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A sauce is a thick liquid which can be used to add flavour to food, to moisten it and/or make it look more attractive on the plate. The term sauce comes from the French sauce of the same meaning, from Latin salsa also of the same meaning, from sal, "salt". Related words: "saline", "salad".
Sauces form an important part of traditional French cuisine. These French-style sauces are thickened with starch or roux (flour cooked in butter.) The 19th-century French chef Antonin CarĂªme who evolved an intricate methodology by which hundreds of sauces were classified under one of five (or six) mother sauces from which all others are made.
Sauces and condiments also plan an important role in the cuisines of many other countries:
There are also many sauces based on tomato (such as tomato ketchup and tomato sauce), other vegetables and various spices. Note that ketchup can be based on vegetables or fruits other than the tomato.
Sauces can also be sweet, and used either hot or cold to accompany and garnish a dessert.
Another kind of sauce is made from stewed fruit, usually strained to remove skin and fibers and often sweetened. Such sauces, including applesauce and cranberry sauce, are often eaten with specific other foods (applesauce with ham; cranberry sauce with poultry) or served as desserts.
White sauces
Brown sauces
Béchamel family
Emulsified sauces
Butter sauces
Sweet sauces
Hot sauces
Asian sauces
Other sauces
Also see: Condiment - Coulis - Custard - Garum - Ketchup -Kochujang - Mustard - Salad dressing - Salsa - Toenjang
'SAUCE is also an acryonym for Standard Architecture for Universal Comment Extensions, a metadata protocol for tagging ASCII text files and other files which generally center around BBSes created by Tasmaniac of ACiD .