Cooking Terms, Tips and Measurements
A collection of Cooking Terms, Tips and Measurements from the this thread on the OCAU Forums.
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Cooking Terms
HoldenAngel: I thought that with all of these recipes, there might be some terminology that you might not know about or want to know the meaning of. So I have compiled a quick list of cooking terms for you. Some of them are totally obvious but others might help.
Al Dente: (AL-DEN-TAY) Refers to how pasta is cooked, it is slightly chewy or being tough to the bite.
Au gratin: (OH-GRAH-TAHN) Foods covered with a sauce, sprinkled with cheese or bread crumbs, or both, and baked to a golden brown
Au jus: (OH-JOO-I) Food served with its natural juice
Bake: To cook by dry heat, usually in an oven.
Baste: (BASED) To ladle drippings (the stuff that comes out of the meat when you cook it!) over a piece of meat being cooked as a roast to make it juicy and to prevent dryness
Beat: To lift a mixture with a spoon or an electric mixer to inject air and make the mixture smooth and creamy
Blanch: To scald, make white, to partially cook an item, or to dip vegetables in boiling water in preparation for freezing, canning, or drying
Braise: To cook meat by searing in fat, then simmering in a covered dish in a small amount of liquid or to brown meat or vegetables in hot fat, then to cook slowly in a small amount of liquid
Broil: To cook by exposing the food directly to the heat
Caramelise: Sugar - to heat sugar until it melts and turns a pale brown colour. Onions/garlic: to cook onions in a small amount of oil or butter until they change to a brown colour (the sugars in the onions/garlic actualy turn to caramel). Done over an easy heat and stirred occassionally.
Chop: To cut into small pieces using a knife or other sharp utensil
Cream (as in butter and sugar): a baking technique involving combining butter or margarine and sugar together together to a fluffy consistency. Done by thoroughly beating butter in a bowl, then gradually adding sugar until mixture is fluffy and creamy.
De-glaze: to pour a small amount of liquid into a hot pan in which something has been fried, to clean the pan bottom, especially as for gravy.
Egg wash: brushing the top of a baked item, such as bread, lightly with a beaten egg.
Flambe: (FLARM-BE) Served aflame
Fold: (Nothing to do with computers this time!!)To mix, using a motion beginning vertically down through the mixture, continuing across the bottom of the bowl and ending with an upward and over movement
Knead: (NEED) To place dough on a flat surface and work it, pressing down with your hands, then folding over and over again
Pinch/dash: small, inexact amounts that basically add up to "to taste."
Poach: To cook in water that bubbles only slightly
Reduce: To concentrate a liquid by simmering for a long time
Rise: in bread-making, to leave the dough in a warm place and allow to double in volume.
Rest: in bread-making, to let the dough sit a few minutes before kneading more.
Roux (Roo) - The basis of many sauces, and a good thickening agent for soup. Made but melting 1tbls of butter and adding 1 cup of flour and 1 cup of milk. For a thinner consistency, add more milk, for a thicker consistency, add more flour.
Saute: (SAW-TAY) To quickly heat meat or vegetables in fat in an open pan
Scald (as in milk): to heat milk just to the point that steam is rising from it, but not to boiling.
Sear: to quickly brown the outside of meat at a high temperature.
Simmer: To cook liquid just below the boiling point
Whip: To beat rapidly to increase volume and incorporate air
Tips
Common Cooking Substitutions
Tori_LeeIf you're out of a particular ingredient, don't give up just yet. Check out this list of substitutions for various ingredients
If you need (You can use)
- 1 c sugar (3/4 c honey)
- 1 c brown sugar (1 c granulated sugar + 2 tbsp molasses)
- 1 c powdered sugar (1 c granulated sugar + 1 tbsp cornstarch, blended)
- 1 c shortening (1 c butter or margarine)
- 1 tsp dry mustard (1 tbsp prepared mustard)
- 1 tbsp prepared mustard (1/2 tsp dry mustard + 2 tsp vinegar)
- 1 c cake flour (1 c minus 2 tbsp regular flour)
- 1 c buttermilk (2/3 c plain yogurt + 1/3 c milk)
- 1 c buttermilk (15 tbsp milk + 1 tbsp vinegar)
- 1 tsp baking powder (1/4 tsp baking soda + 1/2 tsp cream of tartar)
- 1/2 c wine (sweet) (1/2 c fruit juice)
- 1/2 c wine (savory) (1/2 c chicken broth)
- 1 c tomato sauce ( 3/4 c tomato paste + 1 c water)
- 1 c sour cream (1 c plain yogurt)
- 1 c orange juice (3 medium oranges)
- 3 tbsp lemon juice (1 lemon)
Recipe Conversions
Tori LeeHere's a quick-and-easy way to customize any recipe to yield a certain number of servings or feed a certain number of people:
Step One: Divide the number of servings you want to make by the number of servings the recipe claims to make. The result will be your conversion factor.
Step Two: Multiply the amount of every ingredient in that recipe by your conversion factor.
For example: to make my Extraordinary Mashed Potatoes , which makes 10 servings, you need
- 3 lbs (1.36 kg) potatoes
- 1/2 lb (226.8 g) butter
- 1-3/4 c (402 ml) milk
To convert the recipe to yield a smaller amount, e.g. 5 servings, divide 5 (# of servings desired) by 10 (# of servings recipe makes), giving you a conversion factor of 0.5. Thus, your new ingredient amounts are as follows:
- Potatoes: 1.33 kg *0.5 = 0.665 kg (or 3 lb * 0.5 = 1.5 lb)
- Butter: 226.8 g * 0.5 = 113.4 g (or 1/2 lb * 0.5 = 1/4 lb)
- Milk: 402 ml * 0.5 = 201 ml (or 7/4 c * 0.5 = 14/16 or 7/8 c)
Measurements
Tori_Lee: Because recipes can come from just about anywhere in the world, I'd like to post a list of customary (Imperial) units of measurement and their conversions...in case you're not familiar with them. :)
Terms
- tsp = teaspoon
- tbsp = tablespoon
- c = cup
- oz = ounce
- fl oz = fluid ounce (liquid capacity)
- pt = pint
- qt = quart
- gal = gallon
- lb = pound
Customary Meaurements
- 3 tsp = 1 tbsp
- 2 tbsp = 1 fl oz
- 8 fl oz = 1 c
- 2 c = 1 pt
- 2 pt = 1 qt
- 4 qt = 1 gal
- 16 oz = 1 lb
Metric Conversions
- 1/8 tsp = 0.5 ml
- 1/4 tsp = 1 ml
- 1/2 tsp = 2 ml
- 1 tsp = 5 ml
- 1 tbsp = 15 ml
- 1 fl oz = 30 ml
- 1/4 c = 59 ml
- 1/3 c = 79 ml
- 1/2 c = 118 ml
- 1 c = 225 ml
- 1 pt = 450 ml
- 1 qt = 900 ml (usually rounded up to 1 L)
- 1 gal = 3636.8 ml (usually rou