Jus is more savoury and complex in flavour than say a typical gravy. If you have homemade beef stock or chicken stock on hand, this is a deceptively easy sauce that will elevate any dish to fine dining levels!

What exactly is jus?

If the word “jus” conjures images of Masterchef and fine dining restaurants, you’re right on the money! Jus is a French culinary term for what you can think of as the posh cousin of gravy. It’s an intensely savoury, glossy sauce made from homemade stock or meat drippings, heavily reduced to concentrate the flavour. Whereas a gravy is normally made from meat drippings (from things like roasts) diluted with added stock or water before being thickened with flour, a jus is never diluted (quite the opposite). A jus typically gets its thickness from the natural gelatine in meat and sometimes from whisking in finishing butter (called “mounting”). Because it has such a strong flavour, jus is used sparingly – typically a small amount drizzled artfully around the plate! In classical French cooking, a jus is usually made from veal or chicken stock. Veal is often favoured because it’s rich in gelatine, which is desirable. As veal bones are hard to come by these days, beef stock makes a great substitute and is what we are using today. You can also use homemade chicken stock with equally good results. In its purest form, it needs very little or no extra flavours added. However it can be a great blank canvas for adding other flavours. In this case, we’re using vermouth. Closely associated with the martini cocktail, this aromatic fortified wine is flavoured gently with botanicals that subtly but beautifully flavour this sauce. The flavour is not distinctly identifiable (and you can certainly cannot detect any alcohol in it), but it adds incredible extra complexity to the sauce that makes it extra wow!

What you need for Vermouth Jus (sauce for pork belly)

If you’ve got homemade beef stock stashed away in the freezer, this is an excellent and quick sauce to serve alongside meats that will elevate any dish!

Homemade beef stock – Jus has to be made with homemade stock, and beef stock is the easiest type. Here’s why:Store bought stock is nearly always salted, so when reduced down by 80% or more as is required to make a jus, the sauce becomes far too salty;Gelatine from the bones and connective tissue in beef bones is what gives a homemade stock its full-bodied richness and mouthfeel, as well as natural thickness when highly reduced for use as a jus. Store-bought stock lacks this quality; andStore-bought stock simply lacks sufficient flavour. When reduced, it just becomes salty and stronger in flavour, but not tastier. I’ve tried with various store bought brands, from economical to more premium brands. It just doesn’t work, I’m afraid.Butter and eschallot – For slow sautéing at the start, for a base flavour foundation flavour. Butter also helps thicken the sauce slightly;Vermouth – Instead of just plain wine, the aromatics in vermouth impart a beautiful extra complexity to this sauce. The alcohol is totally cooked out so you won’t taste even the smallest hint of it, just all the good flavour. If you can’t consume alcohol, just leave the Vermouth out. You’ll be left with straight classic jus which is equally delicious; andCream – For extra richness and to round the sauce out. Not much here, just 2 tablespoons.

Note: This jus is naturally thickened from the gelatine in the homemade beef stock, once the sauce becomes concentrated. So there’s no cornflour/cornstarch or flour used, unlike in gravy and other sauces. It should have a consistency like pictured below and in the video: a thin syrup, and not as thick as traditional gravies.

How to make Vermouth Jus

Any jus is straightforward to make and most of the time involved is simply leaving the liquid to simmer on the stove to reduce until it thickens and concentrates into a sauce. We’re going to reduce about 2 1/2 cups of liquid (625ml) down to just 100ml / 3.5 oz!

How to serve Vermouth Jus

Jus is normally served with proteins, ie. meats and seafood. You may think a beef stock-based jus must be served with beef, but in reality it does not taste distinctly of beef at all but rather is simply “meaty”. We use beef largely for its gelatine-rich bones, not its flavour (though it does have a deeper flavour than say, chicken jus). 100ml / 3.5 oz is not much sauce, but this is a very intensely-flavoured, heavily seasoned sauce and is supposed to be used sparingly. This is why you’ll see only small amounts drizzled or dotted on plates at fine dining restaurants, rather than smothering everything like a gravy. You shouldn’t need more than 1 1/2 tablespoons per serving, which is what I’ve allowed for in the Pork Belly recipe; As such there are no hard and fast rules about what protein you can serve it with, and so I serve it confidently with Slow-Cooked Crispy Pork Belly here. Use it sparingly when serving as it is a strong flavoured sauce. Allow around for 1 1/2 tbsp per plate. Much more than this and it can overwhelm the flavour of the protein. On the plate of pork belly slices pictured below, I spooned it partially over the pork. The natural thickness of the jus makes it cling to the pork beautifully and pool elegantly around it.

More ways to serve Vermouth Jus

As mentioned, a beef jus can be used with any protein not just beef. You can use a jus anywhere that you would use gravy or a pan sauce, to bring a deliciously upmarket and special touch! Here are a few more suggestions for ways to use it:

With classic Standing Rib Roast (Prime Rib) or Marinated Roast BeefAlongside traditional Roast Chicken, or with Crispy Herb Baked ChickenAll manner of lamb, whether an opulent Rack of Lamb, a pull-apart-tender Slow Roasted Lamb Leg or simple Lamb ChopsWith Roast Pork Shoulder or Pork Tenderloin (replace sauce with jus)Dollop on to a pile of Paris Mash for possibly the world’s most decadent French-style mash n’ gravy!Salisbury Steak (cook the patty, and serve with jus – a classic Japanese diner favourite, in fact!)Poured over an omelette (another popular Japanese diner special!)

Love to know what you think if you do try this! And if you too try your hand at putting together a fancy-pants plate of food, send me a photo – I wanna see! – Nagi x

Watch how to make it

Life of Dozer

You can sit there and look as cute as you want. You aren’t getting a drop of this Liquid Gold!!!

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