mardi 19 août 2014

The Quick Cooking Cheat Sheet

The Quick Cooking Cheat Sheet

Love homemade food but hate how long it takes? I've compiled a little cheat-sheet for you that will save you a whole lot of time and stress the next time you cook.
Quick Cooking
1. Before you do anything, turn on the oven/broiler, preheat a skillet/boil the water. It takes time for things to heat up, so this should always be your first step.
2. Use kitchen scissors to chop cooked or tender raw vegetables (especially greens) right in the bowl or pan.
Quick Cooking
3. Put everything in a colander and rinse with cold water. While cooking, wash the vegetables you’ll need to use towards the end of a recipe. Carrots and cabbage should be rinsed before trimmed or peeled.
Quick Cooking
4. Need minced garlic/ginger/chilies at the same time? Peel the garlic and ginger, trim the chilies, and put all of them in a pile. Then simply chop and mince them together.
Quick Cooking
5. The bigger the food – the longer it takes to cook, so cut it to smaller bits, and the smaller – the better (and faster). 
Quick Cooking
6. Making a soup? Grate veggies instead of chopping them. Chunks take 20 minutes or more to soften, but if grated, they’ll be ready in no time.
Quick Cooking
7. If you need to sauté or simmer something moist (vegetables, beans, or sauces), lay different food on top of it (especially proteins, i.e. fish/chicken/eggs), cover and let the steam cook that upper layer. Pro tip: for a fast eggs Florentine, steam the eggs on top of the spinach instead of poaching them separately.
Quick Cooking
8. When braising, use less liquid: Submerge the ingredients in one inch of liquid, cover the pot, and cook. Remember to occasionally turn the ingredients and to add liquid if needed.
Quick Cooking
9. Making one sandwich is faster than making 2 (or 4): Simply cut a baguette in half and make your sandwich. Cut it to as many pieces as you want.
Quick Cooking
10. The fastest way to prep apples, pears, tomatoes, cabbage, peaches, and bell peppers, is to slice downward around the core, then simply cut the bits into slices/wedges.
Quick Cooking
11. Why roast winter veggies when you can eat them raw? Squash, parsnips, beets, and celery root make great salads and slaws. If you want them less crispy, marinate them for half an hour (or longer) in a vinaigrette.
Quick Cooking
12. Process Brussels sprouts! The processor is very quick and the small pieces broil in half the time (Remember tip #5!). 
Quick Cooking
13. A soup can take hours, but cold soups (like gazpacho) is simply putting ingredients in a blender and turning it on.
Quick Cooking
14. Use frozen vegetables. They’re barely processed and were frozen while incredibly fresh, so enjoy them, they’re a huge time-saver.
Quick Cooking
15. You don’t have to wait for the oven to reach the temperature before putting in the food (unless the recipe calls for it). Vegetables and slow-roasted meat come out better like this.
Quick Cooking
16. Your butter is too hard? Melt it in the microwave! Pro tip: Use a brush for an even amount over your bread.
Quick Cooking
17. Hate rolling meatballs? Use two spoons to put the meat in the skillet - They’ll taste the same!
Quick Cooking
18. Use cooked cabbage as a base instead of a wrapper—same taste, less work.
Quick Cooking
19. Forget lasagna noodles, use egg roll wrappers instead! They don’t need to be boiled and are already in easy-to-handle square

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