Guest guest Posted January 6, 2002 Report Share Posted January 6, 2002 * Exported from MasterCook Mac * How to Follow a Recipe (Info) Recipe By : Martha Rose Shulman, The Best Vegetarian Recipes Serving Size : 1 Preparation Time :0:00 Categories : 0 Info and Techniques Amount Measure Ingredient -- Preparation Method -------- ------------ -------------------------------- -- How to Follow a Recipe -- Cooking schools teach cooks to prepare all ingredients ahead and arrange them in separate containers. This is called a mise en place. It's a good practice, particularly for beginning cooks. It makes it easier to be neat and precise as you cook, and you never get into panic because everything is there in front of you. As you become more experienced and confident, you'll find that you might not need to prep everything before, that you can actually be measuring out an ingredient or preparing another while the onions are cooking or the water is coming to the boil. As my colleague Deborah Madison points out in her excellent book, Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone, cooking is not a linear activity. For example, you begin boiling the pasta water first, although the pasta is the last thing you cook. But to understand the order and rhythm of cooking you need some experience. 1 Read the recipe all the way through first. This is essential, no matter how much experience you have. After all these years of cooking, I still regret it if I don't read a recipe through. You'll be able to visualize the dish, and you won't be hit with surprises while cooking the food. 2 Get out the ingredients called for. You don't necessarily have to prepare them all, but they should be nearby. 3 Get out the equipment that you'll need (steps 2 and 3 can be reversed). 4 Decide on serving dishes. Will you be serving directly from the pan or in separate serving dishes? Will you serve the plates in the kitchen or at the table? 5 Prepare ( " prep " ) the ingredients as instructed, or at least decide what needs to be prepared first. Measure out seasonings or have them at the ready with dry measuring spoons. 6 Read through the recipe again, then proceed step by step as directed. Tasting and Seasoning Following a recipe isn't all there is to cooking. If it were, everybody would be a good cook. To succeed with a dish, you have to taste. You are not finished with the dish until you have tasted and approved it. Keep a special spoon (not the cooking spoon) handy for tasting. Different cooks taste at different times. I usually taste toward the end of cooking, while others taste constantly throughout. What I am looking for is flavor. Think of the best dishes you've ever eaten Their flavors were vivid. This is how you want your food to taste. If you don't feel that the flavors linger long enough on your palate, or that the ingredients are in sharp focus, ask yourself first if there's enough salt. It's very common for dishes to be undersalted. Sometimes it's a bit more garlic that's needed, or maybe another pinch of herbs or a bit of acid, like a sprinkle of lemon juice or peel. Or does it need a bit more heat? Cayenne or more chile pepper? Remember that your clove of garlic may be smaller than mine, and the jalapeno I used to test a recipe might be hotter than yours. In the end, the flavors of your dish depend on your taste buds. If you're not exactly sure what the recipe needs, ladle or spoon out a small amount into a small bowl. Add a little bit of what you think it needs; for example, sprinkle on a very small amount of salt or a drop of lemon juice, give the mixture a stir, and taste. You will know when you've hit it right. Source: Martha Rose Shulman, The Best Vegetarian Recipes, 2001 Typed and MC Formatted by Eruna Schultheiss - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _____ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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