaise and its history

mayonnaise, other, uses, disambiguation, colloquially, referred, mayo, thick, cold, creamy, sauce, dressing, commonly, used, sandwiches, hamburgers, composed, salads, french, fries, also, forms, base, various, other, sauces, such, tartar, sauce, sauce, remoula. For other uses see Mayonnaise disambiguation Mayonnaise UK ˌ m eɪ e ˈ n eɪ z 1 US ˈ m eɪ e ˌ n eɪ z ˈ m ae ˌ n eɪ z 2 colloquially referred to as mayo ˈ m eɪ oʊ 2 is a thick cold and creamy sauce or dressing commonly used on sandwiches hamburgers composed salads and French fries It also forms the base for various other sauces such as tartar sauce fry sauce remoulade salsa golf and rouille 3 MayonnaiseA jar of mayonnaiseAlternative namesMayoTypeCondimentPlace of originFrance SpainMain ingredientsOil egg yolk and vinegar or lemon juiceCookbook Mayonnaise Media MayonnaiseMayonnaise is an emulsion of oil egg yolk and an acid either vinegar or lemon juice 4 there are many variants using additional flavorings The color varies from near white to pale yellow and its texture from a light cream to a thick gel Commercial eggless imitations are made for those who avoid chicken eggs because of egg allergies to limit dietary cholesterol or because they are vegans 5 Contents 1 History 2 Etymology 3 Preparation 3 1 Imitations 4 Uses 4 1 Chile 4 2 Europe 4 3 Japan 4 4 Russia 4 5 United States 5 Nutritional information 6 Salmonella 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory Standard ingredients and tools to make mayonnaise This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Mayonnaise is a French cuisine appellation that seems to have appeared for the first time in 1806 The hypotheses invoked over time as to the origin s of mayonnaise have been numerous and contradictory Most hypotheses do however agree on the geographical origin of the sauce Mahon in Menorca Spain 6 7 8 Other theories have been dismissed by some authors as being somewhat a retrospective invention aiming to credit the sauce as an invention of south western France when most likely its origin can be found in the port city of Menorca 9 According to Emile Littre it may have come from Mahon capital of Menorca in the Balearic Islands Spain occupied by the English at the time and then conquered by the Duc de Richelieu in 1756 His cook would have presented him with this sauce called the mahonnaise made with the only two ingredients he had egg and oil Nevertheless this sauce was starting to be described a little before this event while several versions of similar sauces existed in France and in Spain Mayonnaise sauce may have its origins in the ancient remoulade Another hypothesis is that mayonnaise is derived from aioli 6 Finally the process of emulsifying egg yolk was known for a long time to pharmacists who used it to prepare ointments and salves Some have pointed out that it would make sense that mayonnaise originated in Spain given its requirement of olive oil a liquid produced and consumed mostly there at the time 10 This hypothesis is similar to another that places the origins of French fries in Spain using the same rationale 11 12 13 Remoulade sauce was known for a long time and there were hot and cold versions of it In both cases the base was oil vinegar salt herbs often other ingredients such as capers or anchovies and then mustard in short it was an enriched vinaigrette In the early 18th century Vincent La Chapelle had the idea of incorporating veloute based on roux a mixture of flour and fat to bind it In 1742 Francois Marin published in the Suite des Dons de Comus a recipe called beurre de Provence which contains garlic cloves cooked in water crushed with salt pepper capers and anchovies then mixed with oil This recipe is also close to the aioli the egg yolk appearing later In 1750 Francesc Roger Gomila a Valencian friar published a recipe for a sauce similar to mayonnaise in Art de la Cuina The Art of Cooking He calls the sauce aioli bo 14 If he does not describe precisely the recipe suggesting that it was known by everyone on the island the way it is used the preparations for which it is used as a base and the dishes with which it is associated are most often inconceivable with an aioli Earlier recipes of similar emulsified sauces usually containing garlic appear in a number of Spanish recipe books dating all the way back to the 14th century Llibre de Sent Sovi where it is called all i oli literally garlic and oil in Catalan 15 16 This sauce had clearly spread throughout the Crown of Aragon for Juan de Altamiras gives a recipe for it in his celebrated 1745 recipe book Nuevo Arte de Cocina New Art of Cooking 17 On April 18 1756 the Duke of Richelieu invaded Menorca and took the port of Mahon A theory states that the aioli bo sauce was thereafter adopted by the cook of the Duke of Richelieu who upon his return to France made the sauce famous in the French court 18 which would have been known as mahonnaise 19 20 21 A number of legends arose relating how the Duke of Richelieu first tried the sauce including his discovery of the sauce in a local inn of Mahon where he would have allegedly asked the innkeeper to make him some dinner during the siege of Mahon 22 and even that he invented it himself as a quick garnish 20 Another version is Grimod de La Reyniere s 1808 bayonnaise sauce which is a sort of aspic But if one wants to make from this cold chicken a dish of distinction one composes a bayonnaise whose green jelly of a good consistency forms the most worthy ornament of poultry and fish salads 23 non primary source needed In 1806 Andre Viard in Le Cuisinier imperial transformed this recipe for remoulade by replacing the roux with egg yolk 24 In another recipe an Indian remoulade without mustard he specifies that the binding is facilitated by incorporating the oil little by little This is the first modern mention of a stable cold emulsified sauce 25 In the same book he also proposes a sauce called mayonnaise the first recorded attestation of the name but which is not an emulsion but a sauce linked to veloute and jelly It is only in 1815 that Antonin Careme mentions a cold magnonaise emulsified with egg yolk The word mayonnaise is attested in English in 1815 26 Auguste Escoffier wrote that mayonnaise was a French mother sauce of cold sauces 27 like espagnole or veloute EtymologyThe origin of the name mayonnaise is unclear though some records indicate its introduction to the early 1800s citation needed with numerous suggested sometimes contradictory suggestions citation needed A common theory is that it is named for Port Mahon Mao in Menorcan itself named after its founder Mago Barca 28 29 in Menorca in honor of the 3rd Duke of Richelieu s victory over the British in 1756 and in fact the name mahonnaise is used by some authors But the name is only attested several decades after that event 30 31 One version of this theory says that it was originally known as salsa mahonesa in Spanish 32 33 but that spelling too is only attested later 31 Alexandre Balthazar Laurent Grimod de La Reyniere a lawyer by qualification who acquired fame during the reign of Napoleon for his sensual and public gastronomic lifestyle rejected the name mayonnaise because the word is not French He also rejected the name mahonnaise because Port Mahon is not known for good food and thus he preferred bayonnaise after the city of Bayonne which has many innovative gourmands and produces the best hams in Europe 34 31 Indeed the city of Bayonne sauce a la Bayonnaise could also have given its name to this type of sauce by spelling deformation This form would seem to be confirmed by the fact that there is no written record of the sauce a la mayonnaise before the beginning of the 19th century long after the capture of the city of Mahon 35 Another hypothesis is based according to Marie Antoine Careme a famous contemporary French chef on a derivative of magnonaise from the verb magner or manier or according to Prosper Montagne of moyeunaise or moyennaise based on moyeu x or moyen which means egg yolk in Old French It has also been suggested that the word be linked to the old verb mailler meaning to beat 36 Joseph Favre for his part states in his memoirs that mayonnaise is an alteration of the word magnonnaise derived from Magnon Lot et Garonne and that a cook from Magnon would have popularized it first in the South of France he notes that this sauce has been variously named mahonnaise bayonnaise and mayonnaise 37 A more controversial hypothesis put forward by the linguist and historian Nicolas Lepreux suggests that mayonnaise originated in the Mayenne region and that the e would have changed into an o over time the apocryphal story tells that the Duke of Mayenne on the day before the Battle of Arques overindulged on chickens seasoned with a remarkable sauce so that the next day he fell off his horse and lost the battle citation needed PreparationRecipes for mayonnaise date to the early nineteenth century In 1815 Louis Eustache Ude wrote No 58 Mayonnaise Take three spoonfuls of Allemande six ditto of aspic and two of oil Add a little tarragon vinegar that has not boiled some pepper and salt and minced ravigotte or merely some parsley Then put in the members of fowl or fillets of soles amp c Your mayonnaise must be put to ice neither are you to put the members into your sauce till it begins to freeze Next dish your meat or fish mask with the sauce before it be quite frozen and garnish your dish with whatever you think proper as beet root jelly nasturtiums amp c 38 In an 1820 work Viard describes something like the more familiar emulsified version This sauce is made to take in many ways with raw egg yolks with gelatine with veal or veal brain glaze The most common method is to take a raw egg yolk in a small terrine with a little salt and lemon juice take a wooden spoon turn it while letting a trickle of oil fall and stirring constantly as your sauce thickens add a little vinegar put in too a pound of good oil serve your sauce with good salt serve it white or green adding green of ravigote or green of spinach This sauce is used for cold fish entrees or salad of vegetables cooked in salt water 39 Modern mayonnaise can be made by hand with a whisk a fork or with the aid of an electric mixer or blender It is made by slowly adding oil to an egg yolk while whisking vigorously to disperse the oil The oil and the water in the yolk form a base of the emulsion while lecithin and protein from the yolk is the emulsifier that stabilizes it 40 41 page needed A combination of van der Waals interactions and electrostatic repulsion determine the bond strength among oil droplets The high viscosity of mayonnaise is attributed to the total strength created by these two intermolecular forces 42 Addition of mustard contributes to the taste and further stabilizes the emulsion as mustard contains small amounts of lecithin 43 If vinegar is added directly to the yolk it can emulsify more oil thus making more mayonnaise 44 For large scale preparation of mayonnaise where mixing equipment is being employed the process typically begins with the dispersal of eggs either powdered or liquid into water Once emulsified the remaining ingredients are then added and vigorously mixed until completely hydrated and evenly dispersed Oil is then added as rapidly as it can be absorbed Though only a small part of the total ingredients other than the oil are critical to proper formulation These must be totally hydrated and dispersed within a small liquid volume which can cause difficulties including emulsion breakdown during the oil adding phase Often a long agitation process is required to achieve proper dispersal emulsification presenting one of the trickiest phases of the production process 45 As food technology advances processing has been shortened drastically allowing about 1000 liters to be produced in 10 minutes 46 Imitations Miracle Whip was developed as a less expensive imitation of mayonnaise 47 Because it doesn t meet the legal definition of mayonnaise it is marketed as salad dressing 48 A vegan sandwich with egg free variety of mayonnaise Egg free imitations of mayonnaise are available for vegans and others who avoid eggs or cholesterol or who have egg allergies In the U S these imitations cannot be labelled as mayonnaise because the definition of mayonnaise requires egg 49 50 Egg free imitations generally contain soya or pea protein as the emulsifying agent to stabilize oil droplets in water 51 Well known brands include Nasoya s Nayonaise Vegenaise and Just Mayo in North America and Plamil Egg Free in the United Kingdom 52 53 54 Uses Mayonnaise from the Zaan district North Holland Netherlands and potato fries Mayonnaise is used commonly around the world and is also a base for many other chilled sauces and salad dressings For example sauce remoulade in classic French cuisine is a mix of mayonnaise and mustard gherkins capers parsley chervil tarragon and possibly anchovy essence 55 Chile Chile is the world s third major per capita consumer of mayonnaise and first in Latin America 56 Commercial mayonnaise became widely accessible in the 1980s 56 It is a common topping for completos citation needed Europe Guidelines issued in September 1991 by Europe s Federation of the Condiment Sauce Industries recommend that mayonnaise should contain at least 70 oil and 5 liquid egg yolk The Netherlands incorporated this guideline in 1998 into the law Warenwetbesluit Gereserveerde aanduidingen in article 4 57 Most available brands easily exceed these targets 58 In countries influenced by French culture mustard is also a common ingredient that acts as an additional emulsifier 59 Japan Main article Kewpie mayonnaise Kewpie mayonnaise Japanese mayonnaise is typically made with rice vinegar which gives it a flavor different from mayonnaise made from distilled vinegar 60 61 Apart from salads it is popular with dishes such as okonomiyaki takoyaki and yakisoba and may also accompany katsu and karaage 62 It is most often sold in soft plastic squeeze bottles Its texture is thicker than most Western commercial mayonnaise 63 Kewpie Q P is the most popular brand of Japanese mayonnaise 64 advertised with a Kewpie doll logo The vinegar is a proprietary blend containing apple and malt vinegars 65 The Kewpie company was started in 1925 by Tochiro Nakashima whose goal was to create a condiment that made eating vegetables more enjoyable 66 Russia Mayonnaise is very popular in Russia where it is made with sunflower oil and soybean oil A 2004 study showed that Russia is the only market in Europe where more mayonnaise than ketchup is sold It is used as a sauce in the most popular salads in Russia such as Olivier salad also known as Russian salad dressed herring and many others Leading brands are Calve marketed by Unilever and Sloboda marketed by Efko 67 United States Commercial mayonnaise marketed in jars originated in Philadelphia in 1907 when Amelia Schlorer began marketing a mayonnaise recipe originally used in salads sold in her family s grocery store Mrs Schlorer s mayonnaise was an instant success with local customers and eventually grew into the Schlorer Delicatessen Company 68 Around the same time in New York City a family from Vetschau Germany at Richard Hellmann s delicatessen on Columbus Avenue featured his wife s homemade recipe in salads sold in their delicatessen The condiment quickly became so popular that Hellmann began selling it in wooden boats that were used for weighing butter In 1912 Mrs Hellmann s mayonnaise was mass marketed and was trademarked in 1926 as Hellmann s Blue Ribbon Mayonnaise After numerous corporate iterations Hellmann s is now marketed in the Eastern United States and as Best Foods Mayonnaise in the Western United States 69 Mayonnaise sales are about US 1 3 billion per year in the U S 70 Nutritional informationA typical formulation for commercially made mayonnaise not low fat can contain as much as 80 vegetable oil typically soybean rapeseed sunflower or corn oil 71 depending on region of production but in specialty products sometimes olive or avocado oil Water makes up about 7 to 8 and egg yolks about 6 Some formulas use whole eggs instead of just yolks The remaining ingredients include vinegar 4 salt 1 and sugar 1 Low fat formulas will typically decrease oil content to just 50 and increase water content to about 35 Egg content is reduced to 4 and vinegar to 3 Sugar is increased to 1 5 and salt lowered to 0 7 Gums or thickeners 4 are added to increase viscosity improve texture and ensure a stable emulsion 45 Mayonnaise is prepared using several methods but on average it contains around 700 kilocalories 2 900 kJ per 100 grams or 94 kilocalories Cal per tablespoon This makes mayonnaise a calorically dense food 72 The nutrient content of mayonnaise gt 50 edible oil 9 11 salt 7 10 sugar in the aqueous phase makes it suitable as a food source for many spoilage organisms A set of conditions such as pH between 3 6 and 4 0 and low water activity aw of 0 925 restricts the growth of yeasts a few bacteria and molds 73 Yeasts of the genus Saccharomyces Lactobacillus fructivorans and Zygosaccharomyces bailii are the species responsible for the spoilage of mayonnaise The characteristics of spoilage caused by Z bailli are product separation and a yeasty odor A study suggests that adding encapsulated cells of Bifidobacterium bifidum and B infantis prolongs the life of mayonnaise up to 12 weeks without microorganism spoilage citation needed SalmonellaMayonnaise both commercially processed and home made has been associated with illnesses from Salmonella globally The source of the Salmonella has been confirmed to be raw eggs 74 Several outbreaks with fatal cases have been recorded with a few major incidents In a 1955 outbreak in Denmark 10 000 people were affected by Salmonella from contaminated mayonnaise made by a large kitchen The pH of the mayonnaise was found to be 5 1 with Salmonella counts of 180 000 CFU g The second outbreak also in Denmark caused 41 infections with two fatalities The pH of the contaminated mayonnaise was 6 0 with Salmonella counts of 6 million CFU g In 1976 there were serious salmonellosis outbreaks on four flights to and from Spain which caused 500 cases and 6 fatalities In the US 404 people became ill and nine died in a New York City hospital due to hospital prepared mayonnaise 75 In all salmonellosis cases the major reason was inadequate acidification of the mayonnaise with a pH higher than the recommended upper limit of 4 1 with acetic acid as the main acidifying agent 76 Some brands use pasteurized eggs which would reduce this risk factor 77 See also Food portalList of mayonnaises Fritessaus Joppiesaus List of common dips List of condiments List of sauces Salad cream Peri peri added to mayo to make perinaiseReferences mayonnaise Oxford English Dictionary Archived from the original on 26 October 2020 Retrieved 15 June 2022 a b mayo Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved 14 February 2015 Holly Herrick The French Cook Sauces 2013 ISBN 1423632397 McGee Harold 2004 On Food and Cooking The Science and Lore of the Kitchen 2nd ed New York Scribner p 633 ISBN 978 0684800011 Mayonnaise is an emulsion of oil droplets suspended in a base composed of egg yolk lemon juice or vinegar which provides both flavor and stabilizing particles and carbohydrates Moran Victoria Moran Adair 2012 Main Street Vegan Everything You Need to Know to Eat Healthfully and Live Compassionately in the Real World Penguin p 168 ISBN 9781101580622 Retrieved 28 November 2015 a b Glenn Joshua Larsen Elizabeth F 2013 Unbored The Essential Field Guide to Serious Fun Bloomsbury Publishing Plc p 158 ISBN 978 14 08830 25 3 Aragon Marine 2009 La sauce des tropes dans le lexique de la gastronomie francaise approche semantique et pragmatique Neuphilologische Mitteilungen 110 1 7 26 JSTOR 43344390 Retrieved 18 March 2022 Heron de Villefosse Eloge 1971 Eloge des Delices de la Table Revue des Deux Mondes 1829 1971 116 JSTOR 44600984 Retrieved 18 March 2022 Trudgill Peter 2021 European Language Matters English in Its European Context Cambridge University Press pp 50 51 ISBN 978 11 08832 96 0 Revista Litoral 2006 Salsa Mayonesa Litoral 241 241 165 JSTOR 43433620 Retrieved 18 March 2022 Rupp Rebecca 8 January 2015 Are French Fries Truly French Culture Retrieved 26 October 2021 Ilegems Paul 1993 De Frietkotcultuur in Dutch Loempia ISBN 978 90 6771 325 2 Swalec Andrea 28 July 2010 In Belgium frites aren t small potatoes Reuters Retrieved 26 October 2021 Pelfort Pep 24 November 2019 La Vertadera Historia de la Salsa Maonesa Altrament Dita Aioli BO The True History of Mayonnaise Sauce Otherwise Called Aioli BO cegmenorca org Archived from the original on 3 April 2020 Retrieved 8 April 2021 Martin Mazas Eduardo 2008 Teodoro Bardaji Mas el precursor de la cocina moderna en Espana Ciudad de edicion Anonimo 1979 Llibre de Sent Sovi Ed Barcino Juan de Altamiras 1745 Nuevo Arte de Cocina Ed La Val de Onsera p 101 Mitford Nancy Amanda Foreman 2001 Madame de Pompadour reimpresa ed NYRB Classics p 214 ISBN 094032265X a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Bardaji Mas Teodoro 1928 La salsa mahonesa Impr Julian Pena a b Pisa Villarroya Jose M ª 1999 La salsa mahonesa antes y despues de Teodoro Bardaji Angues La Val de Onsera OCLC 433597489 Dr Thebussem 1998 Segunda ristra de ajos Zaragoza La Val de Onsera pp 217 219 ISBN 9788488518293 Lafuente Vanrell Lorenzo June 1914 La salsa mayonesa Revista de Menorca Mahon Grimod de La Reyniere A B L 1808 Manuel des amphitryons Capelle et Renand p 99 Retrieved 1 July 2018 Viard Andre 17 1834 Auteur du texte 1806 Le cuisinier imperial ou L art de faire la cuisine et la patisserie pour toutes les fortunes avec differentes recettes d office et de fruits confits et la maniere de servir une table depuis vingt jusqu a soixante couverts par A Viard Maho magno bayo ou mayo 1re partie culture uliege be in French Retrieved 26 November 2021 mayonnaise Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required Escoffier Auguste 1912 Le guide culinaire aide memoire de cuisine pratique 3e edition par A Escoffier avec la collaboration de MM Phileas Gilbert et Emile Fetu Magon Barca tropasdemagon Estallo Ignasi Garces 1999 Historia antigua de Hispania Edicions Universitat Barcelona p 74 ISBN 978 84 8338 107 6 Tresor de la langue francaise s v Archived 21 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine a b c Oxford English Dictionary 3rd ed s v Archived 22 December 2022 at the Wayback Machine mayonesa Diccionario panhispanico de dudas in Spanish Real Academia Espanola October 2005 Retrieved 28 August 2017 Trutter Marion Beer Gunter 2008 Culinaria Spain Special ed Germany H F Ullmann p 68 ISBN 9783833147296 Grimod de La Reyniere A B L 1808 Manuel des amphitryons Capelle et Renand p 211 Retrieved 1 July 2018 Jean Vitaux Le nom des plats dans l Histoire chronique Histoire et gastronomie sur Canal Academie 4 novembre 2012 Le Grand Robert t 4 Paris 2001 s v Mayonnaise p 1280 Joseph Favre Dictionnaire universel de cuisine Encyclopedie illustree d hygiene alimentaire Ude Louis Eustache 1815 The French Cook Or The Art of Cookery Developed in All Its Branches author p 34 Viard Fouret 1820 Le cuisinier royal J N Barba p 62 Science of Cooking Science of Eggs Exploratorium edu Retrieved 17 November 2011 Segil Wallace Zou Hong 2012 Eggs Nutrition Consumption and Health New York Nova Science Publishers ISBN 9781621001256 Depree J A Savage G P 1 May 2001 Physical and flavor stability of mayonnaise Trends in Food Science amp Technology 12 5 157 163 doi 10 1016 S0924 2244 01 00079 6 ISSN 0924 2244 Good Eats Season 4 Episode 10 EA1D10 The Mayo Clinic Good Eats Fan Page Retrieved 8 January 2012 This Herve Gladding Jody 2010 Kitchen Mysteries Revealing the Science of Cooking Pbk ed New York Columbia University Press p 39 ISBN 978 0 231 14171 0 Retrieved 31 May 2012 a b Mayonnaise Manufacture Silverson Mixers Retrieved 17 October 2019 IKA 1000 liters Mayonnaise in only 10 minutes Ikaprocess com Retrieved 14 February 2015 Andrew F Smith 2007 The Oxford Companion to American Food and Drink Oxford University Press USA p 370 ISBN 9780195307962 Retrieved 4 December 2015 Melissa Clark Miracle Whip vs Mayonnaise Real Simple July 30 2004 Archived 28 February 2019 at the Wayback Machine CFR Code of Federal Regulations Title 21 Accessdata fda gov Retrieved 12 February 2016 Hampton Creek Foods 8 12 15 Fda gov 20 August 2015 Retrieved 9 September 2015 Encyclopedia of Food and Health Academic Press 26 August 2015 ISBN 9780123849533 Moran Victoria Moran Adair 2012 Main Street Vegan Everything You Need to Know to Eat Healthfully and Live Compassionately in the Real World Penguin Publishing Group p 168 ISBN 978 1 101 58062 2 Goldstein Katherine 27 December 2013 Vegenaise vs Mayonnaise Why Vegan substitute mayo is better than regular mayonanaise Slate com Retrieved 27 August 2015 Plamil Egg Free Mayonnaise Plamilfoods co uk Retrieved 27 August 2015 Robuchon Joel 2009 Larousse Gastronomique Updated ed London Hamlyn p 1054 ISBN 9780600620426 a b Chile Consumo de mayonesa Latin American Markets 26 November 2005 Archived from the original on 26 November 2005 Retrieved 12 February 2016 Wet en regelgeving Warenwetbesluit Gereserveerde aanduidingen BWBR0009499 wetten nl 24 March 1998 Retrieved 30 January 2014 Mayonnaise sales in Europe Foodanddrinkeurope com 29 April 2004 Archived from the original on 14 September 2007 Retrieved 23 June 2009 Making an Emulsion Science Project Ideas 1 October 2010 Retrieved 17 November 2011 Hachisu Nancy Singleton 2012 Japanese Farm Food Kansas City Mo Andrews McMeel Pub pp 312 313 ISBN 978 1449418298 Kewpie mayo wins the condiment game Food Republic 25 April 2012 Retrieved 30 June 2014 Okonomiyaki World 4 November 2015 Ingredients Okonomiyaki World Recipes Information History amp Ingredients for this unique Japanese Food Okonomiyaki World Retrieved 28 November 2015 What Is Japanese Mayonnaise and How Is It Different from American Mayo POGOGI Japanese Food Pogogi com 31 July 2012 Retrieved 14 February 2015 Itoh Makiko 22 March 2013 Why not just add a dollop of mayonnaise The Japan Times Retrieved 1 July 2016 おいしさロングラン製法 キユーピー Kewpie co jp Archived from the original on 27 July 2011 Retrieved 17 November 2011 self published source non primary source needed What is Japanese Mayo japanesemayo com Retrieved 3 August 2017 Moscow s particular taste in sauces FoodNavigator com Retrieved 27 March 2013 The Milwaukee Journal Google News Archive Search Retrieved 27 August 2015 Smith Andrew F 2007 The Oxford Companion to American Food and Drink New York Oxford University Press p 397 ISBN 9780195307962 Retrieved 14 February 2015 Hellmann s mayonnaise America s best selling condiment New York Post 17 September 2011 Retrieved 13 December 2017 Ferreira de Menezes Rose Carla de Carvalho Gomes Queliane Cristina Santos de Almeida Beatriz Filgueiras Rebelo de Matos Marcia Cedraz Pinto Laise 2022 Plant based mayonnaise Trending ingredients for innovative products International Journal of Gastronomy and Food Science 30 1 100599 doi 10 1016 j ijgfs 2022 100599 S2CID 252345527 Retrieved 1 January 2023 10 Healthy Substitutes For Mayonnaise Huffingtonpost com 26 February 2014 Retrieved 27 August 2015 Jay James M 6 December 2012 Modern Food Microbiology Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 9781461574767 Garcia Jose Santos 1 April 2009 Microbiologically Safe Foods John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9780470439067 Lund Barbara Baird Parker Anthony C Gould Grahame W 31 December 1999 Microbiological Safety and Quality of Food Springer US ISBN 9780834213234 Steinhart Carol E Doyle M Ellin Institute Food Research Cochrane Barbara A 6 June 1995 Food Safety 1995 CRC Press ISBN 9780824796242 Keerthirathne Thilini Piushani Ross Kirstin Fallowfield Howard Whiley Harriet 18 November 2016 A Review of Temperature pH and Other Factors that Influence the Survival of Salmonella in Mayonnaise and Other Raw Egg Products Pathogens Basel Switzerland 5 4 63 doi 10 3390 pathogens5040063 ISSN 2076 0817 PMC 5198163 PMID 27869756 External links Wikibooks Cookbook has a recipe module on Mayonnaise Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mayonnaise Science Channel s The Making Series 2 Making of Mayonnaise video in Japanese NPR s Report on the 250th Birthday of Mayonnaise and its history Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mayonnaise amp oldid 1134304395, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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