Mornay Sauce Recipe photo by Taste of Home
Total Time
Prep/Total Time: 15 min.
Learn how to make this easy Mornay sauce—the most delicious cheesy white sauce that can dress up almost any meal.

Updated: May 24, 2024

If you’ve ever sat in the bleachers with a plate of nachos, you know that the chip is just a vessel for the real star of the show: that warm, velvety cheese sauce. Fortunately, nacho cheese, and other cheesy sauces, aren’t just for stadiums and movie theaters.

You can make Mornay sauce at home, and it’s also a lot easier than it sounds. Despite its fancy name, the French sauce comes together easily, and it’s about to take your nacho bar (and roast chicken dinners) up a notch.

What is Mornay sauce?

In French cooking, there are five sauces that are considered to be the “mother sauces.” They are the base for all other delicious French sauces. One of those is a bechamel sauce, which combines butter, flour and milk to make a basic thick and creamy sauce. Add some cheese, et voilà! You’ve got your Mornay sauce.

The most popular cheese to use is Gruyere, but you can use any semi-firm cheese. Sometimes onions are added if the sauce will be used in something like lasagna, but not if you’re aiming for a very smooth final product. And the secret ingredient to it all is a dash of nutmeg.

Mornay Sauce Ingredients

  • Unsalted butter
  • All-purpose flour
  • Whole milk
  • Kosher salt
  • White pepper
  • Gruyere cheese
  • Fresh grated nutmeg, optional

Directions

Step 1: Make bechamel

In a small saucepan set to medium heat, melt butter completely and then add the flour. Whisk continuously until it starts to bubble, about one minute. Continue whisking and slowly pour in the milk. It will get very thick at first, but as the milk is added, it will thin out.

Step 2: Season

Reduce heat to low and continue whisking, allowing the sauce to thicken. If there are any lumps, whisk them thoroughly until they’ve smoothed out. Add the salt, pepper and nutmeg.

Step 3: Add cheese

Keeping the heat on low, add the cheese a handful at a time, allowing it to almost melt entirely before adding the next bit. Taste for seasoning, then remove from heat. Serve immediately.

Mornay SauceTMB Studio

Mornay Sauce Variations

  • Nacho flavor: For a variation on the traditional Mornay, try adding cheddar cheese in place of the Gruyere for more of a nacho cheese vibe.
  • Pasta: You can also make it with small diced onions, which would go great in a baked pasta dish or on a burger.

How to Store Mornay Sauce

Mornay sauce can be stored in the fridge (with a piece of plastic wrap over the surface to prevent a skin from forming) for up to five days or in the freezer for up to three months. To reheat, warm it on low while whisking, adding a splash of milk to thin it out as needed.

Mornay Sauce Tips

Why is my Mornay sauce lumpy?

If you have a lumpy sauce and the whisk just won’t do the trick, you can use a blender or immersion blender to smooth it out entirely.

How do I use Mornay sauce?

There are so many ways to use a Mornay sauce! It can be served over some blanched vegetables like broccoli or asparagus. It can also be used as a sauce in heavier comfort foods like lasagna or poured over the most delicious loaded baked potatoes.

Mornay Sauce

Prep Time 15 min
Yield 1-1/4 cups

Ingredients

  • 2 tablespoons butter
  • 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
  • 1/8 teaspoon salt
  • Dash white pepper
  • Dash ground nutmeg, optional
  • 1 cup 2% milk
  • 2 ounces Gruyere cheese, shredded

Directions

  1. In a small saucepan, melt butter over medium heat. Whisk in flour, salt, pepper and, if desired, nutmeg until smooth. Gradually whisk in milk. Bring to a boil; cook and stir until thickened, 1-2 minutes. Reduce heat to low. Add cheese; stir until melted.

Nutrition Facts

2 tablespoons: 62 calories, 5g fat (3g saturated fat), 14mg cholesterol, 100mg sodium, 2g carbohydrate (1g sugars, 0 fiber), 3g protein.

Serve this classic sauce over poached fish, steamed veggies or roast chicken. If you don't have Gruyere cheese on hand, Swiss cheese would be a great substitute. —Taste of Home Test Kitchen