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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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OK what is your favorite hint that really works well:
A friend told me to salt and pepper and/or season the steaks several hours before grilling. Great hint - the flavors really change. # 1 daughter has been experimenting with a bottle of POM pomegranate juice. She made a wilted spinach salad using the POM in place of vinegar - she said she can replace and vinegar with the POM. Going to try this one. Your hint(s)? Dimitri |
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![]() Dimitri wrote: > OK what is your favorite hint that really works well: > > Here's mine. When slicing or chopping pungent onions have a tabletop fan or perhaps a box fan pointed at yourself and those teary onions. The fan pretty much keeps those sulphurous fumes from reaching your eyes and nose and the tears at bay. (The over the stove vent fan doesn't work in this instance.) |
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"itsjoannotjoann" > wrote in
ups.com: > > > Dimitri wrote: >> OK what is your favorite hint that really works well: >> >> > > > Here's mine. When slicing or chopping pungent onions have a tabletop > fan or perhaps a box fan pointed at yourself and those teary onions. > The fan pretty much keeps those sulphurous fumes from reaching your > eyes and nose and the tears at bay. > (The over the stove vent fan doesn't work in this instance.) If you chill the onion in the freezer for awhile, it won't make you tear while you slice or dice. Some practical science about molecules in slow motion. Andy |
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Andy wrote:
> > If you chill the onion in the freezer for awhile, it won't make you tear > while you slice or dice. Some practical science about molecules in slow > motion. > > Andy Or you could wear contact lenses, like I do. No onion "juice" gets past these suckers ![]() Cheers Cathy |
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![]() Dimitri wrote: > OK what is your favorite hint that really works well: > [snip] So many. Here's one where the reward is great for no extra effort. When you're going to have parmesan cheese, take it out of the 'fridge and grate or shave it as the first step rather than the last in your meal preparation. In this way it will have time to come to room temp and the fragrance/taste will be noticeably improved. If you're using already grated cheese, take it out of the fridge and remove the container's lid. -aem |
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![]() Andy wrote: > > > > If you chill the onion in the freezer for awhile, it won't make you tear > while you slice or dice. Some practical science about molecules in slow > motion. > > Andy Ooooh, great tip! I would have never thought about chilling in the freezer, normally just grab an onion and go to town on it. Thankssss |
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Remove your ice cube tray from the freezer and before twisting it to break
out the cubes, turn it upsidedown and run it under the kitchen faucet for a few seconds. Turn it upright and twist the tray. The cubes will eject whole, instead of crumbled. Andy |
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![]() Andy wrote: > Remove your ice cube tray from the freezer and before twisting it to break > out the cubes, turn it upsidedown and run it under the kitchen faucet for > a few seconds. Turn it upright and twist the tray. The cubes will eject > whole, instead of crumbled. You're talking metal trays... you old geezer! Plastic ice cube trays can be made non-stick... coat with a light film of vegetable oil, let sit over night, then wash as you normally do dishes (dishwashing machine is ideal), your trays will now be non-stick for years... years later when you notice cubes beginning to stick repeat the process. Odds are you'll buy a new fridge with new trays before those treated trays will need re-treatment. Sheldon |
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On Mon, 11 Jul 2005 17:51:44 +0000, Dimitri wrote:
> OK what is your favorite hint that really works well: > > A friend told me to salt and pepper and/or season the steaks several hours > before grilling. > > Great hint - the flavors really change. > Your hint(s)? > > Dimitri Season steak in advance except for salt.. salt right before cooking. Plenty cracked pepper on in advance and nice light coating of kosher salt right before grilling over hard wood. I think the steak has much more juice done this way. |
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itsjoannotjoann wrote:
>> Dimitri wrote: >>> OK what is your favorite hint that really works well: >>> >>> >> >> >> Here's mine. When slicing or chopping pungent onions have a tabletop >> fan or perhaps a box fan pointed at yourself and those teary onions. >> The fan pretty much keeps those sulphurous fumes from reaching your >> eyes and nose and the tears at bay. >> (The over the stove vent fan doesn't work in this instance.) Cut the root end last.. that is where you get the fumes. Debbie |
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![]() Debbie wrote: > itsjoannotjoann wrote: > >> > >> > >> Here's mine. When slicing or chopping pungent onions have a tabletop > >> fan or perhaps a box fan pointed at yourself and those teary onions. > >> The fan pretty much keeps those sulphurous fumes from reaching your > >> eyes and nose and the tears at bay. > >> (The over the stove vent fan doesn't work in this instance.) > > Cut the root end last.. that is where you get the fumes. > > > Debbie I've done that but *occasionally* I've gotten hold of one that is sooooo pungent I thought it was going to take the knife away from me! :-)) |
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![]() Dimitri wrote: > OK what is your favorite hint that really works well: > > A friend told me to salt and pepper and/or season the steaks several hours > before grilling. > > Great hint - the flavors really change. > > # 1 daughter has been experimenting with a bottle of POM pomegranate juice. She > made a wilted spinach salad using the POM in place of vinegar - she said she can > replace and vinegar with the POM. > > Going to try this one. > > Your hint(s)? > > Dimitri Whether or not the science of it is correct, sprinkling just a bit of plain old baking soda into a pot of beans works well for taking the "toots" out of them. ....Picky |
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In article >,
"Dimitri" > wrote: > > Your hint(s)? > > Dimitri When making deviled eggs, place the yolks into a plastic zip lock bag. Add the rest of your filling ingredients - mayo,salt, pepper, etc - and seal the bag. Squish everything until well blended. Cut off the corner and pipe the filling into the egg whites. Easy clean up that way. marcella |
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On Mon, 11 Jul 2005 17:51:44 GMT, "Dimitri" >
wrote: >OK what is your favorite hint that really works well: To keep celery longer than a few days, wrap it tightly in aluminum foil. Will keep a couple of weeks in the refrigerator' crisper. Use a paper holder found in office supply stores that are shaped like a half oval, about 3" tall and weighted with a slit in the top to hold your recipe printouts while you cook. Takes up little room on your countertop and will hold several recipes. Two off the top of my head, anyway. Terry "Squeaks" Pulliam Burd AAC(F)BV66.0748.CA "If the soup had been as hot as the claret, if the claret had been as old as the bird, and if the bird's breasts had been as full as the waitress's, it would have been a very good dinner." -- Duncan Hines To reply, replace "spaminator" with "cox" |
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JeanineAlyse wrote:
> Whether or not the science of it is correct, sprinkling just a bit of > plain old baking soda into a pot of beans works well for taking the > "toots" out of them. ....but the "toots" are half the fun. ~john |
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![]() >>OK what is your favorite hint that really works well: > To keep leaf lettuce longer, wash only what you need at that time, wrap the head in a damp paper towel, and squeeze the air out of the plastic storage bag before twisting shut. |
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"Dimitri" > wrote:
>OK what is your favorite hint that really works well: I always keep several ziplock bags full of the following, finely diced: red, yellow and green peppers yellow onion red onion celery carrot (VERY fine dice) jalepeno cubanelle or anaheim parsley (no garlic - fresh chop only) You'd be amazed at the uses you find for these when they're prepped and ready to go. Last night, for example, since it's so gloomy, everyone wanted potato soup (Yukon golds). I like mine loaded, nobody else does. So I took a few pinches of each (execpt the anaheims), softened in olive oil and dumped into my bowl. Spice up an omlet with no problem. Instead of butter and sour cream on baked potatoes, I soften the above and pour the mess on top. A real time-saver, and it only takes about 5 minutes every few days. -- The Doc says my brain waves closely match those of a crazed ferret. At least now I have an excuse. |
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![]() "Dimitri" > wrote in message . .. > OK what is your favorite hint that really works well: > > A friend told me to salt and pepper and/or season the steaks several hours > before grilling. > > Great hint - the flavors really change. > > # 1 daughter has been experimenting with a bottle of POM pomegranate juice. She > made a wilted spinach salad using the POM in place of vinegar - she said she can > replace and vinegar with the POM. > > Going to try this one. > > Your hint(s)? Do not make smoothie with lid off blender. Do not put cold hand on hot stove. Do not put hand between meat and knife. Do not put head into hot oven. Do not put clean dick into mucky whore. .... Nah, I think that last one closed it. BTW - I keep seeing 'wilted spinach salad' etc. Isn't it always wilted?!? Shaun aRe |
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