Aioli A La Naomi Pomeroy
- 1 egg
- 1/2 cup extra-virgin olive oil
- 1/2 cup neutral oil (such as canola or grapeseed)
- 1 1/2 teaspoons lemon juice mixed with 2 teaspoons room-temperature water
- 1/2 teaspoon garlic paste
- 1/4 to 1/2 teaspoons salt
- Place the whole unshelled egg in a small heatproof bowl and pour in boiling water to cover. Let the egg sit, submerged, for 1 minute. (Coddling the egg this way begins to set the protein in the whites, helping the emulsification process and minimizing the bacteria on the shell.) Remove the egg from the water, crack it, separate the white from the yolk, place the yolk in the bowl in which you will be making the aioli, and discard the white.
- Combine the olive oil and the neutral oil in a squeeze bottle or flexible plastic container (see the recipe introduction). Grip the whisk handle where it meets the wires, not at the top of the handle, and begin whisking the yolk with your dominant hand. When the yolk is broken up and smooth, start to very slowly-a drop or two at a time-add the mixed oils in a very fine stream while whisking constantly (see the photo, page 33). Stop pouring periodically while continuing to whisk to ensure proper emulsification. Keep your elbow glued to your waist as you whisk and let all of the motion come from your wrist. If your arm gets tired, it's fine to take a break for a few seconds, but make sure you've also stopped adding oil. You don't have to, nor do you want to, work fast-it's more important to whisk and pour consistently and slowly. If you do pour in too much oil at once, whisk very rapidly for a few seconds to combine.
- I have found that 1 egg yolk can hold about 1/3 cup of oil before it hits its saturation point and starts to take on a slightly stringy or taffy-like appearance, usually after about 2 minutes of whisking. This is a critical point, and when it happens, use your fingertips to sprinkle about 1/2 teaspoon of the diluted lemon juice over the mixture to thin it out. Resume whisking and drizzling oil until the mixture becomes "tight" again, then add another scant 1 teaspoon diluted lemon juice and the garlic paste. Repeat until all of the oil and diluted lemon juice have been emulsified into the mixture. Finally, stir in the salt, starting with 1/4 teaspoon and adding up to 1/2 teaspoon or as needed.
- The aioli will keep in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 2 days.
egg, extravirgin olive oil, neutral oil, lemon juice mixed, garlic, salt
Taken from food52.com/recipes/69201-aioli-a-la-naomi-pomeroy (may not work)