Thursday, November 11, 2010

10 Tips to Improve Your Cooking Skills

NOT AN ORIGINAL WORK, click here for the original post.

FOCUS ON INGREDIENT QUALITY
Truly,the difference between an ok chef and a good chef is the quality of the ingredients. Food pretty much speaks for itself. Chefs only are the translators between food and those who enjoy it. A good product, say a farm-raised pork belly paired with off-the-ground, organic vegetables is best just roasted and the veggies just flash sautéed. Salt & pepper. What else does it really need? My cooking is simple, or rather, it tries to be. Paradoxically, simple is hard to achieve. Look at Picasso or Cezanne or Matisse. So much simplicity in their work; yet so much mastery, control and experience. They pretty much spent a lifetime trying to achieve simplicity. Simplicity is the key. Focus on the best ingredients you can find. Focus on 3-4 main ingredients per dish. Focus on local, organic, artisan food made with love, care, and respect. Don’t over do it. Let the wholesomeness, goodness of natural ingredients speak for themselves.

THINK TECHNIQUES
Recipes won’t get you anywhere. Think techniques. What’s a technique? Roasting is one.So is mirepoix, or steaming, or sautéing, or braising. Do me a favor. Grab a technique book such as The Professional Chef or Jacques Pepin’s Complete Techniques. Learn only 10 techniques. Then go grocery shopping for whatever you find (see first tip). Come back home. Think deeply about your ingredients. And apply some of the 10 techniques you’ve learn. No books; no recipes. Your inner creativity will reveal itself, and you’ll be much happier in the kitchen preparing what YOU like, not what a cookbook tells you to make.

INVEST IN A GREAT SET OF KNIVES
No way around it. You gotta have the tools. Get proper German or Japanese knives,whatever fits your fancy, but for god sake, don’t be afraid to spend the money.If you’re cash-limited, only buy 3 knives: a chef knife, a paring knife and a filet knife.

INVEST IN A SERIOUS CUTTING BOARD
I don’t mean to make you spend your hard-earned money, but that’s also a pre-requisite. A thick, butcher block like cutting board is the way to go. And please, please, if you have one of those horrible glass cutting board, make a Tiffany lamp out of it and don’t ever bring it back in the kitchen. Proper cutting board will help you cut sharper,improve your precision and organization in more ways than one, let alone give you a sense of comfort that is much needed in the kitchen.

GET A SKILLET
See,it’s not all about spending money. A skillet is dirt cheap. Season it right or steal it from Grandma. I could cook a lifetime of dishes only using a well-seasoned skillet. It can sear beautifully, sauté, roast, make casserole,braise and more. The heat is spread beautifully all over the surface thanks to the conductibility of cast-iron. It goes in the oven. A skillet is really all you need as far as pots & pans.


LET MEAT REST
This is a great, ultra-important tip for beginners/amateur home cooks. When you roast meat, say a pork tenderloin, make sure you let it rest 1/2 the time as it has cooked, before serving it. Did you roast it 16 minutes? Let it rest 8 minutes.Why? Because searing, roasting or grilling is extremely violent on the meat. It pushes all the juices inside the center and dries out all the fibers around the meat. If you serve it right away, the juices don’t have time to travel back from the inside out and irrigate all the fibers back. The result? A much tender piece of meat. Works with all meat and all cooking techniques, providing you don’t overcook things.

Which brings me to my next tip:

STOP OVER COOKING THINGS!

Look, I know you do it. I’ve seen you. Americans are so freaked out with diseases and sickness and tragedy and Armageddon, that they think they will automatically get sick or die if they don’t kill their meat the second time around. Relax. If you’re ingredients are first-class, rare salmon is ok. Medium-rare pork is ok.Flash steamed asparagus is ok. Everything will look and taste much better and much livelier.

OSMOSIS AND DIFFUSION

That’s a big one too. This is where you learn if you should use cold or hot water to start your soup, or a cold or hot pan to sear your steak. Osmosis and diffusion are principles of physics. I didn’t make them up. Let’s translate osmosis and diffusion to the Culinary Arts. You need to know about the following little experiment. Let’s say that you take 2 identically-sized sauce pans,pour 1 gallon of water into both, make sure that one water is boiling, while the other one is cold. Now let’s say that you take 2equally-sized onions, plunge one in the cold water, and the other in the boiling water. Finally, let’s say that you cook them both for 30 minutes (the cold water pan will have to be brought to a boil, of course) and then you taste both waters. Well, one water (the one we started cold) will have a strong taste of onion, while the other one (the one we started boiling) will have a taste of,well, plain water. That’s the principle of osmosis and diffusion in a nutshell.But think about that for a second. Actually, non! Think about that every time you cook something. If you want to make a rich minestrone soup with a flavorful vegetable broth, of course you’re going to start your soup with COLD water. But if you want to keep your asparagus bright, green, and flavorful, you’re going to start cooking them in HOT water. Wow. Cool tip, non? It also works with searing and grilling. Because we want our steak full of flavor, moist and crusty, we’ll start putting our steak on a HOT grill, as opposed to a cold one.

PICTURE YOURSELF AT THE TABLE OF A VERY PRICEY RESTAURANT

You paid the big bucks for an outstanding culinary experience. The server brings you a plate of totally undercooked, cold piece of salmon and brown, sloppy, grossly overcooked asparagus. Are you happy? Are you liking your “outstanding culinary experience”? Or do you totally want to go Gordon Ramsay on the server? Exactly.You’re not happy. Then picture yourself back into chef form, cook your salmon a little more and get another batch of asparagus in the steamer. And this time, don’t overcook them.

COOK WITH WINE MORE OFTEN

I don’t mean in the food, I mean wine in your system. Look, cooking is supposed to be fun, lively, personal but convivial too, and altruistic. Cooking is a cultural experience. People have cooked for thousands of years. It’s necessary,but it can also be really, really fun. So pour yourself a glass of good wine,put some music on, relax, and take your time to have fun in the kitchen. Don’t stress yourself. Don’t overextend yourself. Don’t plan more things than you can actually do. Make it simple and fun. Not stressful and worrisome.

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