• That sauce needs a few drops of fish sauce โ€” the umami science is real, Kenji covered this

    That sauce genuinely needs a few drops of fish sauce for depth โ€” the umami science backs this up, Kenji did a whole breakdown on it!!

    Fish sauce carries both glutamate and inosinate โ€” the two primary umami compounds. When both are present simultaneously, the synergistic effect can amplify perceived umami up to eightfold versus either compound alone. A few drops is all it takes; you won't taste fish.

    I've watched that Kenji episode five times. The sauce structure analysis section specifically. I'll be honest โ€” I haven't actually tested it myself yet, but the theory is rock solid. Has anyone actually tried this?

  • That sauce genuinely needs a few drops of fish sauce for depth โ€” the umami science backs this up, Kenji did a whole breakdown on it!!

    Fish sauce carries both glutamate and inosinate โ€” the two primary umami compounds. When both are present simultaneously, the synergistic effect can amplify perceived umami up to eightfold versus either compound alone. A few drops is all it takes; you won't taste fish.

    I've watched that Kenji episode five times. The sauce structure analysis section specifically. I'll be honest โ€” I haven't actually tested it myself yet, but the theory is rock solid. Has anyone actually tried this?

  • Braising technique explanation is perfect. I'll add: the rendered collagen from connective tissue in braised cuts creates a body in the sauce that no finishing technique can replicate from tender cuts.

  • Agreed on the texture differential. Short rib or oxtail braised properly produces a mouthfeel that prime tenderloin simply cannot achieve regardless of technique. Different tools for different results.