Cooking Tips for Indian Recipes
Tips On Cutting & Peeling:
· Wash vegetables before peeling or
cutting to preserve the water soluble vitamins.
· Peel vegetables as thinly as possible
to preserve the minerals and vitamins.
· Soak potatoes and eggplant after
cutting, to avoid discoloration.
· If you boil vegetables in water, do
not throw the water, keep it to make gravies.
· To avoid browning of apples after
cutting, apply a little lemon juice on the cut surface. The apples will stay
and look fresh for a longer time.
· Keep coriander leaves in a muslin
(cheese) cloth bag in the refrigerator. They will remain fresh for a longer
time.
· Remove the stems of green chilies
while storing them. This will help them to stay fresh for long.
· After peeling onions cut in half and
soak in water for about 10 minutes before cutting to avoid crying.
· Soak almonds in a cup of boiling
water for 10 minutes. The skin will peel off easily.
· Chopping vegetables can be done in
different ways using a sharp knife and a wooden chopping board. Cutting on a
marble slab will blunt your knives.
· Remove the outer leaves and husks
from the corn (bhutta). Holding the corn upright with the flat end firmly in a
board, take a sharp knife and run it down between the kernels and the cob to
strip them away.
· Wrap the fruits and vegetables in
newspaper before refrigerating to keep them fresh for long.
· Chopping dry fruits – Freeze them
first for one hour & then dip the knife into hot water before cutting them.
Tips On Frying:
· Heat the oil thoroughly before adding
seasonings or vegetables.
· Fry the seasonings until they change
color, to get full flavour of seasonings.
· If masala sticks to the pan that
shows quantity of fat included is not enough.
· Add some hot oil and 1/2 tsp of
baking soda in batter while making pakodas.
· When coconut is used in grinding
masala, do not fry for a longer time.
· If you are making patties or tikkis
of potatoes, always make sure that the potatoes are boiled well in advance and
cooled before you use them. It would be better if they can be refrigerated for
a short time. This helps the starch in the potatoes to settle down and the
tikkis will not be gooey.
· Smoke Mustard oil first before using
for preparing vegetables etc. by heating to a point till light white smoke
emerges from it. This would remove the potency from the oil.
· Poori can be rolled and place between
well-rinsed wet muslin cloth at least an hour ahead and can be Fried before
serving.
· To make pooris more crispy add a
little rice flour to the wheat flour while kneading.
· Pakodas will turn out crisper if a
little corn flour is added to the gram flour while preparing the batter.
· Heat a non-stick pan and add a little
more butter than usual. Now beat the egg and stir briskly (even while frying)
with a fork. This way more air goes in your omelet, making it light and fluffy.
Fry till done and serve hot.
· Sprinkle a little amount of salt in
the frying pan before adding bacon to fry. That way it will not splatter all
over.
· When browning meat in fat, choose a
large, deep pan. This will enable you to fry quickly, without splashing the
stove with fat and meat juices
.
.
Tips for Gravies:
· Always use ghee or vanaspathi with or
instead of oil, which gives a good flavour to the gravy. If oil alone is used,
it does not get separated easily from the ground mixture, as ghee separates
from it.
· Fry the ground masala in reduced
flame, so that it retains its colour and taste.
· Little plain sugar or caramelised
sugar added to the gravy makes it tasty.
· When tomatoes are not in season,
tomato ketchup or sauce can be successfully used in the gravies.
· To retain colour in the gravy always
use ripe red tomatoes. Discard green portions if any.
· Good variety chillies and chilli
powder also gives colour to the gravy. As far as possible try to use long
variety red chillies. Dry it under sun for few days and powder coarsely at
home. Always the coarse powder gives good taste in gravies and pickles.
· While using ginger and garlic paste
in curries, always use garlic at 60% ratio and ginger at 40% as ginger is very
strong and may make your dish sharp and pungent.
Tips On Cooking:
· To make 1 cup of dal, add atleast 2-3
cups of water, depending on the type of dal.
· Soak whole pulses overnight and other
dals for one hour before cooking.
· Always add hot water to the gravy to
enhance the taste.
· Add 1 Tbsp of hot oil to the dough
for making Kachories or Kulchas.
· Always use heavy bottomed vessels to
make desserts, in order to avoid burning.
· Make desserts with full cream milk,
to get thick creamy texture.
· Whenever curd is to be added to the
masala, it should be beaten well and add gradually.
· Chop some extra vegetables, for next
day stir fry.
· Use the leftover dal water to make
rasam or sambar.
· Never discard water in which
vegetables are cooked, use it in gravies, soups, rasam or kolumbu.
· Onions and masala are fried in the
cooker body itself, raw vegetables are added to that with enough salt and
water. Cook under pressure according to the cooking time of the vegetable. This
method helps us minimise our cooking time, use of utensils and nutrients are
also preserved.
· If poppy seeds are used in grinding,
soak it in hot water for 10 to 15 minutes, if you are grinding it in a mixie.
· While boiling milk, always add a
little water at the base of the vessel to avoid the milk from sticking at the
bottom.
· Add a tsp. of hot oil to homemade
pastes of garlic, ginger or green chili, along with salt to make it last longer
and taste fresher.
· Store raisins in an airtight
container in the refrigerator. They will stay fresh for much longer. Pour very
hot water over them if they had harden, after that drain them immediately, and
spread on a paper towel to dry. You can also leave a spoon in the vessel in
which the milk is being boiled at low heat so that it does not get burnt at the
bottom
· Add a few drops of lemon a tsp of oil
to rice before boiling to separate each grain.
· Never discard the water in which
vegetables are cooked, use it in gravies or soups.
· Put tomatoes in a large bowl and
cover with boiling water Leave it for about 5 minutes. Take out one by one,
piercing them with a sharp knife, the skin will peel off easily.
· Immediately after boiling noodles put
them in normal cold water to separate them each.
· If you forget to soak chana/Rajma
overnight. Just soak the chana/Rajma in the boiling water for an hour before
cooking.
· Curd in winter – Set in a ceramic
container and place it on the voltage stabilizer of your refrigerator.
· Potatoes soaked in salt water for 20
minutes will bake more rapidly.
· Roasting is a dry heat method of
cooking – it does not use water. The flavors roasting draws forth result from
the process of browning. As the surface of the meat browns, and its juices and
fats drip down and brown on the surface of the hot roasting pan, it adds to the
flavour of the meat.
Tips On Leftover Food:
· If you are making pasta or rice, cook
some extra and store in refrigerator for the next meal.
· Keep some boiled potatoes in fridge,
to make quick sandwiches for breakfast.
· Use left over rice for next day meal,
use your imagination and cook something new.
· Keep some extra dough in fridge to
make chapatis for breakfast.
· Use leftover sukhi dal to make
stuffed paratha.
General Tips for Cooking
Non-Vegetarian:
· When you cook chicken or meat, you
should first cook over high heat to seal juices and then lower the heat and
cook till tender
· If you want to store fish for more
than a day, first clean it, rub it with salt, turmeric and maybe, a dash of
vinegar, and then freeze. It will stay fresh.
· Don’t salt meat before you cook it.
The salt forces the juices out and impedes browning. Instead, salt meat halfway
through cooking, then taste when the meat is done and adjust the salt as
needed.
· Meat that is partially frozen is much
easier to cut or slice.
· Cooking of hamburgers may take hell
of a long time. To cook them a little faster, you could poke a hole in the
middle of the hamburger patties while shaping them. This helps them cook faster
and the holes disappear once the burgers are done.
· Allow meat to stand at room
temperature 1 hour before cooking: It will cook more quickly, brown more
evenly, and stick less when pan-fried.
· To help keep meats moist during a
long grill or barbecue, add a pan of water close to the fire, but away from the
meat.
· To coat chicken evenly, you can place
the seasonings or crumbs in a plastic bag, and then add a few pieces at a time
and shake them well.
· For golden-brown fried chicken, roll
in powdered milk instead of flour before frying.
· To prevent bacon from curling, dip
the strips in cold water before cooking.
· Sprinkle a little amount of salt in
the frying pan before adding bacon to fry. That way it will not splatter all
over.
· To ensure that sausages keep their
shape, put them into cold water, bring to a boil and then drain immediately and
grill or fry in a saucepan.
· When you cook chicken or meat, you
should first cook over high heat to seal juices and then lower the heat and
cook till tender.
· To avoid kebabs from becoming hard
and chewy, marinate them for a longer time and avoid over cooking them.
· To get rid of the smell of prawns,
apply salt and lemon juice to the prawns before cooking. Leave for 15-20
minutes, then wash off and proceed with the recipe. This is usually done with
prawns, fish and al kinds of seafood.
· For better results, mutton should be
of a younger animal. It looks pink and not red and texture should be firm. If
it is red and looks ‘wrinkled’, it will be tough.
· Softening chicken for salads and
sandwiches Chicken in salads and sandwhiches is usually poached. What poaching
does is surrounds the chicken with liquid, so no moisture is lost and cooks the
chicken gently, as opposed to grilling or pan frying.
· How can you tell that steaks are
done? Color can be a good indicator of doneness. This is because myoglobin
which gives meat its color, changes from red to pink to brown as meat cooks. A
rare steak is bright red. A medium-rare steak is dark pink with some red
present; a medium steak is very light pink in color and of course, well-done is
brown.
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