How to measure food

Showing posts with label Cooking tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cooking tips. Show all posts

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Cooking Tips

Food Poisoning is a infection of foods that affect people of all age groups. Food poisoning is very common nowadays as people consume more and more street foods, which are not processed maintaining proper cooking hygiene. The foods also house host of germs and bacteria the enter in the blood cells directly with the food consumption. Bacteria multiply within minutes and affect important organs of the body like digestive tract, abdomen and kidney. Hence one must keep away from the lure of street foods to the best possible extent.

Certain cooking tips can followed in home cooking to be immune from various food borne disease. Our site sitagita provides healthy cooking tips that ensure hygienic and germ free cooking leading to nutrition and growth of those having them.

The cooking tips are general tips that will make for hygienic cooking and reduce the chance of getting the foods affected with toxins and pathogens. During the time of marketing collect the vegetables and non-veg products in separate packets. When storing them in the refrigerator try to store them in separate selfs. While preparing rich non-veg foods from meat, fish, poultry and other animal products first wash it throughly with clean water. The germs and bacteria in the product may stay with it even after the wash. So it is better to clean it with warm water.

Always wash your hands before coming to the kitchen. The utensils and devices of cooking should also be cleaned with soap before cooking. Some common utensils and devices fro cooking include forks, spoons, spatula, dishes, bowls, cutters, grinders, slicers, smashers and frying pan. Separate cutting boards are advisable for animal products and other non-animal products.

The cooked food should be placed on a clean dish or bowl and covered. Most of the food infections occur from unclean utensils and uncovering of the foods. It is very necessary to see that the animal foods are not undercooked. Undercooked foods are susceptible to infections as bacteria and germs are not completely destructed. The animal food and seafood should be boiled at a specific temperature for the complete destruction of the bacteria. The foods remain better if they are kept warm on the oven.

It is better to avoid cooking foods with products having synthetic colors in them. Bright colors like red, blue and green have the high risk of having fungus in them. Colored food items like cream, cheese and other dairy products are vulnerable to fungi. If there is any sign of toxins in the products, they should at once be removed. Sometimes the green vegetables and fruits are sold with synthetic colors in them. The leafy greens have small warms entangling them. In such cases the vegetables should be washed thoroughly and cooked after complete removal of colors and worms. It is wiser to avoid puffed food cans, which may have harmful micro-organisms in them. It is due to the toxic gases the container of the cans may have swelling in them. Hope these cooking tips will make for a hygienic treat for you. Happy eating.


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In cooking, you should always make sure you wash your hands thoroughly. Clean your utensils before using to avoid dirt and bacteria.

Source

Monday, September 14, 2009

How Long Do You Grill Boneless Chicken Breasts

By Nate Scot


Boneless Skinless Chicken Breast are the most expensive cuts of the chicken, but are worth it for many people because of the relative ease of prepping, cooking, and eating. Skinless chicken breast are also low in fat and high in protein. Care must be taken when cooking or the meat can become very dry in a short time.

Directions:

1. Make sure that the chicken has been rinsed completely before cooking, unless the chicken is soaking in a marinade. Pounding the chicken breast will make it uniform in thickness and easier to cook.

2. Pre-heat the grill on med-high to high and lay the chicken breast on the grill. A hotter temperature will cook faster and sear in the juice if grilled correctly.

3. Grill for approx. 4-5 minutes checking frequently to insure the chicken is not burning. The chicken is ready to turn when the bottom side has clear sear marks and the top still is pink.

4. Grill the chicken for another 4-5 minutes or until done cooking. Firmly touch the chicken at the thickest point to see if done. If overcooked the chicken will feel hard without any give. If undercooked it will feel a little squishy. If cooked right it should have a little spring back.

5. If you are unsure if the chicken is cooked enough you can make a small cut into the thickest part of the chicken. If the center is still translucent then it needs more cook time. The chicken will continue cooking after it is taken off the grill. This is when most people overcook, because they remove the chicken too late from the grill. Once it has cooked completely through it will start drying very fast. Most cooks will remove the chicken just before the center is cooked. Be careful with this in that you do not leave the center raw.

6. Remove from grill and serve. Now is a great time to add your favorite sauce. You can apply the sauce during cooking to make a tasty glaze if you want.

Safe Internal Temperature: 165 degrees

Tips:

* Chicken sticks very easy to a hot clean grill. To minimize sticking, lay the side of the chicken that had skin on the grill first. This will also insure much better sear marks. You can also lightly coat the outside of the chicken with oil or spray oil. Some people even use oil on the grill bars before placing on the chicken.

* Grilling the chicken too long on one side before turning will dry the chicken. Signs of grilling too long on one side are the raw topside turns white and the edges curl up.


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Chicken is easily cook, it takes only 2 minutes each side if you have a thin slice of chicken meat. So, if you are on a hurry and you need to cook something delicious, chicken will be best because it's easily cooked and very healthy. There are lots of easy chicken dishes you can make and your family can enjoy. I already posted Roasted Chicken Tenders with Peppers and Onions recipe, try it and I assure you, you'll love it!

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Saturday, September 12, 2009

How to Cook Baked Potatoes - 3 Techniques, 5 Steps

By Ahmad Ranson Platinum Quality Author

Today, the potato is one of the most important of all foods. So it's surprising to think that this vegetable wasn't widely used until the last half of the eighteenth century. The potato is a tuber, which is an enlarged underground stem with buds (or eyes) that become new shoots. Potatoes are classified as either starchy, low-moisture varieties or as waxy, high moisture varieties.

How To Cook Baked Potatoes In A Conventional Oven (Regular Oven)

1. When you are baking potatoes, try to use russets (these are the best kind for baking) or other regularly shaped starchy potatoes.
2. Scrub well and pierce the ends with a fork or skewer so steam can escape.
3. For crisp skins, rub lightly with oil. For more tender skins, leave dry.
4. Place on sheet pans or on sheet pan racks in a preheated 400 degrees F oven and bake until done. This should be about a hour. To test doneness, squeeze gently. Done potatoes will give in to gentle pressure. (using sheet pan racks eliminates the hard spot that forms where the potato is in contact with the sheet pan)
5. Remove from oven.

To hold for service, keep warm and uncovered so the potatoes will not be made soggy by trapped steam. Hold no more than 1 hour, if possible.

It is important to note there was nothing said about wrapping potatoes in foil. Foil wrapped potatoes do not bake, they steam in their own moisture. The texture of a steamed potato is entirely different from a baked potato. So save yourself the trouble, work, and expense of wrapping the potatoes in foil paper and make better baked potatoes.

How To Cook Baked Potatoes In A Microwave

1. Wash the potatoes, and pierce with a knife once or twice all the way through.
2. Place in the microwave on a paper towel or plate. Plates do not stick to the potato.
3. Try to cook about 4 at a time.
4. 4 small potatoes = 7 minutes, 4 large potatoes = 10 to 11 minutes (microwave oven times vary)
5. If only one potato is being put in the microwave, when using a 1200 watt microwave, set the timer to 3:00 for a very small potato, set it to 4:30 for a medium-sized potato, and set it to 6:00 for a large potato. Huge potatoes will require 7 to 8 minutes.

Let the potato stand for five minutes. This will allow the inside of the potato to finish cooking with hot steam that is trapped inside.After waiting, cut open the potato and garnish with your choice of toppings.

Some microwaves have a baked potato button.

How To Cook Baked Potatoes On A Grill

1. Wash and scrub the potatoes well.
2. Pierce the potatoes with a fork or skewer so steam can escape.
3. Baste the potatoes with oil or butter.
4. Place the potatoes on a hot grill and sear them on all sides.
5. When the potatoes give in to pressure easily when touched, there ready to eat.

Baking the potato on a grill is probably the fastest way to achieve baked potatoes (next to baking them in or on an open fire. Another way to grill a potato is to par-coook the potatoes first. This method cuts down on the coooking time on the grill.


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I really love potatoes! Whether it's fried, baked or a part/ingredient in a dish. It's very delicious and will definitely satisfy everyone's stomach. Aside from being a healthy and delicious veggie it is also easy to cook. Who doesn't love potatoes? Well, for me it's one of my favorite veggie.

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Thursday, September 10, 2009

Tips on Grilling For Delicious Steaks

By Francis Murphy Platinum Quality Author

An excellent meal is naturally a successful combination of flavorful food, wonderful ambiance and great company. More often than not, the preparation of delicious food requires effort and a sense of creativity. In the case of steak grill, there is no question that it takes effort and practice to prepare a perfectly grilled steak. Before the grilling takes place, the steps involved in preparation include choosing the right type of steak, having the right cut to it and also applying appropriate seasoning to marinade it. The following are just some of the many tips on grilling steaks.

Firstly, you should know that steaks come in various cuts. There are some terms you should familiarize yourself with. They include fillet, rib-eye, strip, T-bone or sirloin. The best cut for your steak is a matter of personal preference. However, thickness of the steak matters. Great steaks usually are an inch or thicker.

The next step after purchase is preparation. Preparing the steak for grilling is an important process because this affects the steak's quality and grilling outcome. You are strongly advised to purchase your steak on the day you intend to grill them. This maintains freshness and retains quality. Before you begin your steak grill, make sure that that it is at room temperature.

You will need to preheat the grill for about 20 minutes for a gas grill. As for charcoal grill, it is ready when it is covered in white ash. You will need to sear the steaks and cook for 3 minutes on a side on the highest setting with the lid closed. Then, reduce the heat to medium high and continue cooking until the steak is ready. Some may prefer their steaks to be rare, medium rare, medium or well done. This corresponds to the thickness of the stick as well.

To better understand steak grilling, you can always explore tips on grilling steaks available through various sources.


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There are techniques and tricks in choosing the right cut of meat for steaks and on how to grill it. I have a tip for you, if you're going to have steaks, you should choose the meat with many white part (I don't know what it's called but it's like fats on meat) because it will make you're steak more delicious and more tasty. Happy grilling!

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Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Need to Know Salmon and Fish Tips

By Tom Connelly Platinum Quality Author


Salmon is very easy to obtain and not difficult to prepare. Fresh salmon is usually available at your local supermarket, but you can also likely find frozen fillets and/or steaks, packages of smoked salmon, or canned salmon. They are all healthy as long as they are from wild salmon and not farmed fish. Canned is usually from wild fish. Smoked salmon has been showing up as farmed, and thankfully it is usually listed on the package as farmed fish, so it's easy to spot. Another way that you can tell them apart is color. The wild caught is a pale pinkish color while the farmed is colored through color added to the feed, so it looks more orange.

Salmon is usually prepared by baking or broiling, and served with vegetables and rice. This is a very healthy choice, especially when you take into account that it is loaded with heart healthy Omega 3 oils. Compare that to steak or pork, which is usually grain fed and full of saturated fat. The typical way that the salmon is cooked is much better than the breaded and deep fried way that other types of fish are usually prepared.

Most of the salmon sold in North America is from Alaska. Pacific salmon varieties are represented by Chinook (King), Coho (Silver), and Sockeye (Red) salmon. Atlantic salmon are obviously from the Atlantic ocean. Most of this type is farm raised rather than wild. I have had supermarket fish mongers insist that Atlantic salmon is wild caught because of the name, and they (should) know better. Now you do. Again, remember that pale pink is most likely wild and bright orange is farm raised due to the feed coloring. There is some recent data that farm raised salmon is not as bad as previously thought, but wild is still better. They are just healthier fish.

When buying fish, make sure that that fish counter area seems clean and that there is not a smell of bad fish. All of the fish should be under a cover if possible but definitely on ice. If the heads are on, the eyes should be clear and not cloudy, and the gills red. There should be no milky fluids on the fish or on the filet meat. The skin should be shiny and the flesh should be firm and not soft or squishy. Let your nose guide you. Learn to distinguish fresh fish smell to a fishy foul odor. Fresh salmon will only last for approximately 48 hours in the refrigerator. If you need to keep it longer, place it in a freezer bag and freeze it. Once frozen, they should ideally be eaten within 3 months.

Salmon can be cooked on the grill, poached, broiled, pan seared, or baked. It is very versatile. If you know how, raw salmon can be smoked and consumed that way. Salmon will cook rapidly in about 10 minutes for each inch of flesh. Baked fillets can cook nicely at 350F in twenty minutes time.

Canned salmon, one of my all time easy favorites, is as easy as opening the can. Some people who are not used to it might find the fact that most canned salmon contains skin and bones to be a bit off putting, but it is all edible. The bones are brittle and you can just mush it up with a fork until it is the consistency of mushed tuna fish. You can even mix it with some mayonnaise and light seasonings like black pepper and onion powder, as many people do. Some people opt for the skinless and boneless canned pink salmon, but I am telling you here that the red salmon which is canned with the skin and bones is much more flavorful as well as containing more of the healthy Omega 3 fish oils EPA and DHA. The taste is richer. Pink salmon is okay, but I consider it too bland. To each their own. One way to enjoy canned red salmon is to get yourself some thin sliced Italian bread or Portuguese bread slices. White bread (or any sliced bread) works, but the type of bread I suggest is worlds above plain old supermarket white bread. I am referring to the bread that is in a round loaf style before it is sliced into thin slices, with the center slices being the largest. Take two pieces of this and toast it. If the slices you choose are too long for the toaster just toast half then flip and dot he other half. Take some soft butter and spread a thin layer across the inside of the toasted bread slices. This forms a barrier to prevent the fish juice from making the toast soft. This is optional if you plan to eat the sandwich immediately (although tasty), but a necessity of you plan on packing the sandwich for lunch. Take the salmon and either mush it into a pliable paste with a fork, or use a bit of mayonnaise. The mayo acts like a "glue" and keeps it all together, and if you like mayo it really enhances the taste. Simply put the salmon paste onto the toasted bread evenly, gently press the other slice on top, slice in half so that it's easier to handle, and you have one of the simplest and tastiest sandwiches you will ever have.

Smoked salmon slices are likewise not only great on bagels and crackers, but you can make a similar tasty sandwich using Irish style whole grain wheaten bread and buttering two slices and putting the smoked salmon inside. Black pepper and a squirt of fresh lemon juice is highly recommended. Irish style wheaten bread mix can be bought online and it is exceedingly simple to make. The Odlums brand only requires you to add water, mix, and put it into a greased bread baking tin and bake it. It's THAT simple.

I sincerely hope that this article will open up or further expand your healthy food repertoire to include healthy salmon, as well as providing you with some simple ideas to add it into your diet. Bon appetit!


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Fish dishes are very delicious especially salmon, I love it in sandwiches and it's very easy to cook and prepare! Most people who are in diet used to eat fish rather than red meat. But we should learn some tips in buying and cooking fish. I hope these article will help you.

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Sunday, September 6, 2009

10 Cool Cooking Tips And Tricks

By Simonne Matthew

Have you ever heard the saying that great chefs have their secrets? Well, it is true: take two people, give them the same ingredients, and make them cook the same recipe, and you'll see that they obtain different results. Sometimes, a few degrees more in the oven, or 5 more minutes of cooking may lead to a completely different taste of the food.

What you need to know to make good food:

1. Don't overcook vegetables: try them with the fork or with a skewer, and take them off the fire in the moment you can penetrate them, but you still feel some resistance. If you cook them too much, their texture will become soft and very unpleasant.

2. Don't overcook meat: this is more tricky, as in the beginning, the best way to see if it is done is to cut it in the middle. If the knife goes in easily, and you don't see any reddish color from the blood, then you know it's done. If you continue cooking after that moment, the meat will resemble more and more to the shoe leather, it will become dry and very hard to chew.

3. Cook separately veggies and meat. If you cook a recipe which includes veggies and meat, first you have to cook the meat until it is done (try it with the fork), then take another pan and cook the veggies, but make sure they remain hard, then mix everything together and cook for some more 10 minutes. In this way, meat will preserve its flavor, and so will the veggies.

4. Tomatoes should be the last addition to a meal. It has been proven that tomatoes added to a meal in the beginning of the cooking process result in hardening all other ingredients, so you'll never be able to have a properly cooked food. Save tomatoes for the last 10 minutes of cooking, when all other ingredients are already almost done.

5. Add the salt from the beginning. Cooking without salt and adding it only before the moment of eating, will result in uneven distribution of the salt, and in a strange taste. If you have guests who have medical interdiction to eat salt, then you can cook with no salt, put away a part of the food for those guests, then add salt and cook for 10 more minutes the rest of the food.

6. Don't overcook pasta: there is nothing more unpleasant than overcooked pasta. An otherwise very nice meal will turn into a sticky mass with flour taste. Hint: add a little bit of oil in the cooking water, and don't let the pasta boil more than 6-7 minutes.

7. Mayonnaise is tricky: if you want to prepare the mayonnaise at home, use boiled eggs yellow, as this will prevent the mayonnaise from "cutting" (separating the oil molecules from the water). Stir always in the same sense, and use a lot of lemon juice. For a special savor, you can add a teaspoonfull of mustard.

8. Steam cooking is healthier. Over the past few years, steam cookers became widely available. They have the advantage of preserving food's vitamins, and not mixing the aromas. You could consider investing in your health and get yourself a steam cooker.

9. Use spices. The spices offer in groceries is huge. I bet you don't know how many types of spices exist and what you can use them for. Why not trying them? Buy a small quantity of each, and try them in various combinations. You may discover new tastes and a revolutionary way of cooking and playing with flavors.

10. Match the wine with the food. Get yourself a wine catalogue and try to transform your meals in a perfect assortment for your senses. Your guests will be amazed by your cooking talents.


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Here's more cooking techniques and tricks for you. This tips are very helpful because everyday we used to cook vergetables, meats or pastas and We usually fry, steam and saute. It will be easy for the beginners to cook if they know the basic tips in making delicious foods. Happy cooking!

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Friday, September 4, 2009

Looking For Information About Beginners Cooking Tips?

Preparing The Food

Sometimes, the tiny and seemingly insignificant tips that you can get for cooking can turn you from being a good cook into a great one. Preparing dishes and avoiding obstacles in cooking is easily done with cooking suggestions. While it has been said that experience, patience and knowledge are key when cooking, a few practical suggestions can fortunately make many good cooks look like master chefs. In order to improve your skills, try a few of the following cooking suggestions.

Cooking

Food Preparation Safety Tips

Having food that tastes its best is most easily accomplished when you make sure that the products you buy are fresh. As you shop in the supermarket (or produce market, or farmer’s market) you should closely examine each of the items you purchase to make sure it is the highest quality freshness or ripeness. Take the time to look at the fruits and vegetables so you can look them over for signs of freshness, but for the packaged items, simply go by the expiration date. You should also make yourself familiar with the general produce and the ability to spot quality produce in your local market. When picking your meat selections of poultry, beef, or fish, you want to make sure it is as fresh as your other items. Additionally, when preparing meat for a meal keep all meats refrigerated until using, any utensils you use with the meat or that come into contact with the meat should be cleaned with soap and water.

Before you serve your meat, make sure that they have been cooked to the recommended temperature. Always use a cooking thermometer to make sure your meats reach a temperature of 140 degrees F. Likewise, if you are preparing a chilled food, you should do so at a temperature that is less than 40 degrees F.

It All Gets Easier With the Correct Tools

Proper mechanics will use proper tools to fix the exact type of car they are working on. Thus, a cooking suggestion is to make sure your kitchen is stocked with items that will help you prepare your dishes easily and properly. What exactly you need depends on what kinds of dishes you want to prepare, but knives, pots, pans, and measuring cups are standard, and most dishes require the use of a blender or a food processor as well.

Cooking Healthily

Many people believe that low fat food is automatically tasteless. This is absolutely false - in fact, low fat cooking can be colorful, vibrant and extremely tasty. Fresh herbs, fresh spices, a decent amount of olive oil, and plenty of thought are the tricks to making a tasty low fat dish. Any dish can be made low fat simply through careful selection of lean beef or pork, and by using common sense on the amount of oil you use. Changing your meats to chicken, turkey or fish will save you both fat content and calorie content.

Choosing The Beverage

As a final cooking suggestion, always remember that a meal includes a beverage as a well as food. Using the right beverage, you can pretty much improve just about any meal. You might choose wine, mineral water, or even a cocktail, you can make your meal turn outstanding.


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Cooking is really fun. I hope you'll gain more knowledge in reading my blog about Cooking Techniques and Tricks for Beginners. Just follow the cooking tips and surely you'll enjoy cooking and you'll be able to cook a very delicious meal.

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Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Salmon and Sweet Potatoes

Clean up is a breeze with this meal--just wrap seasoned sweet potatoes, onion and salmon in foil then bake until tender.

Ingredients

* 4 5 ounce fresh or frozen skinless salmon fillets
* 2 medium sweet potatoes, scrubbed and cut into 1/8 inch slices
* 1 small yellow onion, diced
* 2 teaspoons cooking oil
* Cooking spray
* 1/2 teaspoon dried crushed oregano
* 1/2 teaspoon ground chili powder
* 1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
* 1/4 teaspoon salt
* 1/4 teaspoon ground black pepper
* 1 medium orange, peeled and coarsely chopped

Method

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Rinse fish and pat dry with paper towels then set aside. In a medium bowl, toss sweet potato slices and diced onion with oil. In a small bowl, combine oregano, chili pepper, cumin, salt and black pepper. Sprinkle 1 teaspoon of oregano mixture evenly on salmon. Add remaining oregano mixture to sweet potatoes and onion then toss to coat. Lightly coat one side each of four 18 inch squares of foil with cooking spray. On each square, arrange 1/4 of sweet potato slices, diced onion, and place on top of filet. Add orange pieces. Fold ends of foil squares to completely enclose, leaving space for steam to build. Place seam sides up on a large baking sheet. Bake 30-35 minutes, or until fish flakes easily, and potatoes are soft.

Number of Servings: 4


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Why not try a more healthier recipe? Try this one and I'm sure you'll love it even your kids will enjoy this dish. It's easy to prepare and very healthy.

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Sunday, August 23, 2009

Healthy cooking tips

Eating healthy food doesn’t mean giving up your favourite foods and switching only to salads. Healthy cooking is easy. In many cases, your favourite recipes can be modified so they offer a healthier alternative. Non-stick cookware can be used to reduce the need for cooking oil. To keep valuable nutrients, microwave or steam your vegetables instead of boiling them.

Keep fats to a minimum

It’s a good idea to minimise ‘hidden fats’ by choosing lean meats and reduced fat dairy products. Processed foods can also have lots of hidden fats. Dietary fats are best when they come from the unrefined natural fats found in nuts, seeds, fish, soy, olives and avocado. Fat from these foods includes the essential long-chain fatty acids and this fat is accompanied by other good nutrients.

If you add fats when cooking, keep them to a minimum and use monounsaturated oils such as olive and canola oil. A little added oil can be a good thing.

At the shop

Low fat cooking begins when you are shopping:

    * Choose the low fat version of a food if it exists – for example milk, cheese, yoghurt, salad dressings and gravies.
    * Choose leaner meat cuts. If unsure, look for the Heart Foundation tick of approval.
    * Choose skinless chicken breasts.

General suggestions
General suggestions on healthy cooking methods include:

    * Steam, bake, grill, braise, boil or microwave your foods.
    * Modify or eliminate recipes that include butter or ask you to deep fry or saute in animal fat.
    * Avoid using oils and butter as lubricants. Use non-stick cookware instead.
    * Don’t add salt to food as it is cooking.
    * Remove chicken skin, which is high in fat.
    * Eat more fresh vegetables and legumes.
    * Eat more fish, which is high in protein, low in fats and loaded with essential omega-3 fatty acids.

Low fat cooking

Suggestions include:

    * If you need to use oil, try cooking sprays or apply oil with a pastry brush.
    * Cook in liquids (such as stock, wine, lemon juice, fruit juice, vinegar or water) instead of oil.
    * When a recipe calls for cream as a thickener, use low fat yoghurt, low fat soymilk, evaporated skim milk or cornstarch.
    * When browning vegetables, put them in a hot pan then spray with oil, rather than adding the oil first to the pan. This reduces the amount of oil that vegetables (such as mushrooms) can absorb during cooking.
    * An alternative to browning vegetables by pan-frying is to cook them first in the microwave, then crisp them under the griller for a minute or two.
    * When serving meat and fish, use pesto, salsas, chutneys and vinegars in place of sour creams, butter and creamy sauces.

Retaining the nutrients
Water soluble vitamins are delicate and easily destroyed during preparation and cooking. Suggestions include:

    * Scrub vegetables rather than peel them, as many nutrients are found close to the skin.
    * Microwave or steam vegetables instead of boiling them.
    * If you like to boil vegetables, use a small amount of water and do not overboil them.
    * Include more stir-fry recipes in your diet. Stir-fried vegetables are cooked quickly to retain their crunch (and associated nutrients).

Cutting out salt

Salt is a traditional flavour enhancer, but research suggests that a high salt diet could contribute to a range of health problems including high blood pressure. Suggestions include:

    * Don’t automatically add salt to your food – taste it first.
    * Add a splash of olive oil or lemon juice close to the end of cooking time or to cooked vegetables – it can enhance flavours in the same way as salt.
    * Choose fresh or frozen vegetables, since canned and pickled vegetables tend to be packaged with salt.
    * Limit your consumption of salty processed meats such as salami, ham, corned beef, bacon, smoked salmon, frankfurters and chicken loaf.
    * Choose reduced salt bread and breakfast cereals. Breads and cereals are a major source of salt in the diet.
    * Iodised salt is best. A major dietary source of iodine is plant foods. Yet there is emerging evidence that Australian soil may be low in iodine and so plants grown in it are also low in iodine. If you eat fish regularly (at least once a week), the need for iodised salt is reduced.
    * Avoid salt-laden processed foods, such as flavoured instant pasta or noodles, canned or dehydrated soup mixes, chips and salted nuts.
    * Margarine and butter contain a lot of salt but ‘no added salt’ varieties are available.
    * Most cheeses are very high in salt so limit your intake or choose lower salt varieties.
    * Reduce your use of soy sauce, tomato sauce and processed sauces and condiments (for example mayonnaise and salad dressings) because they contain high levels of salt.
    * Use herbs, spices, vinegar or lemon juice to add extra zing to your recipe and reduce the need for salt.

Herbs
Culinary herbs are leafy plants that add flavour and colour to all types of meals. They are also rich in health-protective phyto-oestrogens (plant compounds that have some similar effects to the female hormone, oestrogen). In many cases, herbs can replace the flavour of salt and oil.

Remember:

    * Herbs are delicately flavoured, so add them to your cooking in the last few minutes.
    * Dried herbs are more strongly flavoured than fresh. As a general rule, one teaspoon of dried herbs equals four teaspoons of fresh.
    * Apart from boosting meat dishes, herbs can be added to soups, breads, mustards, salad dressings, vinegars, desserts and drinks.
    * Herbs such as coriander, ginger, garlic, chilli and lemongrass are especially complimentary in vegetable-based stir-fry recipes.

Sandwich suggestions

To make a sandwich even healthier:

    * Switch to reduced salt wholemeal or wholegrain bread – for example, some brands of soy linseed bread.
    * Don’t butter the bread. You won’t miss butter if your sandwich has a few tasty ingredients already.
    * Limit your use of spreads high in saturated fat like butter and cream cheese. Replace them with a thin spread of nut spread, hummus, low fat cheese spreads or avocado.
    * Choose reduced fat ingredients when you can, such as low fat cheese or mayonnaise.

Other tips

Suggestions include:

    * Spend a little time on presentation. You are more likely to enjoy a meal if it’s visually appealing as well as tasty.
    * Make every meal an occasion. Set the table. Eat with your family. Give yourself the opportunity to enjoy your food without distractions like television.
    * Long-term deprivation, such as crash dieting, doesn’t work. Allow yourself the occasional guilt-free treat.
    * You are less likely to overeat if you eat slowly and savour every mouthful.



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Cooking is fun! Even kids enjoy cooking which is also a bonding moment with their parents. Always remember that you should cook healthy food. Follow the rips above to create a delicious and healhty foods.

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Thursday, August 13, 2009

The Secret To Great Saute

Probably the most important technique I can share with you is how to sauté properly. When you learn how to saute, you can prepare hundreds of meals with this technique.

What Is Saute?

Saute in French means "to jump" and can be a method of cooking or a way to describe a dish like sauteed chicken breasts. The reason the French called this technique "to jump" is because you are cooking at a very high heat and you don't want it sitting too long in the pan.

To be successful, you need to move the ingredients either with a pair of tongs or like they do on TV by tossing it in the air.

Saute is a type of frying which is a dry heat method of cooking requiring high heat and some sort of liquid fat to cook with.

What Is the Difference Between Sauteing & Pan Frying?

Although they are both considered dry heat cooking and use a fat to transfer the heat of the pan to the food, pan frying requires more oil and you don't toss or move the food around like you do with saute. Typically a pan-fry requires enough oil to reach almost halfway up the ingredient you are cooking. A good example is when you pan-fry eggplant for eggplant parmesan.

The Advantages of Sauteing

Once learned and in your repertoire, you will be free to be creative and devise your own recipes with whatever ingredients you have around. As a novice, this technique is easy and allows you to prepare meals in a moment’s notice.

This includes sautéing chicken, fish, vegetables, or meat. That’s the beauty of learning a basic technique. Compare it to learning how to read a financial statement. Once you know how, you can effectively read any company’s report. sautéing

The Formula To A Great Saute

Proper Saute = Good Saute Pan + High Heat + A Little Fat + Uniformly Cut Ingredients

The Right Pan For The Job

Some say the pan the pan should have sloped sides, others say straight. To me it doesn't matter as long as the pan has a dense, heavy bottom that spreads the heat evenly without any hot spots. It has to be big enough to cook your ingredients without crowding so buy accordingly.

Non-stick is ok if you don't plan to make pan sauces but you need a little sticking to create the "fond" or the brown bits that stick to your pan that are responsible for those delicious sauces served in your favorite restaurants. I use a non-stick pan for my sauteed spinach and broccoli rabe but prefer metal for everything else.

The Right Fat - Butter or Oil?

It all has to do with smoking points. Butter (350°F) will give your food the best taste and a wonderful golden crust but burns more easily. Oil (375° F - 450° F) produces a nice crust and will not burn as quickly, but also doesn’t leave as rich a flavor or color as butter alone. Most chefs will use different oils depending on what they are cooking.

If they are cooking a Mediterranean style dish, they may choose olive oil, but if they are preparing an Asian dish, sesame oil might be the better choice. You match the oil to the style of cooking but remember much of the flavor will be cooked off because of the high heat so you may just be better off using a generic oil like canola or safflower and add a little of the flavored oil at the end.

The Reluctant Gourmet uses a combination of the two. This way I get some of the flavor from the butter and a higher smoking point from the oil. What you cook and the amount you’re cooking will determine how butter and oil you use. For example, use about 1 to 1-1/2 tablespoons of each for 2 or more chicken cutlets and 1/2 to 1 tablespoon of each for 2 or more fish fillets.

How Much Fat?

Just enough to coat the bottom of the pan. You are not deep frying so just cover the bottom of the pan. When a recipe tells you to add 2 tablespoons of oil to the pan, how do they know what size pan you are using. If you add 2 tablespoons to a small pan, it may be too much. 2 tablespoons in a large pan might not be big enough. So add accordingly.

Important Tip - Preheating the Pan

The biggest mistake home cooks make when sauteing is not getting the pan hot enough. They take cold ingredients right out of the refrigerator, put them into a cold pan and stick it on the flame. Big mistake - don't do it. You'll end with bone dry meat, chicken or fish.

Have you ever asked yourself why your cookbooks and cooking magazines suggest you preheat a pan before adding butter or oil to it? I did and spent a lot of time looking for the answer until I contacted my friends Chef Todd Mohr and Chef Ricco. Thay had several reasons for preheating your pans:

Chef Todd

     * If you add cold protein ingredients to a cold pan and put it on the heat, the ingredients will release some of their moisture as it heats up and you end up with dry meats and fish. It's hard to watch a home cook put that cold white piece of chicken in a saute pan, slowly releasing it's moisture, gently simmering in it's own fat, rather than searing at high heat.

Chef Ricco

     * All pans have hot spots. These are places on a pan that heat up faster than the rest of the pan. If you add butter or oil to a cold pan and then heat it up, it can hit one of these hot spots and start burning. If you start with a hot pan that is uniformly heated, there is less chance for the fat to hit a hot spot and burn. When sauteing, you want the butter to foam up before you start and the oil to "almost" start smoking. If it starts smoking, you are too late and the oil will leave a bad flavor to your dish. You want the oil hot but not smoking. Now you are ready to start the saute.
    * There is an expression, "A watched pot never boils" which means if you stand there and watch a pot of water come to boil, it seems like it is taking forever. Our attention drifts and we get distracted. The same is true when heating up butter and oil in a pan. Have you ever added some cold butter to a cold pan, pushed it around a bit, became distracted and walked away only to have the butter burn? By preheating the pan you are ready to start cooking the moment you add your fat. Your attention is focused.

Why Not Just Pre-Heat The Fat With The Pan

You might think it would save time just to heat the fat in the pan at the same time but this is not a good idea. As fats heat up, they start to degrade once they reach 140° F. So rather than let the fat continuously breakdown from 140°F to your ideal temperature, it's better to add the oil to an already hot pan.

How Much Heat Should You Use When Sauteing?

This is an import question and one I'm asked a lot so I wrote a short article describing How Hot Should You Heat Your Pan When Sauteing?

How to Pre-Heat a Saute Pan?

I suggest you put the pan on medium high heat and when the pan is hot enough to evaporate a few drops of water, you know it has to be at least 212° F. This is a good starting point to add your fat. If you have the heat too high, you risk the chance of burning the fat. Too low and the fat won't be hot enough.

Remember though, once your pan is preheated, you are ready to cook and and when you add your butter and/or oil, you may have crank up your heat a little before you start to sauté. The butter or oil will actually bring down the pan temperature.

Interesting Point About Heating A Pan

If you put it on low heat, won't the pan keep getting hotter and hotter? That's what I use to think but the answer is no. The pan will only get as hot as the amount of heat (btu's) you apply to it. If you preheated a pan on low, it would get to a maximum temperature and that's it. To get more heat you have to add more btu's or in the case of a gas stove, more flame.

Equal Sized Ingredients

Whether it is chopped up vegetables to be used as aromatics to add flavor to the dish, breasts of chicken, filets of fish or steak medallions, you want them all to be the same size so they cook evenly. You especially want the aromatics to be finely chopped or minced so they give off more flavor more quickly.

If the ingredients are all cut at different sizes, some will cook faster and overcook and some will cook slower and undercook. Culinary students learn right away how to make precision cuts by spending hours cutting up vegetables for different dishes.

Basic Technique

If you are using butter, you will know your pan is hot enough and it is time to start when the butter stops foaming and begins to turn a pale brown. If you are using just oil, you will know it is hot enough when it goes from perfectly smooth to lined or shimmering. Be careful, let it go any further and it will start to smoke and you will need to start over.

The photo on the left show canola oil added to a hot pan that is at least 212° F. I raised the heat under the pan and a few minutes later you can see the oil in the pan on the right begin to shimmer. This is just below the smoking point (435° F) and time to saute. For the record, I added some diced onions and a couple of them literally "jumped" out of the pan.

Saute oil

Add your ingredients but be very careful not to let it start smoking. If it does, remove the pan from the heat for a moment. You may want to turn the heat down a little but as soon as you add the ingredients, it should lower the heat in the pan. Cooking time will vary, depending on what you are cooking.

Most recipes give you times for cooking each ingredient but I suggest you use these only as estimates because there is no way they can give you an exact time without knowing size & type of pan you are using, the btu's of your stove top, the thickness of the fish, chicken or meat you are cooking or your level of cooking expertise. The times should be used as guidelines but in the end you need to depend on an internal thermometer in the beginning and experience after that.

Also, never use a fork for flipping, it pierces the meat and lets the juices escape. Depending on what you are cooking, you will want to let whatever you are cooking rest for the juices to redistribute. This give you time to make a delicious pan sauce.


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Most of us are afraid in cooking. This tip on how to saute will help you to learn how to start cooking. It's easy to cook, just follow these tricks and techniques in cooking.

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