I learned this French phrase, mise en place, from some friends who are professional chefs. It literally means "putting in place," or -- more colloquially -- having everything in place. When these chefs are training others, this is something they stress. You want to have an orderly work area, with everything in its place, knowing that you have all the ingredients and utensils and so forth before you dive into a recipe (and find yourself ill-prepared to complete it).
One of the things I have always disliked about my wife's approach to cooking is that dirty pans and utensils just get stacked at the side. If those haven't been cleaned before the next cooking session, they are just pushed a little further to the side and more is added to the mess. In contrast, if I go in the kitchen to cook and there are dirty dishes, pots and pans, or utensils, I begin by washing and getting everything clean. As I cook, I wash things as they have been used.
I think it would be accurate to say that a lot of the "junkiness" I've seen in our kitchen has to do with the fact that we have more stuff than we need ... in case some of it is dirty when it's needed. The whole concept of mise en place has given me a new outlook on this. If everything is in its place, then you don't need extras ... you can clear the clutter ... you can have a workspace that makes sense and which is conducive to what you're seeking to accomplish.
What I'm encouraging is organization. This can take a number of different forms, as different approaches make sense to different people. But the more you de-clutter, the more effective you will find yourself, especially in the kitchen.
Saturday, June 16, 2012
Tuesday, June 12, 2012
Measuring Up
My son asked me a question while we
were cooking this past weekend, and I thought it might be good to
share it for others who might wonder the same thing. When you're
using measuring cups, what is the difference between a measuring cup
for liquids and one for dry measure?
As far as volume, there isn't a
difference. A 1-cup measure is a 1-cup measure. A 1-cup measure by any other name ... well, you get the idea.
However, different measuring cups are
designed for different purposes. And that is what is important, when
you're determining which to use.
A liquid measuring cup has two special
features to help you with liquids. First of all, there is a pour
spout. Second, there is extra room at the top of the cup, above the
1-cup line (or whatever the top measuring line is). Both of these
things help you measure liquids and get them poured into the pan or
bowl without spilling.
When you are working with dry goods
(sugar, flour, etc.), on the other hand, the measuring cup doesn't
have extra room at the top. Instead, you should fill the measure and
level it by scraping all the excess off with the back edge of a knife
or other flat utensil. It is hard to get dry goods level in a
measuring cup designed for liquids, because you'll never be filling
to the top of a measuring cup designed for liquids.
There is a second issue, as well. Dry
goods tend to settle more as the diameter of the measuring cup
expands. So if you use a measuring cup for liquids – which tend to
be larger around – you will actually end up with more of the dry
substance, simply because the settling will mean that more of the
substance will fit in the measure. (This is assuming that you are
not packing the cup, as you are sometimes instructed to do with
something like brown sugar.)
Finally, when dealing with liquids, the
meniscus has to be taken into account. When you put water in a glass
measuring cup and look closely, you see that the water is a little
higher against the sides of the cup than in the middle. And if you
fill a measuring cup designed for solids with water, it will “dome”
on top. This is caused (in both cases) by surface tension … and
liquid measuring cups are generally designed to take this into
account (where the lines are drawn on the side). In that way, the
measuring devices are slightly different … because one accounts for
the meniscus and the other does not.
The bottom line is that there are
slight differences … although not enough to throw the typical
recipe off by much. The difference is that liquids and solids should
be measured using devices designed for that purpose. With liquids,
you need to account for the meniscus and be able to measure and pour
without spilling; with dry goods, you need to be able to fill the
measure and level the top. Use the measuring cup designed for what
it is that you are measuring, and you'll save yourself some trouble.
Monday, June 11, 2012
Tuna Mac Casserole
This is an extremely easy recipe I ran across a number of
years ago. Even though it's simple -- it is
NOT a gourmet dish -- but it's tasty and continues to be a "regular"
at my house. You'll find the recipe,
ready to print in half-sheet format, here.
INGREDIENTS:
1 box (7-8
ounces) macaroni & cheese
Milk &
butter (for preparing mac & cheese)
1 can (10-11
ounces) cream of mushroom soup
1 sleeve of
saltine crackers, crushed
2 cans (5
ounces each) of tuna
UTENSILS:
1
medium-sized pan for preparing macaroni & cheese
Large mixing
bowl
Glass baking
dish … 11"x7"x2" Pyrex is an ideal size
Liquid
measuring cup (to measure milk for mac & cheese)
Cooking spoon
for stirring
Strainer/colander
Knife
Can opener
Okay, so I'm listing everything but the kitchen sink. (You'll need one of those, too, by the way.) I'm just trying to be thorough, making no
assumptions about anyone's cooking skills.
PROCESS:
1a) You'll begin by making the macaroni & cheese,
according to the package instructions.
Put water in the pan and bring it to a boil. Add the macaroni, bringing the water back to
a slow boil. Stir occasionally ... and
make sure it doesn't boil over ... and cook for the length of time specified.
1b) While the macaroni is cooking, take the sleeve of
saltine crackers and pour them into the large mixing bowl. Crush them in your hands. You don't want them reduced to a powder, but
you should crush them so that the largest pieces are about a quarter inch to
half inch in size.
2) As the macaroni is almost done, cut the needed amount of
butter from a stick (using the knife), and measure out the necessary amount of
milk. Set both of these aside, ready to
be used. Start preheating the oven to
350 degrees.
When the macaroni
has finished cooking, turn off the burner.
Pour the macaroni and water into the strainer or colander in the
sink. After the water has drained, pick
up the strainer, shake it side to side to get as much water out as possible,
and then pour the macaroni back into the pan.
Quickly add the
pre-measured milk and butter and begin stirring. Stir in the packet of cheese powder that came
with the macaroni & cheese. Continue
stirring until all of the butter has melted and the cheese powder has fully
dissolved.
3) Add the prepared macaroni & cheese to your large mixing
bowl (with the crackers in it). Add the
cream of mushroom soup and tuna. Mix
everything together well.
4) Pour the mixture into your glass baking dish. If you want, you can lightly spray the bottom
and sides with non-stick cooking spray before you do this -- it isn't necessary,
but will make it a little easier to clean the dish when you are finished. Spread the mixture evenly, so the top is
level.
5) Place the baking dish in the oven. Cook for 30 minutes.
When it is done, serve it with a salad and maybe a green
vegetable (green beans or English peas).
Saturday, June 9, 2012
Real Men Don't Have to Cry (when chopping onion)
It took me a few days to get this post ready. I was trying to figure out some technical stuff -- like how to take a video, get it to my computer, add subtitles, and get it uploaded for access from this site. You will notice two things, almost immediately:
1) As previously stated, I am not a professional chef. I'm a "regular guy," just like you. I don't have superb knife skills.
2) I am not skilled at shooting and editing video. I admit that this isn't a great video ... so you don't have to tell me that the video could be better quality.
(By the way, I shot the video on my Asus Transformer EeePad tablet, then sent the file to my Box cloud storage account for retrieval on my computer. Once there, I used the VideoPad Video Editor to edit the video, saving the new file in Box, to be accessed by the link below.)
So let's get down to it. We need to chop (or dice) an onion. We don't particularly want to shed a lot of tears in the process. After all, your eyes sting after a while. So is there a quick and easy way to get an onion chopped?
It just so happens that there is. The video clip (click on the link below) shows me dicing an onion, following these six easy steps:
1) Remove the dry "skin" on the outer layer.
2) Cut off the tapered end of the onion.
3) Using a sharp chef's knife, make horizontal cuts into the onion -- but not all the way through. The finer you want the onion chopped/diced, the more cuts you should make. (That is, you will need more cuts, closer together, for a finer dice.)
4) Rotate the onion 90 degrees and repeat Step #3. You may need to hold the onion together a bit as you do this, so watch your fingers! (You have a sharp knife, remember?)
5) Cut the onion vertically, through the previous cuts. Again, the finer you want the onion to be diced, the more cuts you'll want to make (not cutting off as much each time).
6) Using your knife in a rocking motion, go over the onion pieces on the cutting board, making sure that any larger pieces are cut down to size in the process.
The best news of all is that the onion is diced and ready to go into the skillet before my eyes start to water.
Here is the video clip:
1) As previously stated, I am not a professional chef. I'm a "regular guy," just like you. I don't have superb knife skills.
2) I am not skilled at shooting and editing video. I admit that this isn't a great video ... so you don't have to tell me that the video could be better quality.
(By the way, I shot the video on my Asus Transformer EeePad tablet, then sent the file to my Box cloud storage account for retrieval on my computer. Once there, I used the VideoPad Video Editor to edit the video, saving the new file in Box, to be accessed by the link below.)
So let's get down to it. We need to chop (or dice) an onion. We don't particularly want to shed a lot of tears in the process. After all, your eyes sting after a while. So is there a quick and easy way to get an onion chopped?
It just so happens that there is. The video clip (click on the link below) shows me dicing an onion, following these six easy steps:
1) Remove the dry "skin" on the outer layer.
2) Cut off the tapered end of the onion.
3) Using a sharp chef's knife, make horizontal cuts into the onion -- but not all the way through. The finer you want the onion chopped/diced, the more cuts you should make. (That is, you will need more cuts, closer together, for a finer dice.)
4) Rotate the onion 90 degrees and repeat Step #3. You may need to hold the onion together a bit as you do this, so watch your fingers! (You have a sharp knife, remember?)
5) Cut the onion vertically, through the previous cuts. Again, the finer you want the onion to be diced, the more cuts you'll want to make (not cutting off as much each time).
6) Using your knife in a rocking motion, go over the onion pieces on the cutting board, making sure that any larger pieces are cut down to size in the process.
The best news of all is that the onion is diced and ready to go into the skillet before my eyes start to water.
Here is the video clip:
Monday, June 4, 2012
Beef Enchilada Casserole
I can't find the source for this Beef Enchilada
Casserole recipe. I know it isn't my
own, but – unfortunately – I cannot credit a source at this time. A PDF file with the recipe printed in
half-sheet format is located here.
INGREDIENTS:
1
pound lean ground beef
15-ounce
can mild enchilada sauce
15-ounce
can tomato sauce
1
small onion (finely chopped)
½ cup
green onion (finely chopped)
2
cups (8 ounces) grated cheese (Colby-Jack or cheddar)
This is "pizza cheese"
½ package
flour tortillas
Salt
& pepper (to taste – about ¼ teaspoon of each)
You can include green chilies if you would like to
add some zest. Another ingredient that adds
a nice flavor is black olives (finely chopped).
A small can of either, or whatever other ingredients you would like to
add, will be plenty.
Note that
I am using lean ground beef. This will
have little fat that cooks off during the browning process, and does not need
to be drained for this recipe. If you
use beef that is more than 7% fat, you will probably need to drain the fat
after the meat is browned (that is, at the beginning of Step 3).
UTENSILS:
Large
skillet
Glass
baking dish (13"x9" Pyrex)
Spatula
Cutting
board
Chef's
knife (or any other sharp knife)
½ cup
(dry) measuring cup
¼ teaspoon
measuring spoon (if needed, for salt & pepper)
Non-stick
baking spray
PROCESS:
1) Chop the onion.
You want it chopped fairly fine.
NOTE THAT STEPS 2a AND 2b (BELOW) SHOULD BE
PERFORMED TOGETHER.
2a) Put the beef and onion in the skillet. Set the burner on medium-low. (The burners on my cook top can be set to Low-2-3-4-5-6-High. I set the burner on 3 for browning.)
The goal
is to brown the beef. Use a spatula to
break the beef up into pieces, mixing it with the onion as you do so. As the beef browns, continue using the
spatula to break up the pieces as you turn the meat. If you leave it sitting too long, some of the
meat will burn – and that is not a good thing – so turn the meat and break up
the pieces every 2-3 minutes.
To make
sure the meat is cooked – without burning – realize that a little patience is
involved. Expect about 20 minutes for
the meat to brown well.
2b) While the meat is cooking, chop the green
onion. Like the onion, you'll want it
chopped fairly fine … you'll end up with a bunch of thinly-cut rings. Use the ½-cup measure to keep up with how
much you've chopped.
If you
are going to add another ingredient that needs preparation, this is the time
for that, as well. Black olives, for
example, make a nice addition … chop those finely.
3) After the meat has been thoroughly browned, add
the enchilada sauce, tomato sauce, and green onion. Add a little bit of salt and pepper. (I use about a ¼ teaspoon of each.) If you are adding other ingredients – like
green chilies or black olives – add them now.
Mix everything together well, turn the burner down to about half the
temperature (I browned the meat on "3," so I turn the knob down to about
"1½"), and let it simmer for 10-12 minutes.
While the
mixture is simmering, you can wash the cutting board and knife. With a quick rinse of the measuring cup and
spoon, everything is clean and ready to put away.
About
halfway through the simmer, start preheating the oven to 350° F (175° C).
4) You are ready to fill the baking dish.
a) Spray the bottom of the dish lightly with non-stick
spray.
b) Tear tortillas in pieces and cover the bottom of
the dish. I use small (about 6"
diameter) tortillas and tear them in quarters.
c) Pour about half of the meat & sauce mixture
over the tortillas, spreading it evenly.
d) Sprinkle about half the cheese over the top.
e) Repeat steps (b)-(d) so that there are two layers
of everything.
5) Put the casserole in the oven and let it bake for
20 minutes. (While the
casserole is baking, wash the skillet and spatula.)
6) When the casserole has finished baking, let it
cool for 5 minutes. You can use a
spatula to cut it into pieces, and the pieces should lift out easily. Leftovers can be refrigerated (or frozen) after
the casserole has cooled, to be reheated later.
This is an easy recipe. Serve it with corn (Mexican corn, if that
appeals to your taste buds) and a small garden salad for a nice, nutritious
meal.
About the Recipes
As I share recipes, I admit that I have created very few of them on my own. Some I have stumbled
across recently, through a web site or in a cookbook. Some I added to my collection years ago. Where possible, I will credit the source ... but
I know that I will not always be able to do so.
I mentioned, in a previous post, that I like to
print recipes on half-sheets (5½" W x 8½" H), which can be printed
side-by-side on regular (8½" x 11") printer paper and cut in
half. With each recipe I share, I will
share a link to a PDF file that has the recipe ready to print in that format.
I will also, in the blog itself, provide some
"expanded instructions" that will help those who are a little lost in
the kitchen. These instructions will
help you know what needs to be happening at each step in the process.
It is always good to make sure that you have
everything assembled before beginning to prepare a dish. This means that you have all of the
ingredients, of course. It also means that
you have located pans, baking dishes, measuring cups, and so forth. The more organized you are at the outset, the
less the likelihood of running into a problem in the process.
The other "general tip" is to read through
a recipe (and the expanded instructions) before you begin, to get a good
understanding of what you'll be asked to do.
All of the recipes I will share are fairly easy to prepare, but it's
still good practice to know what will be required before you begin.
Sunday, June 3, 2012
Organizing Your Recipes
Organizing recipes is something that I have found to be extremely helpful. Many people use
a recipe box or other form of index-card filing system. I have chosen to work with a 3-ring binder
that holds "half sheets" -- 5½"W x 8½"H -- which I print
two-to-a-page (landscape mode) on regular-sized paper and then cut in
half. I have found that most recipes fit
nicely on a page of this size ... and I don't have to keep rewriting things on
index cards.
When I share recipes with you on this blog, I will
attempt to also include a PDF file with the recipe ready to print in that
format. You can print one recipe, then
flip and reverse the page to print another recipe on the other half of the
page.
Let me tell you why I find this helpful -- there are
three key reasons. First of all, there
are a large number of sources for recipes ... including cookbooks, web pages,
cooking apps on your mobile device, and index cards that you find in your mom's kitchen. It makes sense to get all of these assembled
together into a usable collection.
Second, keeping my recipes in this format saves a
lot of time -- because I don't have to remember on which page in which cookbook
a particular recipe was found. Many of the recipes in a cookbook are things that I'll never
attempt, and to keep flipping past those
every time I want to get to the recipe I want to prepare is
wasted time and energy. Yes, I have cookbooks ...
yes, I often try new things. But once I
have tried something and discovered that it is a "keeper," it is
transferred into my notebook.
Third, and most important of all, this allows me to
make adjustments. Early in my cooking career,
I would toss recipes that I was not going to repeat. I have since learned that
some can be salvaged, with a bit of adjustment. If the printed recipe
has a little too much onion, make a note on your copy of the recipe to not use
quite as much. If you decide to add an
ingredient not in the original, make a note. If the recipe
calls for an ingredient that is difficult to find (or expensive), make a note
about the substitutes that can be used instead.
The notebook -- or index card -- allows you to customize a recipe to
your tastes. This helps you make your recipes your own.
For me, index cards are a little too compact -- and it requires a lot of writing (and re-writing). I like the half-sheets because they give me
enough room to make notes (and keep the print large enough to read when I'm
glancing at the page mid-preparation). I
also save the recipes on my computer -- formatted for half-sheets -- so that I
can print new copies whenever I need them. I can print a new copy after modifications have been made and the recipe is "perfected" ... or when I spill something on the page and just need a fresh copy.
Regardless of the format you choose, get your
recipes organized. Even if you only have
five recipes you are comfortable with at the moment, get a system started. It will reap huge dividends in the long run ...
and the sooner you start, the easier it will be.
Saturday, June 2, 2012
Who Am I to Write a Cooking Blog?!?
I didn't marry until two months before my 25th
birthday. As a bachelor, I fed myself about
as much as I ate out. Even though I did
some cooking, I can't say that I cooked very well at that time. Rather than saying that my meals were appealing,
it would be more accurate to simply say that they were nutritious and edible. Many of my meals were frozen -- or Some-Type-of-Meat
Helpers which were prepared out of a box.
In my marriage, we followed the
"traditional" roles in many things.
For one, my wife did the bulk of the cooking. I did continue to cook occasionally, and I had
a few dishes which were my "specialties." I would also sometimes look through a
cookbook and find a new recipe which we would add to the rotation of meals that
we prepared. In that way, at least, I
was a little more adventurous than my wife -- I was typically the one who would
discover and attempt something new.
I can say that my cooking became better with time …
particularly in the past half decade or so.
I have continued to experiment, and I have continued to learn new
things. I have tried a wider variety of
dishes, and in the process I have learned about flavors and spices. I can now say that my cooking typically turns
out pretty darned good.
What I found interesting, though, was when my
teenage son began saying that he liked my cooking better than his mother's. I heard this for at least a year before it occurred
to me to try to determine why. After
thinking it through, I think I have found the answer.
Understand that I am not a gourmet chef, by any
stretch of the imagination. I'm not sure
I would even dare to call myself an experienced cook -- although I do cook
regularly now. I often prepare a
casserole of some type, but I only occasionally prepare a meal out of a
box. And I think that the difference is
precisely the fact that my recipes aren't complex, but they include ingredients
which make them tasty. By contrast, my
son's mother often cooks a boxed or frozen meal. Even when she does use a recipe, much of her
cooking could be described as bland.
Cooking does not have to be difficult … although it
does require a bit of time to prepare a decent meal. I have learned that cooking can be learned --
even on one's own -- and even by a guy that doesn't have much of a background in
the kitchen. The goal of this blog will
be to pass along some of what I've learned … thinking primarily of single dads
who want to be able to prepare good, nutritious meals.
Others can utilize this information, of course. Whoever you happen to be, and whatever skills
you bring to the kitchen, I hope that I can help you to learn new things and to
be proud of your ability to put a delicious meal on the table.
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