How to Make Roux and Use It to Thicken Soups and Sauces

Roux is a classic thickening agent for soups and sauces, with roots dating back more than 300 years in French cuisine. Here's how to make it, step-by-step.

Silky smooth roux (prounced roo) not only thickens sauces, soups, and stews, but it also adds a subtle nutty flavor to the dish. It's an essential building block of recipes ranging from macaroni and cheese to gumbo. Every cook should know how to make a roux, and it's easier than you might think. Let's do some roux!

How to Make Roux

Roux takes just a few minutes to make. Whether you are making just enough for a single dish, or a batch to divide and freeze for later, the proportions of ingredients are the same: 1 part oil or fat and 1 part all-purpose flour, by weight.

If you have a kitchen scale, this is easy to measure. If you do not have a kitchen scale, use measuring cups or spoons to measure 1 part oil or fat and 1-3/4 parts all-purpose flour.

Here's how to make a small batch:

Cook the Fat and Flour Together

Begin by heating 2 tablespoons oil or fat in a saucepan over medium heat until a pinch of flour sprinkled into the oil just begins to bubble.

Making a Roux
Meredith

Then, whisk in 3-1/2 tablespoons of flour to form a thick paste the consistency of cake frosting. Continue whisking as the roux gently bubbles and cooks to the shade desired. Do not allow the roux to bubble too vigorously, or it will burn rather than brown.

Making a Roux
Meredith

Four Stages of Roux

roux-CookingStages
From left to right: white roux, blond roux, brown roux, dark brown roux | Photo by Allrecipes.
  1. The white stage is reached once the flour loses its raw smell, after about 5 minutes of cooking and stirring. Although slightly grainy in texture, it is much smoother than it was at the beginning. The mixture is bubbling vigorously and the color is a little paler than when the clarified butter and flour were first combined.
  2. The blond stage is reached after about 20 minutes of continuous cooking and stirring. The bubbles are beginning to slow, and the aroma has taken on nuances of popcorn or toasted bread. The roux is now tan colored, very smooth, and thinner than it was at the white stage.
  3. The brown stage is reached after approximately 35 minutes of cooking and stirring. It is a peanut butter-brown color and its aroma is more pronounced and sharper than the nutty nuances of blond roux. The roux is now thinner, and the bubbling has slowed even more.
  4. The dark brown stage is reached after about 45 minutes of cooking and stirring. It is the color of melted milk chocolate. Its aroma is more mellow than the strong, roasted flavor of brown roux; some say it smells a little like chocolate. The roux is no longer bubbling, and is very thin.

Add Liquid to Make a Sauce

After cooking roux, you'll usually add a liquid ingredient to make a sauce (milk added to white roux, for example, makes white sauce).

whisking and cooking butter and flour in a pot to make roux
Photo by Meredith. Meredith

To ensure lump-free thickening when making sauces, the liquid ingredient should be cold or at room temperature, and slowly whisked into the hot roux. Do this by adding the liquid a little at a time, whisking between each addition until smooth and the roux forms a thin paste. Then, whisk in the remaining liquid and bring the mixture to a simmer. Cold or room temperature roux can then be simply whisked into a simmering soup or sauce until it dissolves. These methods ensure the roux is incorporated slowly and the mixture will not form lumps.

Roux begins to thicken soon after it is combined with a liquid, but it must be simmered for 10 to 20 minutes in order to reach its full flavor and thickening potential. This additional cooking time allows the flour to soften and absorb the liquid, resulting in a silky smooth soup or sauce. If the roux doesn't simmer long enough, the flour in the roux will remain grainy.

What is Roux?

a close up view of a single bowl of creole gumbo served with steamed white rice and fresh herbs

DOTDASH MEREDITH FOOD STUDIOS

Roux is made by cooking equal parts flour and fat together until the raw flavor of the flour cooks out and the roux has achieved the desired color. Butter is the most commonly used fat, but you can also make roux with oil, bacon grease, or other rendered fats.

There are four varieties of roux: white, blond, brown, and dark brown. The different colors are a result of how long the roux is cooked; white is cooked for the shortest time, while dark brown cooks the longest. White and blond roux are the most common, used to thicken sauces, soups, and chowders. Brown and dark brown roux have more flavor, but less thickening power than white or blond roux. Dark roux are primarily used in Cajun and Creole dishes, most notably gumbo and jambalaya.

If you're cooking and storing a batch of roux for future use, use clarified butter as it will harden when refrigerated, trapping the flour in suspension. This suspension helps to prevent lumps when the roux is whisked into a sauce or soup. Having a well-made roux on hand will make it easy to use this marvelous thickener in everyday cooking.

The Right Color Roux for Your Recipe

Here's how to choose which color roux is right for what you're cooking:

White Roux

White roux is cooked for about 5 minutes, just until the flour has lost its raw smell, but before any golden color or toasted aroma develops. This roux is used to thicken chowders and milk-based sauces. Classic macaroni and cheese, tuna noodle casserole, and New England clam chowder are all based on milk thickened with a white roux.

Baked Potato Soup I
Baked Potato Soup I | Photo by Christine Boutwell Mita.

Blond Roux

Blond, or golden roux, is cooked approximately 20 minutes to a light, golden-brown shade with an aroma resembling popcorn or toasted bread. This is the most commonly used roux, desired for the richness and slight nuttiness it provides along with its excellent thickening power. Blond roux is a good, general-purpose roux to keep on hand for thickening gravy, sauces, soups, and stews.

Garden Fresh Tomato Soup
Garden Fresh Tomato Soup | Photo by Stella Reynoso.

Brown Roux

Brown roux is cooked about 35 minutes until it reaches a peanut butter-brown color. Its aroma is more pronounced and sharper than the nutty smell of blond roux. Cooked to this stage, flour begins to lose its thickening power, requiring more roux to thicken a given amount of liquid.

Dark Brown Roux

Even darker than brown roux, dark brown roux is cooked for approximately 45 minutes until it is the color of melted milk chocolate. Its aroma is mellower than the strong, roasted flavor of brown roux, and will actually smell a little like chocolate. This stage has the least thickening power of all four. Its main purpose is as a flavoring agent; its thickening ability is secondary.

Charleston Shrimp 'n' Gravy
Charleston Shrimp 'n' Gravy | Photo by Caroline C.

How to Store Roux

Having a stash of cooked roux in your fridge or freezer saves time when it comes to making sauces and soups. Here's how to store it so it's ready when you are:

  1. Carefully pour the finished roux onto a baking sheet or into ice cube trays and place in the refrigerator to cool.
  2. Refrigerate the roux for several hours or overnight until it has hardened completely.
  3. Transfer the hardened roux to an airtight container or cover the ice cube tray, if used. It will keep indefinitely when stored in the refrigerator or freezer in an airtight container. If roux has been made with vegetable oil, it can be stored at room temperature for several weeks, Roux made with butter or fat should always be refrigerated.
white ramekins filled with macaroni and cheese topped with breadcrumbs
The creamiest mac and cheese starts with roux. | Photo by Meredith. Meredith

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