💾 Archived View for lycopersica.flounder.online › r-mayonnaise.gmi captured on 2022-04-28 at 18:46:39. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

⬅️ Previous capture (2021-12-03)

➡️ Next capture (2023-05-24)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Homemade Mayonnaise

This recipe is shamelessly plagiarized from a website on the internet. But it works!

Tools used

I use a food processor. Mine is a small one that you have to hold down the button on the whole time but it has a little funnel to drip-feed oil through on the lid which is really useful for this recipe. You could maybe also use a hand blender but probably not a standing blender.

Ingredients

Canola has worked best for me so far. I tried olive oil, because i love the flavor of olive oil, but it gave the end product kind of a "cooked" flavor, like old fried food. I think peanut oil would have a similar effect. Grapeseed and avocado would be fancy and expensive but probably good.

Apple cider will have too strong of a scent, in my opinion. I had great results with red wine vinegar. It's common for Japanese brands to use rice vinegar, so i'll definitely try that too sometime.

I just used standard yellow mustard for this because the flavor doesn't come across strongly in the end product, but according to the recipe it's important for emulsification. I don't really see how but whatever.

Preparation

Note about eggs

Salmonella can and has occurred from the use of raw eggs in mayonnaise. However, in all documented cases, the mayonnaise was improperly acidified -- it did not have enough vinegar in it. I do not know the ph of this recipe or if it is safe in that regard. I imagine it is but I certainly can't claim to know. I might test it sometime! To stay on the safe side, you can always add more vinegar OR a splash of lemon juice for acidity without aroma. Another way to reduce your risk of salmonella is to use eggs from organic or cage-free hens.

Although I have not yet experimented with it, aquafaba (the water left over from a can of chickpeas) is often used as an egg replacement in many vegan recipes. The above recipe is designed to be foolproof, so I don't know that just swapping out the egg for aquafaba would work, or what amount of aquafaba equals one egg. These would be things to find out before experimenting. Many recipes I have seen for vegan mayo used ingredients that seemed weird or unnecessary to me (like thickeners, and maple syrup??) or they insisted on specific techniques that differed from the ones I wanted to use (such as hand blender vs food processor).

According to thekitchn:

The Formula
Three tablespoons of aquafaba is equivalent to about one whole egg, while two tablespoons of aquafaba is equivalent to about one egg white. Keep in mind that a can of chickpeas yields about 1/2 to 3/4 cup of this liquid, so about eight to 12 tablespoons.
Aquafaba should ideally be the same consistency of egg whites to function as a proper egg replacement. If it seems very watery, you can thicken it slightly by simmering it on low in a saucepan on the stove until it’s reduced by about a quarter.
1 whole egg = 3 tablespoons aquafaba
1 egg white = 2 tablespoons aquafaba

-----

back to recipes

back to index