Blender Hollandaise Sauce Recipe (Easy!) - Wholesome Yum (2024)

Blender Hollandaise Sauce Recipe (Easy!) - Wholesome Yum (1)

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Table Of Contents hide

  • Why You’ll Love This Blender Hollandaise Sauce Recipe
  • What Is Hollandaise Sauce?
  • Hollandaise Sauce Ingredients
  • How To Make Hollandaise Sauce In A Blender
  • Ways To Use Blender Hollandaise
  • More Homemade Sauce Recipes
  • My Favorite Blender For This Recipe
  • Blender Hollandaise Sauce Recipe (Easy!)

Want to learn how to make hollandaise sauce, but feel a little nervous? You aren’t alone! But have no fear, this easy hollandaise sauce recipe comes together with a simple little tool — the blender! My no-fuss method transforms basic ingredients like butter, egg yolks, lemon juice, and sea salt into a luxuriously smooth sauce. Blender hollandaise is one of my favorite ways to add a special touch to any healthy recipe, from eggs Benedict to roasted veggies, making your dishes taste even better!

Pair this luscious sauce with other brunch favorites, like my breakfast casserole, easy oven-baked bacon, or my ultimate omelette recipe. Get ready to impress at your next brunch with this foolproof recipe!

Why You’ll Love This Blender Hollandaise Sauce Recipe

  • Rich, buttery and silky smooth – I love the luxurious, buttery flavor, and thanks to my blender method, there are no lumps. This sauce is downright velvety.
  • Just 3 ingredients – You can make this right now if you have the basics on-hand. I always have these around, and you probably do, too!
  • Ready in under 5 minutes – No need to babysit pans or whisk constantly on the stove.
  • Quick and foolproof method – Simply blend for a perfect sauce — with no risk of burning or separation.
  • Takes any meal up a notch – This blender hollandaise sauce adds a touch of gourmet flair to any dish.
Blender Hollandaise Sauce Recipe (Easy!) - Wholesome Yum (2)

What Is Hollandaise Sauce?

Hollandaise is a French sauce made of egg yolks, melted butter, and lemon juice. It’s a staple for eggs benedict and also often served over vegetables, like roasted asparagus.

Hollandaise Sauce Ingredients

This section explains how to choose the best ingredients for hollandaise sauce, what each one does in the recipe, and substitution options. For measurements, see the recipe card below.

  • Butter – I prefer to use unsalted butter, so that I can control the salt separately. You can also use ghee, though the flavor will be different.
  • Egg Yolks– This hollandaise recipe uses raw yolks, so be sure to use pasteurized eggs. They’ll need to be at room temperature to emulsify properly in the sauce.
  • Lemon Juice – Adds a fresh, tangy zing to the sauce, and if you don’t have it on hand, you can substitute it with white wine vinegar or lime juice for a similar acidic touch.
  • Sea Salt– I prefer to use sea salt, but kosher salt works just fine. You can also add a pinch of cayenne pepper or white pepper for a little kick.
Blender Hollandaise Sauce Recipe (Easy!) - Wholesome Yum (3)

Blender Hollandaise Sauce Recipe (Easy!) - Wholesome Yum (4)

TIP: There’s a quick shortcut to bring your eggs to room temperature!

If you forget to set them out ahead of time, simply place them in a bowl of warm water for a few minutes. Once they reach room temp, you can remove them and separate the yolks from the whites.

How To Make Hollandaise Sauce In A Blender

This section shows step-by-step photos together with the instructions, to help you visualize the recipe. For full instructions, including amounts and temperatures, see the recipe card below.

  1. Melt the butter. Cut the butter into chunks and place it into a glass measuring cup. Microwave just until melted. (You can also melt the butter in a small pot or pan instead.)
  2. Blend the yolks and lemon juice. In a blender, blend the egg yolks and lemon juice together at a high speed for several seconds.
Blender Hollandaise Sauce Recipe (Easy!) - Wholesome Yum (5)
Blender Hollandaise Sauce Recipe (Easy!) - Wholesome Yum (6)
  1. Add the butter and blend again. While the blender is running, pour in the hot butter in a thin stream. Blend until it looks thick and bubbly.
  2. Season. Sprinkle blender hollandaise sauce with sea salt to taste. You can stir or give it a quick blend to disperse the salt. Enjoy while it’s still warm or at room temperature.
Blender Hollandaise Sauce Recipe (Easy!) - Wholesome Yum (7)
Blender Hollandaise Sauce Recipe (Easy!) - Wholesome Yum (8)

Blender Hollandaise Sauce Recipe (Easy!) - Wholesome Yum (9)

Tips & Troubleshooting

Hollandaise can split if it gets too hot or too cold, and sometimes it’s not the thickness you want at first. Here are some tips for fixing these issues:

  • How to thicken – If your blender hollandaise sauce is too thin, you can add more melted butter while blending until it reaches the desired consistency.
  • If it splits after heating – Sometimes adding a splash of cold water can help.
  • If it breaks after cooling – Rescue the split hollandaise by whisking in some hot water.
  • Prepare fresh for best results – Separation happens with either cooling or overheating, so it’s best to prepare this sauce right before you want to enjoy it. It takes just a few minutes, so make it last when the rest of your meal is ready.

Storage & Heating

  • Store: Hollandaise is really best fresh, and most recommendations are to throw it out after an hour, as it’s made with raw egg yolks. If you want to save it for later, it’s best to use clarified butter (ghee) instead of regular butter. This will help with separation. That being said, I’ve successfully been able to store blender hollandaise made with regular butter in the fridge for a couple of days. Let it sit on the counter to come to room temperature before serving.
  • Keep warm: I don’t recommend reheating hollandaise, as it will almost certainly separate. However, you can keep it warm in a stainless steel bowl or thermos. My favorite method is to pour hot water into the vessel, then empty it and dry. Now you can pour in freshly made hollandaise sauce and it will stay warm without separating.
  • Freeze: Results are mixed on this. Sometimes it comes out okay, and sometimes it separates. If you want to chance it, freeze the sauce for up to 1 month and thaw at room temperature. If it separates, blend until emulsified again, or you can try the tips above.
Blender Hollandaise Sauce Recipe (Easy!) - Wholesome Yum (10)

Ways To Use Blender Hollandaise

Once you make this easy hollandaise sauce, you’ll want to drizzle it on everything! Here are my favorite recipes to serve with it:

  • Eggs Benedict – This is the most popular way to use it! Layer Canadian bacon or ham and a poached or coddled egg over English muffins, then drizzle with this blender hollandaise. Or, drizzle it over my eggs benedict casserole for a complete brunch.
  • Eggs – Don’t stop with eggs benedict! I like to drizzle this silky sauce over all kinds of egg recipes! It tastes amazing over a spinach quiche, drizzled on egg muffin cups, and even over my steak and eggs.
  • Asparagus – Another popular pairing! I use homemade hollandaise sauce for my creamy asparagus casserole, but you can drizzle it over simple roasted asparagus, quick sauteed asparagus, crispy air fryer asparagus, and even grilled asparagus.
  • Sauteed Veggies – I love this blender hollandaise with sauteed broccoli the most, but have also enjoyed it over sauteed veggie mix or green beans.
  • Roasted Veggies – Add a creamy, luxurious touch to any roasted veggie recipe. Try it on roasted cauliflower, broccoli, or even brussels sprouts. It’s particularly delicious over spring veggies, like roasted artichokes.
  • Potatoes – I usually use it with runny baked eggs and hashbrowns, but it’s also delicious on oven roasted potatoes and for a lighter option, roasted rutabaga.

More Homemade Sauce Recipes

Sauces can upgrade any meal! Check out these other homemade sauce recipes – they’re fun to make and super tasty, just like this blender hollandaise sauce:

Peanut Sauce Recipe

Chimichurri Sauce

Lemon Butter Sauce

Tahini Sauce Recipe

For the fastest hollandaise sauce in a blender, I use this high-powered one. It’s also perfect for hot soups, smoothies, nut butters, and everything in between!

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Recipe Card

Blender Hollandaise Sauce Recipe (Easy!) - Wholesome Yum (16)

5 from 14 votes☝️ Click stars to rate or click here to leave a review!

Blender Hollandaise Sauce Recipe (Easy!)

This easy blender hollandaise sauce recipe is ready in minutes with just 3 ingredients. It's delicious on eggs, veggies, & more!

Prep: 1 minute

Cook: 2 minutes

Total: 3 minutes

Author: Maya Krampf from WholesomeYum.com

Servings: 8 (adjust to scale recipe)

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Ingredients

Tap underlined ingredients to see where to get them.

Instructions

Tap on the times in the instructions below to start a kitchen timer while you cook.

  1. Cut the butter into tablespoon-size chunks and place into a glass measuring cup with a spout. Microwave for about 30-45 seconds, just until melted. (Alternatively, melt over medium-low heat in a small saucepan on the stove.)

  2. Meanwhile, combine the egg yolks and lemon juice in a blender. Blend at high speed for 10 seconds.

  3. Remove the center cap of the blender (the one that allows adding something while the blender is running) and slowly pour in the melted butter in a thin stream, with the blender continuing to run on high.

  4. Season with sea salt to taste. If the sauce is too thick, blend in a few drops of warm water as needed to thin it out.

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Recipe Notes

Serving size: 2 tablespoons

Nutrition Facts

Amount per serving. Serving size in recipe notes above.

Calories128

Fat13.6g

Protein1.5g

Total Carbs0.4g

Net Carbs0.3g

Fiber0.1g

Sugar0.2g

Nutrition facts are provided as a courtesy. Have questions about calculations or why you got a different result? Please see our nutrition policy.

Course:Condiment

Cuisine:French

Keywords:blender hollandaise, blender hollandaise sauce, easy hollandaise sauce, hollandaise sauce recipe

Calories: 128 kcal

© Copyright Maya Krampf for Wholesome Yum. Please DO NOT SCREENSHOT OR COPY/PASTE recipes to social media or websites. We’d LOVE for you to share a link with photo instead. 🙂

Blender Hollandaise Sauce Recipe

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Blender Hollandaise Sauce Recipe (Easy!) - Wholesome Yum (24)
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FAQs

How do you make Ina Garten hollandaise sauce in a blender? ›

Melt the butter in a small sauce pan. Place the egg yolks, lemon juice, 1 1/2 teaspoons salt, 3/4 teaspoon pepper and cayenne in the jar of a blender. Blend for 15 seconds. With the blender running, slowly pour the hot butter into the blender and blend for 30 seconds, until the sauce is thick.

What is a common mistake with hollandaise sauce? ›

Hollandaise Sauce

One common hollandaise mistake is overcooking the egg yolks, and there's no coming back from that. But the most common problem is that the emulsion breaks, and you see streaks of liquid butter instead of a uniformly creamy sauce.

Why is my blender hollandaise not thickening? ›

How do you fix a runny hollandaise? Blenders tend to make runny hollandaise - it's usually because the butter was too cold and hasn't cooked the eggs enough to thicken them. To thicken a runny hollandaise, tip the mixture into a heatproof bowl set over simmering water and whisk over the heat until thickened.

What's the difference between Benedict sauce and hollandaise sauce? ›

It's what happens next that sets them apart: Hollandaise gets its acidity from lemon juice (sometimes vinegar) and is usually seasoned with salt, white pepper, and cayenne pepper. Béarnaise, meanwhile, builds upon hollandaise with white wine vinegar, shallots, tarragon, and other fresh herbs.

What is a sister sauce to hollandaise? ›

The sister sauces include:
  1. Béarnaise = hollandaise + shallots + tarragon + chervil + peppercorns + white wine vinegar.
  2. Chantilly = hollandaise + whipped heavy cream. The tomato sauce is classically served with pasta, fish, vegetables, polenta, veal, poultry, bread, and dumplings such as gnocchi.

What is the emulsifier in hollandaise sauce? ›

The butter breaks into minute droplets, while the egg yolk acts as an emulsifier, helping to keep those droplets dispersed, as well as thickening the sauce. What you get is a creamy, smooth sauce with a rich texture and mild flavor, perfect for topping eggs, fish, or vegetables.

Why do I feel sick after hollandaise sauce? ›

Raw eggs are used in homemade versions of foods such as mayonnaise and hollandaise sauce. Unpasteurized dairy products. Unpasteurized milk and milk products — sometimes called raw milk — may be contaminated with salmonella. The pasteurization process kills harmful bacteria, including salmonella.

Why does my hollandaise just taste like butter? ›

If your hollandaise sauce tastes mostly like butter, you may have added too much butter to the recipe. Try adding a little more Dijon mustard and lemon juice to balance out the flavors. Is the Hollandaise sauce like mayo? No, hollandaise sauce is not like mayonnaise.

Is hollandaise sauce a high risk food? ›

Eggs and risk

Menu items commonly associated with food poisoning are sauces such as mayonnaise, aioli and hollandaise; spreads, such as 'egg butter'; desserts, such as mousse and tiramisu; and drinks, such as eggnog and high-protein smoothies. To handle eggs safely: wash your hands after handling eggs.

What does broken hollandaise look like? ›

If the heat is too high, the egg yolks will curdle and the sauce will become grainy. When a sauce splits, this means that the fat has separated from the egg foam (the sauce has lost its emulsion). The result will look thin, greasy, and lumpy.

Does butter thicken hollandaise sauce? ›

Put the yolks, butter and 2 tbsp water in a heavy-based pan and heat very gently, whisking all the time. As the butter melts, the sauce will begin to thicken; don't be tempted to hurry things along by turning the heat up, the sides of the pan should be cool enough to touch at all times.

What is the basic formula for hollandaise? ›

In a small bowl, whisk together egg yolks, lemon juice, cold water, salt and pepper. Melt butter in a saucepan over low heat. Gradually whisk yolk mixture into butter. Continue whisking over low heat for 8 minutes, or until sauce is thickened.

What is béarnaise instead of hollandaise sauce? ›

You should choose it over hollandaise when you want a little more boldness and depth. The acidity in béarnaise can complement not only a seared steak, but also a hearty piece of grilled white fish or some pan-roasted mushrooms. Using béarnaise in place of hollandaise can also jazz up the aforementioned eggs Benedict.

What liquid is used in hollandaise? ›

Hollandaise sauce (/hɒlənˈdeɪz/ or /ˈhɒləndeɪz/; French: [ɔlɑ̃dɛz], from French sauce hollandaise meaning “Dutch sauce”) is a mixture of egg yolk, melted butter, and lemon juice (or a white wine or vinegar reduction). It is usually seasoned with salt, and either white pepper or cayenne pepper.

What thickens hollandaise sauce? ›

To thicken the sauce, chefs can employ various methods:
  1. Slurry: Whisk a slurry of starch, such as cornstarch or flour, into the sauce. ...
  2. Additional Egg Yolks: Gently whisk in an additional yolk or two, making sure they're tempered to avoid cooking them on contact.
  3. Butter: Incorporate cold, kneaded butter in small pieces.
Apr 3, 2024

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