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Getting Started: The Necessary Preliminaries - The 14 Cooking Methods

The document discusses 14 different cooking methods: blanching, poaching, boiling, simmering, steaming, deep fat frying, sautéing, grilling, broiling, gratinating, baking, roasting, braising, and stewing. It provides details on the purpose and steps for each method, such as precooking ingredients for blanching, keeping the liquid at a low temperature for poaching, and using a small amount of liquid and covered pot for braising.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
64 views7 pages

Getting Started: The Necessary Preliminaries - The 14 Cooking Methods

The document discusses 14 different cooking methods: blanching, poaching, boiling, simmering, steaming, deep fat frying, sautéing, grilling, broiling, gratinating, baking, roasting, braising, and stewing. It provides details on the purpose and steps for each method, such as precooking ingredients for blanching, keeping the liquid at a low temperature for poaching, and using a small amount of liquid and covered pot for braising.

Uploaded by

LleservaProcess
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Getting Started: The Necessary Preliminaries – The 14 Cooking

Methods

Blanching

• The cooking method of pre-cooking, cooking or cleansing an item either as preparation for
another cooking method or for preservation.

• Why we blanch?

 To clean and sanitize

 To destroy enzymes

 To prevent ingredients from sticking

 To improve the color of ingredients

 To pre-cook or cook an ingredient

 To pre-cook or cook an ingredient for preservation

• How to blanch?

 Without lid starting with hot water

 Without lid starting with cold water

 Blanching in oil

• Blanching starting with cold water without lid: Bones and Large Meat Parts (98*C-100*C)

• Purpose: to remove impurities; to cause cells to open so that strong flavors, blood and
impurities can be leached out

• Steps:

 Wash bones under running water

 Place bones in a pot, cover with water

 Bring to a boil

 Skim off impurities and fat

 Boil for 2 minutes

 Drain water, wash bones with hot water, then cold water

• Blanching starting with hot water without lid: Poultry and Meat
• Purpose: to remove impurities, fat and bone fragments; hot water is used to seal in flavor and
juices; to remove skin of certain vegetables

• Steps:

 Wash food in running water

 Use hot water with temp of 80*C

 Ratio: water 10 parts, food 1 part

 Place in pan, cover with hot water

 Bring rapidly to a boil

 Skim off impurities

 Boil for 1 minute, remove pan from fire

 Drain, wash with hot water, then cold water

• Blanching in hot water without lid: green vegetables for freezing or pre-cooking (green beans,
spinach, romaine lettuce, green peas, asparagus etc)

• Purpose: to sanitize vegetables; preserve green color; reduce bitter taste

• Steps:

 wash, rinse, peel, trim, and cut veges

 Bring water to a boil, add salt

 Place veges into boiling water blanch vegetables for approximately 15 to 30 seconds

 Strain and place into iced water to stop the cooking (except potatoes)

 When cold, remove veges and place on clean towel or grid for drying.

• Blanching in oil: meat, fish, poultry, vegetables, potatoes

• Purpose: to precook the product prior to service

• Steps:

 Prepare product following the recipe

 Place product in deep fryer at 130*C – 150*C

 Fry until cooked but not colored

 Remove from oil and place on absorbent paper


Poaching

• It is a cooking method for tender ingredients which are high in protein at a low temperature
between 65*C – 80*C on the stove or 165*C in the oven (with the poaching liquid at 93*C –
95*C)

• Purpose: to prevent tender meat parts, fish and recipes containing eggs from being overcooked;
to prevent meat from drying or becoming tough/hard

• Ways to poach:

 Floating in liquid

 In small amount of liquid

 In water bath with stirring

 In poaching liquid: court bouillon, stock, stock syrup, milk

• Poaching in floating liquid without lid: for large un-portioned meat, poultry, fish and dumplings

• Steps:

 Prepare ingredients based on recipe

 Bring liquid to a boil

 Place ingredient into the liquid

 Never cover to prevent it from boiling

 After the ingredient is cooked, remove and let it cool,

Do not throw away the liquid

• Poaching eggs

• Steps:

 Do not add salt as this will prevent the egg from forming well

 Vinegar is always added: 10 parts water, 1 part vinegar. (increase amount of vinegar if egg is not
fresh)

 After cooking, place the eggs in lukewarm salted water – to absorb salt and to lose the vinegar
taste

• Poaching in small liquid (shallow poaching) with lid or parchment paper: for portioned meat,
poultry, fish and seafood with low connective tissue

• Purpose: only half-covered because the steam will help cook the uncovered part of the
ingredient; the liquid is usually made into sauce

• Steps:
 Butter the pan, saute ingredients are per recipe, add main ingredient on top, season with salt
and pepper (or lemon for fish)

 Pour liquid over the ingredient, cover, bring to a quick boil, lower temperature and gently poach
until cooked.

• Poaching in water bath while stirring: for recipes containing egg yolks or whole eggs, which are
heated to 63*C – 65*C

• Purpose: to whisk the mixture to a creamy consistency which will enable the egg to bind with
other ingredients; this also incorporates air and increases the volume of the mixture.

• Steps:

 Prepare based on recipe

 Whip eggs until foamy in a bowl

 Place the bowl on top of the water bath, taking care that it doesn’t touch the water

 Whisk until it thickens and it is creamy

 Note: when mixture is too hot, the egg will curdle

Boiling

• Boiling liquid at 98*C – 100*C

• Purpose: for products to absorb more liquid and to tenderize faster

• Ways:

 Start with cold water without salt

 Start with cold water with salt - potato

 Start with hot water without salt – egg

 Start with hot water with salt - pasta

 Boiling without lid – 98*C – 100*C (eggs and pasta)

 Purpose: to achieve a rapid boiling point, to cook faster, to reduce excessive loss of nutrients
and flavors

Simmering

• Liquid is at 95*C – 98*C


• Purpose: for the product to further absorb water and tenderize further; simmering does not
destroy texture

• Simmering without lid – stocks, clear soup, liquid is at 95*C – 98*C

• Purpose: to monitor the liquids so that they don’t boil

• Simmering starting with hot water with a lid – for meat, poultry etc – to sear the outside

• Purpose: the lid helps to reduce over evaporation of the liquid

Steaming

• Is done with a cover, for meat, fish, poultry, grain products, legumes, vegetables, potatoes
(100*C – 120*C)

• Purpose: high heat and reduced cooking time

Deep fat frying

• 170*C – 180*C

• To evenly brown the product; to create a crisp outer layer while keeping in the moisture.

• The product has undergone blanching

• Never heat oil above 200*C

• Never fry different products in a same fryer

• Never cover

Sautéing

• Steps:

 Add a small amount of oil, heat up close to smoking point

 Add seasoned meat (no salt) to the oil and sear the surfaces of the meat

 Season with salt only at the very end

• Sautéing in non-stick pan (pan frying)

• Steps:

 Add oil, fat, or butter and heat it up until hot (not smoking)
 Add ingredients into the pan

 Season when necessary

 Remove from pan

 Deglaze pan with liquid

Grilling

• Healthy cooking method and fat free

• Steps:

 Marinate in a quick marinade (avoid sugar or honey as they burn at 150*C)

 Make sure grill is hot

 Occasionally brush with marinade or heat resistant oil

Broiling

• Basically the same as grilling

• Heat comes from above the product

Gratinating

• A cooking method for finishing off a product with a final step to brown a covering usually egg,
cheese or cream

• Purpose: done for flavor and presentation

Baking

 Baking is the technique of cooking food in an oven by dry heat applied evenly throughout the
oven or only from the bottom element

Roasting

 To cook (food such as chicken, potatoes, or beef) with dry heat in an oven or over a fire
Braising

 to cook (food) slowly in fat and a small amount of liquid in a covered pot

Stewing

 to cook food slowly in hot and full submersion in liquid

Glazing

 done to give a nice shine and color

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