What are the best practices you’ve learned to save time or make a meal better.

40 points

Ok I might get downvoted to oblivion but I use MSG. It enhances the flavors so much that I have stopped going to restaurants.

Edit- I did my research and found no credible source that says MSG is harmful.

Edit2- If you go to a restaurant or order KFC chances are they use MSG as well

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16 points
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Anti-MSG propaganda actually comes from Asian racism, and was born out of the idea that Chinese food with its MSG was causing headaches and other health effects that were entirely made up. MSG is perfectly fine for you, and it makes a ton of things even tastier. I use it all the time in home cooking.

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12 points

There is nothing wrong with MSG. It being bad for you is made up by racists.

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3 points

Uncle Roger agree with you!

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1 point

Hahaha true

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23 points
  1. Nothing goes on a plate without being tasted
  2. If it’s too sour, add sugar
  3. if it’s sweet and you haven’t added acid, add a splash of vinegar.
  4. if it’s too hot, add fat
  5. if you burn it, throw it out.
  6. IF you taste it early, it should taste weak. If it’s fantastic when when it starts to simmer, it’ll be too harsh once it’s reduced.
  7. Taste it and it tastes empty or boring? Smell it. Smell all your herbs/spices on hand, which ever one it smells the closest to, add a healthy pinch and salt if it doesn’t taste salty already.
  8. know your oils and use the right ones. Olive oil can handle some heat and is great for savory, grapeseed is almost flavorless. Canola has a distinct flavor that doesn’t go with everything. 9 season your meat before you cook it.
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3 points

Only thing I’d add is that, on 8, learn what rancid oil smells like. Most people keep things like olive oil in poor conditions (that’s without us even getting into quality of oil, or how people buy FAR MORE oil than they’ll reasonably be able to use), and the oil goes bad far faster than they think it will.

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11 points

Don’t be afraid of spices. Use more than you think is necessary. Onion and garlic can make a meal 100x better.

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1 point

Agree. Especially the onion 🧅

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0 points

No good advice with certain hot peppers.

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4 points

To each their own

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9 points

Biggest hack? Realizing that humans have been cooking for millennia, and that it’s in the best interest of big business to convince you that it’s difficult/expensive/extremely complicated.

You don’t NEED the fancy equipment every company out there is trying to sell you.

Not everything needs to be gorgeous on the plate, or a whole production to make.

The poorest people in the world cook delicious food every day.

For instance, you don’t need NEED a +$150 Japanese chef knife to cook at home. What you need is something that can hold an edge through general maintenance, a whet stone, a kitchen towel to dry off your blade immediately after you hand wash it, and a little bit of patience.

IKEA sells some surprisingly great single construction (steel blade, steel handle) knives, and their single body chef knife is like $25. Just get an honing rod for use before you start slicing, and a whet stone for periodic sharpening (there’s TONS of YouTube videos of all the different ways of sharpening your knife), and remember to wash and hand-dry after you’re finished. My chef knife cost me barely anything, and I’ve used it for years and years, and it still slices through a tomato without a problem. Also, I only cook for myself, so I can absolutely 100% guarantee my whet stone will “outlive” me.

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2 points

That being said, a mandoline can save a lot of time, and a kevlar glove paired with that will save a lot of fingers.

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1 point

Not exactly a mandoline, but I used to work at a place with a cheese slicer named “Old Nubby.” It had blooded the entire team at least once.

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3 points

Did they ever learn to use protection?

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2 points

Legend has it the blood was never cleaned off either

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8 points

Bake bacon on cookie sheets at 375 for about 20 minutes. You can make a ton of bacon very quickly, with almost no mess, and all the bacon is perfectly flat. We have a double oven and we can make about 4 pounds of bacon in about 30 minutes this way. :)

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3 points

And then save the bacon grease in a jar to add to gravys! I add a tablespoon or so to my sausage gravy for biscuits and gravy and it is freaking delicious. Can also use it to grease a cast iron pan before making a pizzookie for a little extra flavor.

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2 points
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Cookiesheet bacon is the best! If you like it crispy it helps to broil it for a minute or so at the end of cooking it.

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2 points

Does this not splatter all throughout the oven?

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0 points

No, it does not splatter throughout the oven.

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0 points

Yes and no. A substantial amount of grease will be aerosolized and condense on the interior of your oven when it cools. It’s nasty looking and the next three cakes you bake will taste slightly of bacon. You can decide whether that’s a bug or a feature.

If I could figure out how to make my electric smoker get to 375F I would only do bacon outside in the smoker as I essentially have to clean the over every time I do bacon in it. And, yes, you can smoke bacon. It’s not bad, but it also is a bit more like jerky than the crispy bacon I like. Again - bug/feature territory.

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1 point

I do pretty much the same but at a lower temp (~350F) so it doesn’t hit the smoke point. I also prefer my bacon a bit floppy instead of crispy.

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