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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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Can potatoes and carrots be peeled the evening before they're used in a crock
pot? They'd be for beef stew. My guess is put them in water in the fridge after peeling or would the potatoes soak up too much water? Thanks. |
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On Sep 15, 12:02*am, wrote:
> > Can potatoes and carrots be peeled the evening before they're used in a crock > pot? They'd be for beef stew. My guess is put them in water in the fridge after > peeling or would the potatoes soak up too much water? Thanks. > > I often prep vegetables the day or night before I'm going to cook something in a crockpot. Never have noticed any soaking up water, it does keep those potatoes from turning that nasty gray/black color. |
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> wrote in message
... > Can potatoes and carrots be peeled the evening before they're used in a > crock > pot? They'd be for beef stew. My guess is put them in water in the fridge > after > peeling or would the potatoes soak up too much water? Thanks. Two important things: Cover with water and refridgerate. If left out on the counter, especially in warm weather, one day, maybe, two days and you'll see foam on the top of the water and they have soured. They might be ready for vodka but not your stew. |
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On Sep 15, 2:34*am, "Julie Bove" > wrote:
> > wrote: > > > Can potatoes and carrots be peeled the evening before they're used in > > a crock pot? They'd be for beef stew. My guess is put them in water > > in the fridge after peeling or would the potatoes soak up too much > > water? Thanks. > > Potatoes will go black if you don't keep them in cold, salted water. > > Salt is unnecessary. I've never used it in the water and have yet to have a black potato because of the omission of it. |
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On Sep 15, 11:53*pm, "Julie Bove" > wrote:
> > wrote: > > >> Potatoes will go black if you don't keep them in cold, salted water. > > > Salt is unnecessary. *I've never used it in the water and have yet to > > have a black potato because of the omission of it. > > Really? *Hmmm... *I've always heard/read to use salt. > > You don't need it, honest. |
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Steve Pope wrote:
> > > wrote: > > >On Sep 15, 12:02 am, wrote: > > >> Can potatoes and carrots be peeled the evening before they're used in a crock > >> pot? They'd be for beef stew. My guess is put them in water in the > >fridge after > >> peeling or would the potatoes soak up too much water? Thanks. > > >I often prep vegetables the day or night before I'm going to cook > >something in a crockpot. Never have noticed any soaking up water, it > >does keep those potatoes from turning that nasty gray/black color. > > Okay, why would you peel potaotes and carrots in the first place? > > Steve I rarely peel potatoes but I do peel carrots. Just me. G. |
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Steve Pope wrote:
> >I often prep vegetables the day or night before I'm going to cook > >something in a crockpot. Never have noticed any soaking up water, it > >does keep those potatoes from turning that nasty gray/black color. > > Okay, why would you peel potaotes and carrots in the first place? One doesn't peel carrots because they don't have a skin. What they have is a dirty outer layer of cells that usually taste bitter. But since carrots have no skin or peel, they don't discolor if you scrape them and let them sit before cooking. |
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On Sep 16, 1:52*pm, (Steve Pope) wrote:
> > > wrote: > > >On Sep 15, 12:02*am, wrote: > > >> Can potatoes and carrots be peeled the evening before they're used in a crock > >> pot? They'd be for beef stew. My guess is put them in water in the > >fridge after > >> peeling or would the potatoes soak up too much water? Thanks. > >I often prep vegetables the day or night before I'm going to cook > >something in a crockpot. *Never have noticed any soaking up water, it > >does keep those potatoes from turning that nasty gray/black color. > > Okay, why would you peel potaotes and carrots in the first place? > > Steve > > _I_ peel potatoes because the dish I might be preparing does not call for the skins to be left on and to save time from having to do it the day of preparing the dish. You _never_ peel potatoes? |
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On Sun, 16 Sep 2012 16:41:17 -0400, George M. Middius
> wrote: >Steve Pope wrote: > >> >I often prep vegetables the day or night before I'm going to cook >> >something in a crockpot. Never have noticed any soaking up water, it >> >does keep those potatoes from turning that nasty gray/black color. >> >> Okay, why would you peel potaotes and carrots in the first place? > >One doesn't peel carrots because they don't have a skin. Carrots certainly do have a skin only it's thinner and more tender than with most veggies. The skin of carrots is bitter, that's why with most commercial preparations they are peeled, usually abraded/sanded away to save time/labor... that's how those "baby" carrots were born that low IQers are willing to pay double. The carrot skin has a higher proportion of nutrients than the rest of the carrot but not so high that it matters, just eat two more bites of carrot to make it up. For sweet dishes like carrot cake they don't need to be peeled, the added sugar and other flavorings offsets the bitterness. There are an enormous variety of carrots out there, shapes, sizes, colors, however very few markets carry other than the ordinary nantes http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/ar/archiv...carrot1104.htm |
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Brooklyn1 <Gravesend1> wrote:
> On Sun, 16 Sep 2012 16:41:17 -0400, George M. Middius > > wrote: > >> Steve Pope wrote: >> >>>> I often prep vegetables the day or night before I'm going to cook >>>> something in a crockpot. Never have noticed any soaking up water, it >>>> does keep those potatoes from turning that nasty gray/black color. >>> >>> Okay, why would you peel potaotes and carrots in the first place? >> >> One doesn't peel carrots because they don't have a skin. > > Carrots certainly do have a skin only it's thinner and more tender > than with most veggies. The skin of carrots is bitter, that's why > with most commercial preparations they are peeled, usually > abraded/sanded away to save time/labor... that's how those "baby" > carrots were born that low IQers are willing to pay double. The > carrot skin has a higher proportion of nutrients than the rest of the > carrot but not so high that it matters, just eat two more bites of > carrot to make it up. For sweet dishes like carrot cake they don't > need to be peeled, the added sugar and other flavorings offsets the > bitterness. There are an enormous variety of carrots out there, > shapes, sizes, colors, however very few markets carry other than the > ordinary nantes > http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/ar/archiv...carrot1104.htm I go part way. Just remove most of the skin, but leave some on. Last time I just scraped with steak knife, for my soup. I also boil the pealed potatoes in water with some of the skins. Take out skins and add the works into the big pot of soup. The potato has much nutrients just under the skin, which is normally removed. Greg |
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On Sep 16, 5:29*pm, (Steve Pope) wrote:
> > > wrote: > > >On Sep 16, 1:52*pm, (Steve Pope) wrote: > > >> Okay, why would you peel potaotes and carrots in the first place? > >_I_ *peel potatoes because the dish I might be preparing does not call > >for the skins to be left on and to save time from having to do it the > >day of preparing the dish. *You *_never_ *peel potatoes? > > Actually, no I never do. > > Sometimes, I use thinner-skin ones if I feel a Russet would have > too much skin effect. > > Steve > > Ok, fair enough. Unless I'm doing baked potatoes or the small red potatoes for 'tater salad, my potatoes are peeled. |
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On 9/18/12 4:45 PM, Krypsis wrote:
> > Given that it takes so little time to peel potatoes and carrots.... I take it you've never served in the military. -- Larry |
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On 19/09/2012 7:11 AM, pltrgyst wrote:
> On 9/18/12 4:45 PM, Krypsis wrote: >> >> Given that it takes so little time to peel potatoes and carrots.... > > I take it you've never served in the military. > > -- Larry > Dixie bashing, BTDT. Missed out on the peeling. Besides, I wasn't expecting that you were peeling for thousands, just a family. -- Krypsis |
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pltrgyst wrote:
> > Given that it takes so little time to peel potatoes and carrots.... > > I take it you've never served in the military. I'd guess peeling 100 lbs for a military mess takes longer than peeling 2 lbs for home cooking. |
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