As many of you know, I love cooking; it is my main hobby. Over the years I have discovered little tips that make cooking so much better. These are things which are most often lacking when someone presents you with bad or dull food. If you follow all of these tips, your cooking will improve dramatically.
The Microwave Oven is good for one thing only: defrosting; and even that can be done just as easily by putting something in the refrigerator one day before your need it to defrost gently. Microwaves do not add to the flavor of anything they cook, whereas stove top or oven cooking does – through the caramelization of juices (which is what gives us the brown crispy outside of meat). Having a microwave in the house leads to the temptation to cut corners. I have not had a Microwave for 3 years and I can still cook an entire meal from scratch in less than 40 minutes – and I guarantee it tastes a hell of a lot better than anything cooked in a microwave.
If you are using a recipe, read it twice from beginning to end before you start doing any cooking. So often we skim a recipe and then in our hurry (once things start to heat up) we neglect certain steps. By reading the recipe twice, you are less likely to skip a step which can result in disaster. Having said this, I also recommend that try to experiment with your cooking – don’t become a slave to your cookbook – but make the choices intentionally, not through forgetfulness.
If you are cooking a meal with multiple components – such as a roast chicken with vegetables, it can be very helpful to write a list of what you need to do and when. You can write down specific times (I find it useful to work back from the time you want to serve). This results in a much smoother working process and you won’t have people waiting for dinner to be served late.
Wine can add a lot of flavor to a meal; if you are braising meat – for example in a pot roast, pour in some wine. The alcohol content left after cooking is not enough to make this an “adults-only” meal (on the other hand, I think children should be given wine with dinner from a very young age anyway). The general rule is to use red wine with red meat, and white with white. If you are going to pan fry some fish, just pour in a half cup of white wine and some herbs, and you can make a lovely meal with a ready made sauce.
Dried herbs have little or no flavor. This tip alone can transform bland food in to masterful food. You can either grow your own herbs, or you can buy them fresh from the supermarket. The herbs you are most likely to use repeatedly (and therefore the best ones to grow yourself) are thyme, bay leaves, parsley (use the Italian flat leaf type – it has a lot more flavor than curly parsley), and (to a lesser extent unless you like to do a lot of oriental cooking,) coriander (cilantro). Another less common herb that you should try if you haven’t is tarragon – it has a slight aniseed flavor and is excellent with fish or chicken; buy the French kind – the other type (Israeli) has no flavor.
Forget everything you have been told about salt and health. If you want to eat good food, you need to use plenty of salt. A real pinch of salt involves using 2 fingers and a thumb, not the forefinger and thumb. People have been frightened off using salt by government advertisements, and it is ridiculous. The French eat a lot of salt (and butter) and they have a very low cardiac deathrate compared to a nation such as England which has a bizarre obsession with salt reduced diet. When boiling pasta, make sure the water tastes like the sea. If you have never tasted seawater, it tastes like it is so salty that a mouthful would make you gag. For a very large pasta pot of water, I usually use two small handfuls of salt. When cooking vegetables in water, always add salt. Contrary to popular belief, salt in cooking water does not stop the color from leeching out of vegetables, it simply enhances their flavor. Also, if you boil your potatoes before roasting, salt water helps to give more color and crunch to the outside.
Butter is fundamental in good cooking. When you fry a steak, you should always fry it in butter (with a little oil added to stop the butter burning). Butter adds flavor to anything, and can also be used as a thickener (see sauce below). Do not use margarine, do not use semi-soft butter. Always cook with unsalted butter (then you can decide exactly how much salt you want the dish to have). If you really want to improve boiled or steamed vegetables, undercook them, then add them to a pan with a big knob of butter and finish the cooking over a high heat. Add salt, pepper, and chopped parsley.
They say that a good sauce is the difference between a cook and a chef. Sauces are extremely easy to make and you should almost always prepare a sauce to go with your meals. If you have fried meat in a frying pan, leave the heat on and pour some wine in to the pan – scrape all the bits off the bottom and cook until the wine has evaporated by half. Pour in some stock (any type will do, but do try to match the stock with the meat – or use chicken for everything except fish) and cook down until it is half again. Taste it and add salt and pepper if you need to. Strain and serve. Additionally, if you want your sauce to be a little thicker, whisk in a knob of butter off the heat.
Fresh ingredients make all the difference. Vegetables and meat bought from small producers (such as local farms) is even better. Supermarkets have strict requirements about the appearance of food and very little concern about taste. An apple bought from the local market will always be better than anything you can buy in a supermarket. Add to that the overpacking that we see so often in chain markets and you have a recipe for disaster. I guarantee you that any of your regular recipes when made with fresh ingredients and not supermarket ingredients will be 100 times better.
Tasting is the most important part of cooking. You must constantly taste what you are cooking as you cook it. This is true even of things like hamburgers. You should take a little bit of your hamburger meat and fry it – then taste it. Keep adding more salt and pepper or other ingredients and repeat the frying. When it finally tastes right, you can make your burgers. Because this is such an important part of cooking, many chefs will not cook with ingredients they do not like. Tasting early in the cooking process can save you from a disaster later on – when it is too late to recover.






























Not very good either, I avoid pics as often as possible. Half lying down,no bra, boobs disappearing into armpits, no make up, no hair-do, in bed at a crappy hotel. Not my best angle.
Mom – cool photos. Love the garden.
And, it’s weird, but you kinda looked like I imagined you would.
Whattaya doing Saturday nite
#10: HEY! I MAKE AN AWESOME MICROWAVED PORK CHOP, all juicy and pinkish, Nummies.
Wine, salt, butter, Are you sure you’re not french? Not that there would be anything Wrong with that. Good food, Incredible egos.
Most of the actual Food at home Is of my design, And I can agree with most of this list. Being in a relationship with a baker has it’s benefits. There’s never a shortage of Bread, and I make a tasty Sandwich, Pepper onion bun, Smoked salmon, alfalfa sprouts, sweet Vidalia vinagrette… tomatoes and lettuce optional. Great I made myself hungry.
Listverser=Foodie.
Lovely list, microwaves should be banned!
I don’t usually meet guys who like cooking, but I always find that men who love to cook hate to do the washing up ^_^
Leaving it to the women…
kiwiboi: Back the ***** up…that’s my kool-aid.
Mom424: If that is what you consider a bad pic, I’d be very interested to see what you would call a good pic. As for me, I’m not very photogenic, so I typically avoid cameras like the plague. I’m extremely tall and very broad, so I dwarf just about everyone I’m in a picture with. Not very aesthetically pleasing. The only time I get away with it is pictures of me on stage when I’m not near anyone else, so the vast majority of my facebook pics are band photos.
Mom:
Lovely gardens… admirable work… I lost my energy for gardening a few years back… I should return to it.
Mom: Nice bush. Like the easel.
MichyMoonshine: Dishes are Gods way of keeping your gluttony to a minimum. I cooked, You can clean.
“the vast majority of my facebook pics are band photos”
Slick – what instrument ?
bucslim: they do – producing lush flavoursome nuclear free produce
Crimanon: definitely not French – I just appreciate that food is their greatest contribution to man
MichyMoonshine: you just described me to a ‘t’
I despise washing up and don’t do it
Kiwiboi: theremin.
jfrater – LOL
jfrater/kiwiboi: You laugh, but I’ve actually played one…on stage, no less. My primary instrument is bass.
slickwilly: seriously? I am actually envious! I really want a theremin!
Slick:
You’ve PLAYED a theremin? Now see.. *that* is cool. (still, that was a good one, Jamie).
Who the hell OWNS a theremin? I want one. Just so I can scare my neighbors.
I play guitar by the way… proud owner of a vintage Gretsch, actually…
This is STILL my favorite theremin performance:
“You laugh”
Slick – that’s cause you must be the cool guy in the theremin photo on wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theremin
Crimanon/jfrater: I just described why I hate men in a “t”
You’ll never catch me cleaning up after what someone cremated
I mean, cooked…
Slick – bass is my main instrument too
Though I have around 12 or so “ordinary” guitars too (don’t remind my wife; they are all over the house)
Randall – a vintage Gretch. That’s waaay cool. Lemme guess – a cream colored one ?
Do you Kiwis like Jermaine and Brett? What about Murray? Do you think Mom could be a part time model?
“Mom: Nice bush”
Crimanon – now that is plain bad
bucslim – I’ve never seen Flight of the Conchords! I should d/l some and take a peek
Michy: Personally Offended that you think that I would Burn food. I’ve got a Y chromosome, so what, that isn’t Directly related to ruining a good meal. I’ve met more Women in my life time that can’t cook. XX, A confirmation that water Can Indeed Burn. Not very fair is it?
Jamie: What the Hell was that???? Theremin… I’ve got to see this.
Mom424: I hope you are ready for the onslaught of emails you are going to be getting when I get back to NZ – I need a direct line to a green thumb and you are IT!
I hate Flight of the conchords and simply cannot understand their popularity.
kiwiboi:
nope, not cream colored… cherry wood stained… fairly dark. It’s a 1965 Tennessean, with Chet Atkin’s signature on the pick guard, and a Bigsby whammy bar… I bought it 25 years ago, off a guy in this awful heavy metal band, but he’d been the guitar player for the Dictators, one of the original NYC punk bands in the mid-seventies… so this thing has been played at CBGB’s… and by god knows who.
She’s a beauty… not easy to play though.. thick neck. (I have relatively short fingers).
What do you have? I love Fenders… always wanted a vintage Rickenbacker 12 string too. Though i heard that actually, the machinery on them—tuning heads and so forth–were kinda crap. Still, super cool.
best list in weeks
kiwiboi: Very cool.
Always great to meet a fellow four-stringer. I’ve fiddled around with guitar, but it just doesn’t do it for me. I’m much more comfortable on a large instrument like bass (I play a 6-string, Yamaha TRBJP to be specific, with the WIDE string spacing), partly because my hands are so big. What kind of bass do you play?
And yes, I have played a theremin. It was for a this kooky, avant garde fusion project I was involved with for a short time. They are surprisingly difficult to play. You have to be very precise with your hand movements to get it to do what you want it to do. I wasn’t very *good* at it, but it was great for this sort of atmospheric soundscape piece we were doing.
bucslim: I *love* Flight of the Conchords. One of my favorite running gags is how everyone assumes they are british because of their accents.
Randall: What?!! The Great Randall actually…*gulp*…complimented me? Should I kneel and genuflect? Or do you just want money again?
Seriously though, love those Gretschs. Fabulous tone. Semi-hollow body, I assume?
MichyMoonshine: In our household growing up, it was customary that whoever didn’t cook has to clean. Otherwise, you make the cook do everything, and the cook might not be so inclined to cook again in the future. As far as I’m concerned, if you didn’t cook you should at least offer to help clean up. Otherwise, it’s kind of rude. Of course, the cook should clean as he or she goes as best they can, so they don’t just leave the kitchen a filthy stinking mess.
Randall – I’m a Fender guy. I have a pinkish 71 Precision bass, a white strat, and assorted others (about 16 in all).
Currently I’m looking for a Lowden electro-acoustic.
I’m a leftie
BTW…that Gretch sounds cool. I love rockabilly, but the ony time I played a Gretch (upside down) it just wasn’t me. But I’d love to own one!
Rickenbackers ? Oh yeah! I never played one, but I looove The Jam!
kiwiboi:
Cool collection, man…. I’d love a vintage Fender…
don’t know Lowden, off the top of my head…
The Gretsch is a beauty. I’m proud of her.
LOVE the Jam, man! One of the greatest groups ever…
Here’s some of my guitars :
http://www.kiwicool.com/guitars.htm
..and a guitar-related page I put up a coupla years ago for a young Aussie guy who was starting out on guitar :
http://www.kiwicool.com/music.htm
Slick:
Semi-hollow with the painted-on F holes, yeah.
Crimanon/Slick: I see what you mean, but I’m always made to clean, no matter who cooks
16 year old girl is not equal to slave
But I’m the only one who cleans 0_o
And it generally is a stinking, greasy, not to mentioned burnt-on-pan mess…
Why is everyone suddenly talking about guitars?
I play grade five….on an unknown brand!
(Fake LesPaul)
“I’d love a vintage Fender…”
Hmmm…I bought a white 1965 telecaster for $150 when I was a young ‘un. But it was a right-hander and I had trouble with the cutaway (or, lack thereof, being a leftie).
So, being the investment guru that I am, I traded it “up” for a brand new sunburst Ibanez Les Paul copy. They gave me $120 for the Tele as part of the deal.
Believe me, it hurts all over again just typing this story out. I saw onr of those Teles go for $11,000 last year…
“I play grade five….on an unknown brand!”
Michy – good for you. Keep it up!!
A couple more tips is to have the proper tools and equipment(sharp knives well seasoned pans) and you must have patience. You do not want to rush through anything. I have to disagree about having the microwave I never use it to cook meats. But it makes it convient to heat up water and steam veggies.
My trick is to not let my girlfriend anywhere near the kitchen, still trying to get the smell out of the draw under the bench, she spilt cream while trying to whip it, which proceeded to seep through a crack in the wodd leaving rancid creamsycles on the underneath of the bench and a pool of the stuff in the draw underneath, this happened 4 months ago and it stills seeping through.
Nice, I like to cook a lot of Italian so the tips on making the water salty like the sea will really help. Really could have used the tip “Always have the necessary utensils such as knifes(sharp ones) and other important cooking utensils.”
kiwiboi: Oy…the guitar player from one of my old bands had a late 60′s telecaster and sold it a couple of years ago for several grand. You’ve been had.
As far as basses go, I was never a big fan of the Precision. Without a graphic eq, they have a very muddled high end. I like the Jazzes better. More definition. I’ve actually been meaning to acquire a Fender Jazz recently, but I already have a pretty badass 4-string (Stingray) when I’m not playing my 6er and I’m reluctant to drop the money. The slap tones on the Js just make me drool, though.
On a side-note: left-handed instruments always send me for a loop.
“I was never a big fan of the Precision. Without a graphic eq, they have a very muddled high end. I like the Jazzes better. More definition.”
Slick – I have absolutely no problem with Precisions; and never experienced any muddiness in the sound (always used a 200W Traynor head through a quad). Also, I’m not a big fan of Jazz basses, because I find the neck too narrow. One of my friends from way back was a Jazz freak though, and got a real nice sound out of his one.
Horses for courses, I guess…
“don’t know Lowden, off the top of my head…”
Randall – they are handmade in Northern Ireland. Cost around the same as a new Martin. I played one (electro-acoustic cutaway) 8 years ago here in London and have to say it was the singlemost best guitar I have *ever* played (and, believe me, I’ve tried ‘em all). It was $3,000, and instead of merely laying down the cash and cuddling that baby all the way home I decided to “think it over”.
Aaarghghghgh….I went into the store the next week to have another play and it was gone! And none of the other Lowdens they had, even the same model, came close!
Stay away from me…I’m a jinx; even to myself
jfrater:
The French use olive oil a lot too (not soo much as we spaniards or italians, but much more than northern europeans), as do the Portuguese, so using butter for everything is far from being and European standard.
For a nice surprice you could try to use olive oil for any fried thing, not only for snacks or salads, altought I can understand that it can be very expensive on some countries to be used for that purpose. I also generally consider it better than butter for seasoning roasts.
Sometimes I like to fry the eggs with sunflower oil because its softer flavour preserves better the eggs one than the olive oil or butter.
juanjux: I use olive oil when it suits the meal – don’t get me wrong
However, I totally disagree with you on the eggs comment
I think that butter adds to the flavor of egg – it doesn’t take it away, it adds that nice buttery nuttiness – sunflower oil is too milk to have any effect.
Precisely jfrater, when the eggs are stunningly good (read: from my grandmother town directly from the back :> of a very happy and almost free hen, not from one of those horrible “egg factories”) I don’t want to add of substract any from the flavour so I use sunflower oil. When the goods are the average (bad) supermarket ones I use olive oil.
I have to agree with filipinoknight.
An absolute essential to good cooking is the proper equipment. At the very LEAST, a good set of pans, and a good set of knives. Sure, it can be a hefty investment, but you’ll literally be eating off them for years.
And don’t forget to pick up a nice set of cutlery. Why spend a lot of effort creating the perfect meal, and then consume it off cutlery made from pressed sheet metal? Get something that feels hefty and substantial in your hand.
As far as guitars go, I have a custom-made 8-string bass. Not 8 wide, but doubled, with 4 pairs of strings, each pair octaved, like a 12-string guitar. It’s inlaid on the neck and body with abalone and mother-of-pearl. It sounds FAT.
I was already hungry before reading this! Now I’m REALLY hungry! lol
Perhaps I missed it, but KNIFE SKILLS. Being able to cut/chop fast with safety and precision adds a whole new dimension to your skills. And always use a sharp knife.
Macaroni and cheese are a weekly staple in the southeastern US. However, not the boxed, Kraft type. My Mom always made it using good grade pasta (yes, with more than a “pinch” of salt added), good, sharp cheddar cheese, a bit of finely chopped jalapeno (or other spicy type) peppers, and some freshly ground black pepper. She also added a bit of milk, butter, and God only knows what else – it was always delicious (always baked in the oven, never stovetop and certainly NEVER microwave cooked). From time to time she would do strange things like put small shrimp or bits of ham or chorizo in it.
Reference the microwave issue – one of my friends said the microwave is great for popcorn and leftovers. I disagree. Popcorn is wonderful on the stove in a nice pot with real oil (olive is great, but watch the burn/temp), and leftovers are sooooo much better in the oven – think of leftover spaghetti casserole baked with wonderful fresh cheese over the top…mmmmm)
First time here posting, nice site, I like it!
Savannah GIJoe: I live in Savannah! Did you just get back? Thank you for your service. And, I frickin’ love some mac and cheese!!!
Welcome to Listverse!
Fun facts about the palate! -
When I was in high school, I took a taste test with a specialist because I was a dramatically picky eater. (My doctor had been asked by this specialist to recommend kids for this study on super-tasters he was doing, so I got this for free. Its not like my mom was going, “she hates spinach! to the specialist!) Anyway, part of this test is drinking a chemical that tasted horribly bitter to super-tasters, mildly unpleasant to tasters, and basically like nothing to non-tasters. So high amounts of grease, spicy flavors, and basically every veggie tastes bad to a super-taster. In addition, there is a low tolerance for sweetness. I ended up in the “this chemical tastes horrific catagory,” so presumably this explains why I never developed a taste for veggies the way most adults do. I can eat lettuce, carrots, and anomalously… onions. Basically, I stick to the foods I like. A fairly short list. Decent beer tastes like a bitter mess to me. I can’t even drink all crap beers, Bud Lite or Coors because of an extreme bitter aftertaste. Yay for the watery and inoffensive Miller Lite! What tastes mild and incredibly flavorful to me can taste just plain bland to others.
Another symptom of this supertasting thing is that it actually makes it harder for me to taste supposedly “good” food. It is easy for my tastebuds to be overwhelmed.
25% of Americans are projected to be supertasters, according to an article I read recently. Half are tasters, and the other 25% are nontasters.
So the point of my long post is… (and this is not a commentary on the list, the list is great. aside from the fact that you will pry my microwave out of my cold, dead hands). Everyone has a different palate. Perhaps it would be nice if we could be a little more accepting of each others’ preferences.
The good news is, your tastebuds begin to die and become less “effective” so to speak as you get older. This is why kids who hate spinach often learn to love it when they are older. The older I get, the more buffalo wings I’ll be able to consume without freaking out and eating ten pieces of bread. And I’ll be able to take a bite of cooked spinach without someone offering me 20 bucks to do so. blech.
And Velveeta is delicious *runs away before Randall can slap her.*
I seriously don’t agree about the microwave being a bad piece of equipment. The microwave should rarely be used to cook alone, but in unison with another heat source.
Using a microwave to cook food increases the range of textures and flavours that a meal can have at the end. Microwaving of eggs allows you to make a very fluffy and light scrambled egg, which something that frying cannot achieve. Microwaving of fish allows you to effectively cook it all, and then fry it to crisp the outside without drying it out. Microwaving of metal allows you to make a cool light-and-sound show that the kids’ll love. Ovens can’t claim that. There’s a heap of reasons to keep a microwave around, but downplay it’s importance.
Jono: You need lessons on cooking eggs… and fish… and never mind you need lessons. Eggs, to me at least are super easy, And I do know the Micro-fried egg trick. My GFs (ugh) mother Makes the best fish in the world. Try buying it fresh, Not frozen, and not cooking for so long.
Invest in the best set of knives and cookware you can afford. It DOES make a difference!
I also pretty much despise ketchup about the only thing I use it on is potatoes, like french fries and fried potatoes. other than that I do not use ketchup at all.
And I have never understood how ketchup and scrambled eggs can be considered good by anyone with working taste buds…….YUCK
My favorite spice is garlic……the more the better!!!
I don’t agree 5 and 4.
Ask an italian for the salt when boiling pasta…
And, much much much beter than butter is the olive oil.
Salchichon: an excellent blog post about the correct Italian way to make pasta: http://reallyrome.com/blog/2007/10/05/what-italians-have-taught-me-about-pasta/
It involves lots of salt and no oil in the water.
As for the butter/olive oil thing – there is a time and place for both – I am not saying you only use butter – I am saying that you should use butter much more liberally than people usually do. I always use olive oil if I am doing Italian style meals.
Crimanon:
My point was sorely missed by you. I never said anywhere that I preferred microwaved eggs or fish to alternate methods. I prefer scrambled eggs made in a frying pan. I simply said that you CAN make it in the microwave and have a different texture. I can guarantee you that my eggs, will be superior to yours anyway. I have cooked more eggs in the last 3 months than you’ve probably had in 3 years. Every day, at least 6 eggs. Sometimes 9, hundreds of ways. So please, just because you’re a traditionalist to the core, doesn’t make you a better cook at all.
Plus, I always buy fresh fish. Hell, I even catch it myself too. That’s what the Waitemata is for. Searing fish is also a simple technique, but if you opened your mind to trying something different, you’d see the advantages of two different kinds of heat to produce the final result.
Think before you slander.
Kiwiboi (no 137) “Slick – that’s cause you must be the cool guy in the theremin photo on wikipedia”. The caption names him as Leon Theremin, whose life story must be worth a ListVerse entry sometime, along with Walter/Wendy Carlos.
Slick_Willy: You should invent a funky new musical instrument and name it after yourself, so you can play with your willy on stage!!!!
jfrater: how about list of musical instruments named after people: Saxe, Sousa, Theremin, Moog, Heckel.
All of this is off-topic. My fiancee is a keen cook, and I’ve basically been shut out.
“I think children should be given wine with dinner from a very young age anyway”……?????
Jono; fish does cook well in the microwave, at least in some instances. Roll a whitefish fillet around some seasoned crab (real crab meat please – not the ground up pollock substitue – sea legs)dip in egg, coat with cornflake crumbs, microwave on high till cooked. Very good.