Classic Béarnaise Sauce

Classic Béarnaise is a creamy, rich and buttery sauce flavored with fresh tarragon. A sauce like this can easily transform weekday steak or chicken into a dinner party-worthy dish.

Classic mother sauce: béarnaise in a bowl with a plate of salmon and sauce set behind the bowl.
Sally Vargas

Irresistibly creamy, buttery, and rich, béarnaise combines an herby, slightly acidic reduction of white wine, vinegar, shallots, fresh tarragon, and lemon juice with hollandaise to make a luscious sauce for spooning over grilled steak, chicken, fish, or vegetables.

It is subsidiary sauce or ‘daughter’ sauce of hollandaise, one of the five French mother sauces, with an herbal piquancy that complements its mother sauce.

To make béarnaise, you start with a reduction of wine, vinegar, shallots, and tarragon. Set it aside while you make the hollandaise, which is a semi-permanent emulsion of egg yolks and clarified butter. Stir the herbal reduction into hollandaise, and voila! You have béarnaise sauce.

Tips for Making Béarnaise Sauce

If you’re new to Béarnaise Sauce, it helps to know the entire game plan from start to finish. Here are some of the finer points.

  • Be sure to finely chop the shallots since they will remain in the sauce.
  • You’ll want to cook the reduction until it is almost, but not quite dry—there should be a bit of liquid in the bottom of the pan, but the shallots should not be swimming in it.
  • Let it cool until at least lukewarm before stirring it into the hollandaise.
  • The process of clarifying butter removes the milky solids from the butter, so it is almost 100 percent butterfat. Without liquid in the butter, the sauce will be thick and lush.
  • The butter gets heated in a microwave, rests for 5 minutes, and then is microwaved again. At that point, the milky solids will be on the bottom, and the clarified butter can be carefully poured into a clean container, leaving the milky residue behind. You can also do this on the stovetop. I provide both methods below.
Overhead view of Béarnaise sauce with shallots, herbs, and lemon around the bowl.
Sally Vargas

How to Use Béarnaise Sauce?

Steak Béarnaise is probably the most well known use of béarnaise sauce, a dish you might order in a restaurant, but certainly not out of reach for the home cook for a fancy date night in chez vous. Steak is not the only game in town. Consider spooning it over poached eggs, salmon, chicken or vegetables.

Variations of Béarnaise Sauce

While béarnaise sauce may be a ‘daughter’ sauce of hollandaise; it has its own descendants! Try some of these tweaks next time you make béarnaise.

  • Tarragon is the hallmark of béarnaise, but you could add more herbs like chopped parsley, chives or dill if you want a greener, herbier sauce.
  • For grilled meat or fish, stir in tomato puree to create Sauce Choron.
  • Add demi-glace, and the sauce becomes Sauce Foyot for serving with grilled fish or meat.
  • For a lamb sauce, make Sauce Paloise, by substituting mint for tarragon.
French Mother Sauce: béarnaise in a white bowl with a spoon.
Sally Vargas

Storing Béarnaise Sauce

Béarnaise Sauce is best used immediately. If you must, you can refrigerate it for up to 2 days and reconstitute it. It will become solid in the fridge.

Break it up into pieces and reheat it, whisking constantly and vigorously over low heat and sliding the saucepan off the burner if it seems to be melting too quickly. Have a glass of ice water close to the stove, and if the sauce looks like it is starting to separate, add a few drops of the cold water.

If it does separate, try whisking it into an egg yolk in a thin stream in a separate bowl. Return it to a clean pot and gently reheat it before serving.

Classic Béarnaise Sauce

Prep Time 10 mins
Cook Time 15 mins
Total Time 25 mins
Servings 6 to 8 servings
Yield 1 cup sauce

Ingredients

For the tarragon base

  • 1/4 cup dry white wine

  • 3 tablespoons white wine vinegar

  • 1/4 cup shallots, very finely chopped

  • 1/4 teaspoon black pepper

  • 1 1/2 tablespoons fresh tarragon, chopped, divided

For the sauce

  • 8 ounces unsalted butter, cut into cubes

  • 3 egg yolks

  • 3 tablespoons water

  • 1 tablespoon lemon juice, or more as needed

  • Pinch salt, to taste

Method

  1. Make the tarragon base:

    In a small skillet or saucepan over medium-low heat, simmer the wine, vinegar, shallots, black pepper and 1/2 tablespoon of tarragon until most of the liquid has evaporated, but the pan is not completely dry. There should still be a tablespoon or two of liquid in the bottom of the pan. Set aside and let cool to lukewarm.

    Toasting aromatics in a skillet to make béarnaise sauce.
    Sally Vargas
    Making the base of a béarnaise sauce in a skillet.
    Sally Vargas
  2. Clarify and strain the butter:

    To clarify in the microwave: In a 2-cup Pyrex measuring cup covered partially with a paper towel, microwave the butter on high power for 1 minute, or until it is melted. Let it rest for 5 minutes. Return the melted butter to the microwave and microwave again for 1 minute.

    At this point the butter’s milky solids should have settled into the bottom of the cup. If there is foam on top, skim it off with a spoon. Set a fine-mesh strainer over a clean measuring cup or small bowl. Carefully pour the butter into the cup or bowl, leaving the residue behind. The strainer should catch any bits of cooked milky solids that stray into the cup.

    To clarify on top of the stove: In a heavy saucepan over medium heat, melt the butter. Simmer for about 10 minutes, or until the foam subsides, the water in the butter evaporates, and the milk solids on the bottom are lightly brown. Carefully ladle the pure melted butterfat into a separate container, leaving the milk solids behind. You can also strain it through several layers of cheesecloth or a coffee filter. The resulting clarified butter will have a slightly nutty flavor.

    Side view of a liquid measuring cup with cubes of butter to to make béarnaise sauce.
    Sally Vargas
    Side view of melted butter in a liquid measuring cup to make béarnaise sauce.
    Sally Vargas
    Skimming foam off the top of a measuring cup to make béarnaise sauce.
    Sally Vargas
    Straining milk solids out of melted butter to make clarified butter for béarnaise sauce.
    Sally Vargas
  3. Cook the eggs for the sauce:

    In a small saucepan, whisk the egg yolks, water, and lemon juice for 3 to 4 minutes, or until pale and thick, something like the consistency of soft mayonnaise.

    Set the pan over low heat and whisk constantly until the sauce increases in volume, is frothy, and then thickens until you can see the bottom of the pan through the streaks made by the whisk.

    As you whisk, be sure to reach into the bottom corners of the pan where the eggs could cook too quickly. Remove the pan from the heat.

    A saucepan with whisked egg yolks inside to make béarnaise sauce.
    Sally Vargas
    Thickening egg yolks in a sauce pan to show how to make béarnaise sauce.
    Sally Vargas
  4. Add the butter:

    Whisk the warm, clarified butter into the thickened egg yolks, a few tablespoons at a time, until the sauce thickens further and the butter is incorporated and forms an emulsion. This can take anywhere from 5 to 8 minutes.

    The final thickness should be soft, light, and velvety; not runny or as thick as mayonnaise. You should be able to pour it off the spoon.

    Adding clarified butter to the pot to show how to make béarnaise sauce.
    Sally Vargas
    Whisking butter and egg yolk mixture in a saucepan to show how to make béarnaise sauce.
    Sally Vargas
  5. Add the tarragon base:

    Stir the tarragon base into the sauce and stir in the remaining 1 1/2 tablespoons freshly chopped tarragon. Taste and add a pinch of salt if you like, or a little more lemon juice, to taste.

    Adding shallots and tarragon to a sauce pan with thickened béarnaise sauce.
    Sally Vargas
    Classic mother sauce: béarnaise in a pan with a spoon coated in sauce above the pan.
    Sally Vargas
Nutrition Facts (per serving)
248 Calories
25g Fat
2g Carbs
3g Protein
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Nutrition Facts
Servings: 6 to 8
Amount per serving
Calories 248
% Daily Value*
Total Fat 25g 33%
Saturated Fat 15g 76%
Cholesterol 154mg 51%
Sodium 49mg 2%
Total Carbohydrate 2g 1%
Dietary Fiber 0g 1%
Total Sugars 1g
Protein 3g
Vitamin C 1mg 7%
Calcium 25mg 2%
Iron 1mg 3%
Potassium 63mg 1%
*The % Daily Value (DV) tells you how much a nutrient in a food serving contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice.
Nutrition information is calculated using an ingredient database and should be considered an estimate. In cases where multiple ingredient alternatives are given, the first listed is calculated for nutrition. Garnishes and optional ingredients are not included.