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Cooking Techniques
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Heat can be transferred to food in 3 ways…
#1) Conduction is the transfer of heat from something hot to something that is cooler. The larger the food item, the longer it will take to cook.
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Heat can be transferred to food in 3 ways…
#2) Convection the spread of heat by a flow of hot air, steam or liquid
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Heat can be transferred to food in 3 ways…
#3) Radiation is the transfer of heat through high energy waves (microwaves). These microwaves cause the water molecules of a food item to vibrate which causes heat.
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There can be many different ways to cook food
There can be many different ways to cook food. Cooking techniques can affect a food’s: Nutritive value (quantity of nutrients) Texture (how it ‘feels’ on your tongue) Colour Aroma (how it smells) Flavour (how it tastes) Appearance (how it looks)
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To cook an egg, grill a steak, poach fish, or stew tomatoes you use very different cooking techniques. Although each technique involves heating food, they all use a different process to make heat transfer possible.
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There are two cooking techniques
Moist cooking Dry cooking
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First we’ll take a closer look at moist cooking…
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Moist Cooking… All moist heat cooking methods involve water based liquids as a means of heat transfer.
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A few examples of moist heat cooking methods are:
Boil (boiled pasta) Simmer (simmer stew) Poach (poach fish) Steam (steamed vegetables) Braise (braised bunny wabbit)
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And now….dry cooking
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Dry Cooking… Dry heat cooking methods transfer heat without use of water or steam. They may rely on hot air, hot fat, radiation, or hot metal.
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A few examples of dry heat techniques are:
Bake Roast BBQ Broil Grill Sear Fry
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List 4 types of foods that you would
Bake…? Broil…? Sear…? What kind of equipment is required for the cooking methods above?
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Other common dry cooking methods…
Sautéing is a quick, dry cooking technique that uses a small amount of fat or oil in a pan (literally means to jump) Stir-frying similar to above…it’s important to constantly “stir” the food as it cooks.
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Blanching (moist cooking)
A quick way to change the flavour and keep the colour in foods. #1 Completely submerge the food in a boiling liquid and cook it briefly. #2 Remove food from liquid and plunge it into ice water. This is known as “shocking”.
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A blanched food item is only partially cooked, so a second stage of cooking is needed to complete the cooking process. For example, you might first blanch green beans and then saute them in butter and herbs.
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Your server brings you a plate with a tough, grayish-brown piece of meat and limp, colourless vegetables. Explain what went wrong during cooking and why.
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In your kitchen lab teams, compose 2 meals that includes three different foods that are prepared with different dry cooking techniques. Explain how each item was prepared. In your kitchen lab teams, compose 2 meals that includes three different foods that are prepared with different moist cooking techniques. Explain how each item was prepared.
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