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Frizzled Leek » Recipes » Cooking Basics

What Is Mirepoix? The Classic 2-1-1 Ratio Behind Every Great Stock

A profile picture of me standing in a kitchen with a brown apron on.
Modified: Jun 27, 2026 · Published: Jun 24, 2026 by Mike Cleavenger · This post may contain affiliate links · 1 Comment
Onions, carrots, and celery on a wooden cutting board and then slowly cooked in a large pan.
Slowly sweating mirepoix in a large pan with a wooden spoon.
Onions, carrots, and celery layered in a large glass jar.
A mixture of diced onions, carrots, and celery scattered on a wooden cutting board.
Onions, carrots, and celery on a wooden cutting board and then slowly cooked in a large pan.
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I'll teach you the classic 2-1-1 mirepoix ratio, with the exact proportions of onion, carrot, and celery that build the flavor base under every great stock, soup, and braise. You'll learn why the ratio matters, how to cut it for the dish you're making, and the one mistake that ruins it before the pan even gets hot.

A glass jar with onions, carrots, and celery layered.

Jump to:
  • What is Mirepoix?
  • The Classic Mirepoix Ratio
  • How To Cut Mirepoix: Small, Medium, and Large Dice
  • How to make Mirepoix
  • Mirepoix Variations
  • How To Use Mirepoix
  • Chef Tips
  • FAQ's
  • What to make with Mirepoix
  • 📖 Recipe
  • 💬 Comments

What is Mirepoix?

Mirepoix (meer-PWAH) is a mixture of onion, carrot, and celery, cut and cooked together to build the flavor base for stocks, soups, sauces, and braises.

The name comes from the Duke of Lévis-Mirepoix, an 18th-century French nobleman whose chef is credited with popularizing the technique. The ratio his kitchen left behind became one of the building blocks of classical French cooking.

Mirepoix is usually sweated low and slow until soft and translucent without color. But that's not the only move. For a roasted chicken stock, and veal stock, you'll often roast and caramelize the mirepoix instead.

That roasted veal stock is also the starting point for a demi-glace, the rich, reduced sauce that ends up under a classic steak.

The Classic Mirepoix Ratio

The classic mirepoix ratio is 2 parts onion, 1 part carrot, 1 part celery by weight, not volume. For a batch using 1 pound (450g) total, that's roughly 8 oz (225g) onion, 4 oz (115g) carrot, and 4 oz (115g) celery.

Get the ratio wrong and you'll taste it. Too much celery turns the base bitter. Too much carrot makes it overly sweet. The 2-1-1 ratio is the balance point where none of the three vegetables overpowers the other two.

How To Cut Mirepoix: Small, Medium, and Large Dice

The size you cut mirepoix is all about cook time. Match the cut to how long the mirepoix will actually be in the pot. Check out my Knife Skills 101 blog post where I cover every knife cut.

Demonstrating small, medium, and large diced mirepoix on a wooden cutting board.
  • Brunoise (small dice, ⅛ inch): Use for quick sauces and pan sauces where the mirepoix can break down and soften fast.
  • Medium dice (¼ to ½ inch): The standard cut for soups and most braises. Cooks down without turning to mush before the rest of the dish is done.
  • Large dice (¾ to 1 inch): Best for stocks you'll strain out at the end.

How to make Mirepoix

Diced onions, celery, and carrots on a wooden cutting board.

Step 1. Prep the vegetables.
Dice the onion, carrot, and celery to the size you need - see the cuts above. Keep the pieces uniform in size so everything cooks at the same rate. Getting everything cut and ready before the pan heats up is mise en place in practice.

Sweating mirepoix in a large pan with a wooden spoon.

Step 2. Sweat the mirepoix.
Heat 1 tablespoon of oil or butter in a pan over medium-low heat. Add the mirepoix and cook for 8-10 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the onion turns translucent and everything softens.

Step 3. Watch for color.
This is the step most people get wrong when sweating mirepoix. If you see browning, your heat is too high. Pull the pan back and finish at a lower temperature. Browning means you've crossed from sweating into sautéing, which changes the flavor you're building toward.

If you're roasting mirepoix instead, for a veal stock or braised short ribs, color is the goal, not the mistake. That's a different technique with a different result, covered above.

Mirepoix Variations

Small piles of mirepoix, Trinity, White mirepoix, and Sofrito.
  • Classic Mirepoix - Combination of 2 parts onion, 1 part carrots, and 1 part celery.
  • Holy Trinity - In Cajun and Creole cooking, the "Holy Trinity" is the foundation used for gumbo, jambalaya, and étouffée. It consists of 2 parts yellow onion, 1 part celery, and 1 part green bell pepper.
  • White Mirepox - Is a French aromatic flavor base for light stocks like my White Chicken Stock, soups, and sauces. Consisting of white onions or leeks, celery or celery root, and parsnips.
  • Soffritto - A flavor base found across Spanish, Cuban, and Puerto Rican cooking, made by slowly cooking aromatics in oil until soft, never browned. The ingredients shift by region, onion, garlic, and bell pepper are common, with tomatoes and cilantro added depending on the tradition. Used as the foundation for rice dishes, beans, and stews.

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How To Use Mirepoix

  • Stocks - Large diced mirepoix simmers for hours, then gets strained out before the stock is finished.
  • Soups and braises - Medium diced mirepoix is found in my Dairy Free Clam Chowder, and braises like my short ribs or salmon stew.
  • Pan sauces and gravies - Finely diced mirepoix cooks quickly in sauces like a classic Velouté Sauce, which gets its body from a roux thickening the mirepoix-based stock.
  • Rice pilaf - Adds aromatic flavor before the rice goes in.
  • Mains - Mirepoix is the base for many main dishes like in my Bolognese Ragu recipe.

Chef Tips

  • Measure 50% onions, 25% carrots, and 25% celery by weight.
  • Depending on the recipe, the size of your cut mirepoix will differ.
  • Cut onions, carrots, and celery uniform in size so they cook evenly.

FAQ's

Can you freeze mirepoix?

Yes, I like to cook a large batch and portion them in silicone ice cube trays or vacuum seal and freeze for 1-3 months.
Cooked mirepoix portioned into an ice cube tray.

Is Mirepoix French?

Yes, mirepoix is a classic French cooking term. It refers to a aromatic base of diced vegetables, traditionally onions, carrots, and celery, that are gently cooked in fat (usually butter) to create a foundation for soups, stews, stocks, and sauces.

What's the difference between mirepoix an the holy trinity?

The holy trinity is found in cajun and creole cooking and replaces carrots with green bell peppers.

What to make with Mirepoix

  • Red wine braised short ribs with mashed potatoes and carrots in a light-blue plate.
    Red Wine Braised Beef Short Ribs
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    The Best Salmon Stew Recipe
  • Venison Ragu in a pasta bowl with fresh basil.
    Venison Ragu Recipe
  • A spoon removing the fat cap off the top of veal stock.
    Veal Stock Recipe

📖 Recipe

Dice onions, carrots, and celery layered in a large glass jar.

Mirepoix Recipe

Mike Cleavenger
Learn how to make classic French mirepoix using the traditional 2:1:1 ratio of onion, carrot, and celery. This simple aromatic base is the foundation for flavorful stocks, soups, sauces, braises, and countless other recipes.
5 from 1 vote
Print Recipe Pin Recipe
Prep Time 15 minutes mins
Cook Time 10 minutes mins
Total Time 25 minutes mins
Servings 1 pound
Calories 277 kcal

Ingredients
  

  • 8 ounces (225 g) yellow onion, diced about 2 medium onions
  • 4 ounces (115 g) carrots, diced about 2 medium carrots
  • 4 ounces (115 g) celery, diced about 2 ribs of celery
  • 1 tablespoon unsalted butter or olive oil

Instructions
 

  • Dice the onion, carrot, and celery into uniform pieces.
  • Melt the butter or heat the olive oil in a large skillet or saucepan over medium-low heat.
  • Add the vegetables and cook for 8 to 10 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the onions become translucent and the carrots and celery soften.
  • Use immediately in stocks, soups, sauces, braises, rice pilaf, or freeze for later use.

Notes

  • Measure the vegetables by weight, not by volume, for the most accurate 2:1:1 ratio.
  • Keep the dice uniform so the vegetables cook evenly.
  • Sweating develops sweetness without adding roasted flavors.
  • For roasted stocks or braises, caramelizing the mirepoix is intentional and creates a deeper, richer flavor.
  • Refrigerator: Store uncooked or cooked mirepoix in an airtight container for up to 4 days.
  • Freezer: Freeze in freezer-safe bags for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator or add directly to soups, stocks, and braises.

Nutrition

Calories: 277kcal | Carbohydrates: 35g | Protein: 4g | Fat: 15g | Saturated Fat: 2g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 2g | Monounsaturated Fat: 10g | Sodium: 178mg | Potassium: 989mg | Fiber: 9g | Sugar: 17g | Vitamin A: 19458IU | Vitamin C: 27mg | Calcium: 135mg | Iron: 1mg
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More Cooking Basics Every Home Cook Should Know

  • Small glass bowls with Mise en place prepped out.
    What Is Mise En Place and Why It Makes You a Better Cook
  • Making a brown roux in a stainless-steel pan and stirring with a wooden spoon.
    How To Make A Roux (White, Blonde, and Brown)
  • A photo of different knife cuts on a wooden cutting board.
    Knife Skills 101: The 10 Basic Knife Cuts Every Cook Should Know
  • Chicken cut up into 10-pieces on a wooden cutting board.
    How To Break Down A Whole Chicken

Comments

  1. Mike Cleavenger says

    June 27, 2026 at 3:29 am

    5 stars
    A mirepoix is a foundational skill in French cuisine.

    Reply
5 from 1 vote

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Wearing a chef jacket standing with my arms crossed in front of floating shelves.

Hey, I'm Chef Mike!

Culinary trained and obsessed with good food, I break down the basics of cooking so anyone can feel confident in the kitchen. Let's get cooking!

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