T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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848.1 | Go for it! | FHOOA::CORNWALL | | Tue Dec 01 1987 10:47 | 10 |
| Hi Renee,
If *I* can cook, anyone can cook. I recommend you get _The_Joy_of_Cooking_.
I never use it for the recipes, but it's a great "dictionary/encyclopedia".
It tells what to look for in purchasing fresh fruits, veggies, meats, etc.
Also, nice hints are included for preparation and serving...
Cambridge Adult Ed. (Brattle Street) used to offer great cooking/eating
courses. I'm in Detroit now, but check out their latest course offerings
booklet.
Happy Cooking!
--Ginger
|
848.2 | Don't be afraid to try. | TOLKIN::GRANQUIST | | Tue Dec 01 1987 11:54 | 12 |
| I went to chef school a long time ago and love to cook. I'm not
to sure what you really are looking for as far as tips are concerned,
but the best place for you to start is local high Schools. A lot
of schools have adult ed programs with cooking classes included.
If you can't find one you want to try, then as .1 suggested get
a copy of The Joy Of Cooking. If you can follow a recipe you can
cook. You may not be great at first, but at least you will be able
to make a few of the easier things.
If I can be of help to you let me know.
Good Luck,
Nils
|
848.4 | here I go again | FRAGIL::DOCTMP | | Tue Dec 01 1987 15:05 | 6 |
| One more question, what is the easiest type of food to prepare.
It doesn't have to be the fastest just kind of easy.
thanks again,and again and again ect...
Renee
|
848.5 | An easy meal | SQM::AITEL | Helllllllp Mr. Wizard! | Tue Dec 01 1987 16:09 | 29 |
| There's a note titled something like "help a starving man" that
was somewhat in the same vein - things to make that are EASY.
I don't remember the number, but you could look it up.
If you want to impress someone with a meal that looks/smells/tastes
great, roast a chicken and make a salad and rice and peas/beans/other
green veggie to go with it. Follow the directions on the package
the chicken comes in. Make sure you remove the giblets before
roasting (neck, heart, liver, all in a little bag inside the chicken).
You also might want to take a little of the fat out of the bird.
When the bird is done roasting, take it out and sit it on a carving
board. It's good to let it cool just a tad before carving (or you
will burn yourself), so you can make gravy now. Take the pan
drippings. Put them in a separater container (one of those little
"pitchers" where the spout is a tube from the BOTTOM, so you can
pour off the juice and leave the fat) or in a small measuring cup.
Remove the fat with a spoon or by pouring off the juice from the
bottom. Put the juice in a little pot or pan. Take a tablespoon
or so of flour, and mix it in with some cool water until it's smooth.
Add a little more water if you need to so the mixture is as thin
as pancake mix and will pour. Pour it into the pot/pan and blend.
Put this over medium heat on the stove, add enough milk/broth/water
to make about 2 cups of liquid, blending it in. Add some salt/pepper
and some herbs (parsley, sage) and/or garlic, to taste.
Let your boyfriend carve the bird. After all, men are *born* knowing
how to do it..... ;-)
--Louise
|
848.7 | basic hints? | THEBAY::WILDEDI | DIGITAL: Day care for the wierd | Tue Dec 01 1987 18:53 | 30 |
| Don't be so hard on yourself...I taught myself to cook because my mother
HATES to cook, she's good at it but hates it.
First, try simple things ...we always seem to go for the fancy
recipes first and scare ourselves to death...AND DON'T LOOK AT THE
PICTURES! Nobody but a pro will make it look that good, but it can
still taste wonderful.
Basic hints:
get everything you need for a recipe out on the table or
work surface before you start. As you use it, put it
away...when all ingredients are replaced or the containers
are thrown away, you know you haven't forgotten anything.
If you don't have something called for in a recipe, you
know it before you start, so you can borrow or run to
the store.
Start making soups....they are the most forgiving food
in the world and taste wonderful even if everything
in the recipe isn't available...just add some other
kind of vegetable. Your boyfriend has to be impressed
with homemade soup and fresh bread from the local
bakery followed by pears, apples and gouda cheese for
dessert. I recommend the pea soup that is on the
package of dried peas you can buy in the market. While
at the store, pick up the rest of the ingredients
and follow the directions.
|
848.8 | try the lentil soup of 737.8 | TIGEMS::RYDER | Al Ryder, aquatic sanitary engineer | Wed Dec 02 1987 07:03 | 11 |
| Try the lentil soup in note 737.8 by Karen Portosa. It is the epitomy
in easy, but delicious soup. When I tried it the other day, I almost
modified the recipe --- anything that stark in ingredients *must*
be bland --- WRONG! This will become a standard in our household.
Make some buttermilk biscuits to go with it. Maybe include 1/2
cup of grated Swiss cheese plus 1/4 tsp of dill in the dough.
re experience When Betty was a new bride, she couldn't cook
worth a darn. After 30 years or practice, she is the very best!
|
848.9 | Equal Opportunity Cooking | PARSEC::PESENTI | JP | Wed Dec 02 1987 07:32 | 11 |
| What is it about the traditional world (read: sexist) that the best restaurant
chefs were always men, while the best home cooks were always women. I'm glad
that rubbish is finally being carted away! My mom was always a real mediocre
cook (liver chips, cardboard fish, gray beef, etc.). My dad was the cook for
his PT boat crew in the war, and is a great cook. I somehow managed to pick
up my dad's recipe-less style, while my sisters followed in Mom's footsteps.
Try taking a class together!
- JP
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848.10 | live action... | SUPER::ST_ONGE | | Wed Dec 02 1987 07:49 | 10 |
| Hey, was your boyfriend "born" with the knowledge to repair your
car?? Send him over to my house!!
One idea that no one has mentioned yet regarding learning to cook:
try watching "The Frugal Gourmet" or similar TV chefs (Julia Child
is good, but a little fancy for beginners). Or start hanging around
your friends who are good cooks as they prepare meals. Nothing
like getting it straight from the horse's mouth.
Good luck!
|
848.11 | Try Betty Crocker | RSTS32::VERGE | | Wed Dec 02 1987 09:40 | 10 |
| Renee, try some of the rcipes in the TLE::COOKS notes file - there
have been a few similar requests. Also, the cookbook *my husband*
presented me with before we got married was the Betty Crocker
cookbook - mineis like a 3-ring notebook, and lies flat open so
you don't lose your place. This cookbook is pretty basic and
uses mostly basic ingredients, and also has sections of hints
and definitions (EX: How to mash potatoes). The basic recipes
work well, and there are some fancier things in there, too, for
when you feel like trying them. Good Luck - and get your boyfriend
to learn to cook, too, so you can share the experience.
|
848.12 | more advice, plus cherry pie | TLE::NELSON | | Wed Dec 02 1987 11:22 | 75 |
| I like to cook, but I wouldn't bother learning unless you want to
yourself.
Anyway, my advice is, to pay attention to the quality of your
ingredients, and to look for helpful gadgets.
For instance, a pretty easy and good dinner is steak with steamed
broccoli. The best I've had is made with the best steaks you can
buy from Bread and Circus, coated with coarse mustard and broiled;
and with really fresh, firm broccoli, cut up (you can peel the
stems and cut them up, too), steamed until a fork goes into them
with just a little resistance.
Some examples of helpful tools-
- my husband uses an egg separator, because he can't separate the
eggs from whites otherwise
- I have a gadget to mash potatoes, which makes it incredibly easy
- Pies are easy to make, except that it's easy to ruin the crust
by handling it too much. Or to ruin your temper trying to break
up a hard piece of butter in the flour. There is a gadget called
a pastry cutter, which does that portion of the task quite well.
As long as I'm at it, I'll tell you my favorite pie recipe:
Cherry Pie
Preheat oven to 425 degrees.
Crust:
Mix together in a bowl:
1 cup flour
1/2 tsp. salt (I always omit this, actually)
Add:
1/3 cup of cold butter
Mix till you get small lumps of butter with a pastry cutter or 2
knives. Sprinkle in:
2 1/2 Tbsp. cold water
Mix lightly with a fork. Then start rolling into a ball; you may
have to add more water, as much as 2 Tbsp. more. Roll out and place
in a 9 inch pie plate. (I roll it on floured wax paper.) Flute
the edge up high (just fold the dough over and stick it together
with your fingers).
Filling:
Drain the liquid from:
1 can (#303, about a pound, I think) tart cherries packed in water
Keep liquid in a small sauce pan. Add:
2/3 cup sugar
1 Tbsp. cornstarch
(I never have the cornstarch, so I use another cereal, like oat
meal, oat bran, cream of wheat, or ralston.) Heat at a medium
temperature and stir. Bring to a boil for several minutes, until
it clears and starts to thicken. Add:
2 Tbsp. butter
1 Tbsp. lemon juice
Remove from heat.
Crumb Crust:
Mix in a bowl (the pie crust bowl will do):
2/3 cup flour
1/2 cup sugar
Add:
1/3 cup cold butter
Mix with a pastry blender or 2 knives until the butter is in small
chunks.
Assemble pie:
Place cherries from can in pie crust. Cover with filling, then
with crumb crust. Bake at 425 degrees for 15 minutes, then reduce
heat to 325 degrees, and bake another 40 minutes. I always put
the plate on a cookie sheet in case it overflows.
good luck,
Beryl
|
848.13 | COOKING CLASS | FRSBEE::TRUMPOLT | | Wed Dec 02 1987 11:22 | 14 |
| HI RENEE; THE BEST PLACE TO SEE IF THEY HAVE A COOKING CLASS IS
THE ASSABET VALLEY REGIONAL VOCATIONAL HIGH SCHOOL ON FITCHBERG
ST. IN MARLBORO, MA. I WENT THERE WHEN I WAS IN HIGH SCHOOL AND
GRADUATED FROM CULINARY ARTS (GORMET FOOD) AND BACK THEN THEY DID
HAVE A NIGHT CLASS FOR TEACHING PEOPLE HOW TO COOK THEY ALSO HAVE
A BAKE SHOP AND TEACH YOU HOW TO BAKE BREAD, CAKES, AND EVERYTHING
ELSE. MY MOTHER WHO IS A GREAT COOK HERSELF TAUGHT ME WHEN I WAS
YOUNG AND AFTER TAKING THE CLASS AT ASSABET FOR 3 1/2 YEARS I CAN
COOK PRETTY GOOD MYSELF. I KNOW ASSABET HAS EVENING PROGRAMS FOR
ADULT EDUCATION JUST CALL THEY SCHOOL SOME TIME AND ASK THEM IT
WOULDN'T HURT.
LIZ
|
848.14 | see note 836 | PARROT::GALVIN | Another Grey Area | Wed Dec 02 1987 11:45 | 27 |
| Just in case you missed it, note 836 has cookbook recommendations
for adult beginners.
Cooking is pretty easy. All you have to do is follow the directions.
(Using the references listed in note 836, you should even be able
to decipher them.) That's how I started, and now, I rarely use
recipes. After a while, you'll discover which flavors you like, and
you may want to improvise. That's when the fun begins.
As long as others are posting recipes here, I'll post one of the
world's easiest chicken recipes. I don't know where it came from,
but I suspect it originated in the kitchen of Kraft or Lipton.
Don't let the ingredients scare you away; it sounds vile, but it's
really very good. I've served it to lots of people and have never
heard a complaint.
CHICKEN APRICOT
1 jar apricot preserves
1 bottle of Kraft Catalina salad dressing
1 packet of onion soup mix
Chicken pieces (I usually use about 6-7 breasts and 8-10 thighs)
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Mix jam, salad dressing, and
soup mix together in a bowl. Dip chicken pieces in to cover
them, and spread them in a single layer in one or two pans.
Pour remaining sauce over the chicken. Cook for 1 hour.
|
848.15 | The uterus as a tracking device ;-) | OVDVAX::WIEGMANN | | Wed Dec 02 1987 12:33 | 20 |
| To echo the sentiments in previous notes - get your boyfriend to
learn with you. His attitude sounds perilously close to men who
think things like knowing where the scotch tape is or how to turn
on the washing machine are biological! Now is the time to start
- get one of the cookbooks mentioned, and he can read the directions
while you measure or vice versa. Start with something you both
like, e.g. spaghetti sauce is pretty easy, and will enjoy, and can
tell if you've done it right. Also, at first, don't be afraid to
use mixes or processed foods - I mean, if you make a quiche (another
easy one) get a frozen crust instead of tackling a scratch crust.
Then, when you feel more comfortable with the whole deal, you'll
want to move away from the processed foods and experiment. Then,
maybe he can make the crust while you make the filling!
Watching other cooks is a good idea, too - most people who enjoy
cooking would enjoy sharing, I think. Ask a friend if you can come
over the next time he/she makes that special meatloaf or whatever;
they'll probably appreciate the company.
Go for it and good luck!
|
848.16 | chicken OJ | PICA::DROWNS | this has been a recording | Wed Dec 02 1987 15:47 | 26 |
|
Renee,
I agree with the last note, cook something you like to eat. And
DON'T pick a difficult recipe to start with. Here's an easy one.
Buy boneless chicken breast.
Wash the breast
Place them in a baking dish
Cover the chicken with Orange Juice
Let cook for 45 minutes - 1 hour (depending on size)
You won't believe how moist and sweet your chicken will be. If
I think of it, I usually soak the chicken in the OJ overnight.
I serve white rice with oranges slices in it! Yummmy.
Good Luck!
Bonnie
|
848.17 | 2 cents.... | HPSVAX::MANDALINCI | | Thu Dec 03 1987 15:01 | 22 |
| I really only have 2 suggestions. First, try to find a book that
is an encyclopedia/dictionary/how-to book of cooking techniques.
By this I mean, how to seperate an egg, how to sift flour, how to
scald milk, etc. Look for picture books. Unfortunately, I do not
have a specific one to recommend and, to be honest with you, I don't
know if such a wonderful book exists, but one surely should. My
second suggestion is to read your recipe through COMPLETELY. And
then re-read it again. My mother used to make me do this and I finally
understood why when I would discover timing issues, like chill the
dough for an hour before making the butter cream. (If you don't
know about that hour you may completely throw off your schedule
or you may have someone making the butter cream and what do you
do with it while the dough chills?!?!?) My mother would even ask
me questions about the recipe to make sure I knew what I was about
to do. Another argument for reading the recipe through is that
sometimes hidden within the instructions and added ingredients.
Wouldn't it kill you if at the bottom the recipe it said to sprinkle
with powdered sugar and you didn't have any around.
I'm of the belief that if you can read, you can cook!!! Read first
and if you need to look up something do it before you start so you
won't get caught in timing issues. Best of luck!!!
|
848.18 | Getting started in cooking | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu Dec 03 1987 16:18 | 16 |
| "Joy of Cooking" ill intimidate most new cooks - start out with
Betty Crocker. Anyhow, most things you make (if you stay away from
obvious gotchas like Hollandaise sauce!) will turn out to be FOOD,
even if they don't come out looking like the picture in the cookbook.
It can be lots of FUN to help/watch a friend cook something that
you like - several people have invited themselves over to help make
the croissant dough the evening before a champagne brunch at our
house, for example - it's nice to have the company when you are
chopping, rolling, etc., anyhow!
PS - It was a MALE friend of mine who taught me to separate eggs
using half of the eggshell - my mother (dad was a terrible cook
- except when he made pizza!) never learned to do that and would
do it with a spoon, which would puncture the yolk about a third
of the time. She used to avoid recipes that called for separating
eggs.
|
848.19 | It's not because it's easy that you won't get any questions !! | SHIRE::BIZE | | Fri Dec 04 1987 04:20 | 17 |
| RE: Note on OJ Chicken 848.16
Your recipe sounds wonderful and I plan to try it on Monday evening.
However, I'd like to make sure of a few things:
1) You don't mention any spices (salt, paprika, ???)
2) Should it be covered or uncovered during cooking?
3) What heat? (high, medium or low)
4) I any fat used at any point in time?
Thanks in advance for your help.
Joana
|
848.20 | chicken OJ | PICA::DROWNS | this has been a recording | Fri Dec 04 1987 10:15 | 14 |
|
What great weather to cook in!
I don't use anything but the OJ, I don't cover it either. I do
turn the chicken after 20 minutes to make sure the top of
the chicken doesn't dry out.
Cook in a 350 oven for 45- to an hour (no longer). You can
tell when chicken is done by putting a fork into and gently
twisting the chicken, it should pull away very easily.
Good luck!
bonnie
|
848.21 | This is soooo easy! | HPSVAX::BSCHOFIELD | | Mon Dec 07 1987 12:27 | 23 |
| Renee,
This is an incredibly easy and tasty chicken cordeon bleu recipe.
Ingred:
1 pkg. bonless, skinless chicken breasts (usually 2 to a pkg)
1 can cream of mushroom soup
1 8 .0z sour cream
4 slices of mozzerela cheese
4 slices of ham
Wash the chicken and cut off visible fat (the yellow stuff).
Cut the breasts in half. You'll be able to see where. Remove that
cartilage thing in the middle. (Don't worry, all you have to do
is cut it out) Now you have 4 chicken breasts.
Lay 1 piece of ham and 1 piece of chees on each, fold it over and
place them in a cassarole dish. (Corningware works great).
In a bowl, mix the sour cream and soup, pour over the chicken and
cook (Uncovered) for 40 minutes at 350 degrees. Serve with rice.
Good Luck!!
|
848.22 | Macho Male | ROLL::IRONS | Sunshine daydream | Tue Dec 08 1987 12:25 | 17 |
| Gosh, I'm a male and I've been living alone for four years. I had
to either learn how to cook or starve! I took the former. Now
I cook meals for others occasionally (including my girlfriend and
my parents) and they enjoy it! I can tell because they always ask
me when I'm going to invite them over again for dinner. My dads
favorite is the meat pie recipe I got from this notesfile. That's
a pretty easy recipe but you need all afternoon for it to cook.
It's good for a Saturday afternoon when you have nothing else to
do.
I've never had a cook book or took any lessons or ask anyone how
to cook. Just jump in with two feet and *don't* let it overwelm
you because it's easy.
Yes, you guessed, I'm proud and bragging about myself!
dave
|
848.23 | He might not want to take a class! | CSCMA::MAYNARD | | Tue Dec 08 1987 12:58 | 11 |
| re: -1
I'm also a male who likes to cook. I admit that my wife does do
most of the cooking, but for 2 reasons: 1) She's much better at
it, and 2) She says I take too long and make a colossal mess of
her kitchen.
Some noters should remember that the original topic was for easy
easy recipes and beginner tips, not on sexist cooking. Give her
boyfriend a break for Pete's sake.
-Don
|
848.24 | For years and years now | SALES::RFI86 | Pime doesn't cray | Tue Dec 08 1987 13:03 | 10 |
| I'm male too and I've been cooking professionally and so I don't
starve for about 12 years now. Everyone who's ever had it has said
that my Pizza is the best they've ever had( Recipie should be in
her somewhere, note 70something I think). Cooking is a breeze. If
you want to make something you've never tried follow a recipie and
use common sense in seasoning to taste.
Seasonings are the spice of life:-)
Geoff
|
848.25 | Another one | SSDEVO::WILKINS | Trust me, I know what I'm doing | Wed Dec 09 1987 12:29 | 10 |
| I'm a male also who cooks. My wife and I both work and when we split
up the household chores I got the cooking (mostly because she could
burn water). I agree about using a cook book as a guide or for ideas
but have fun and try things. The more experience you get the more
times you will end up with something great. After several years
living as a batchelor and 8 years married, my kids will not let my
wife near the kitchen for fear of posioning :')
Dick
|
848.26 | easy chicken recipe | WAV14::BELL | | Fri Dec 11 1987 12:58 | 21 |
| I agree that your best to enroll in an evening cooking class at
your local Vocational School if you have one. It's alot of fun
even for the experienced cook.
And alot of Cook Books are very good as far as explaining the different
techniques that you need to know in order to follow the recipes.
After you have come to understand the basics, cooking is alot more
fun when you experiment and try different things.
Here's a simple little recipe, nothing fancy, but easy to make and
tastes very good with a baked potatoe and vegetable:
1-2 pcs of Chicken (any type) per person
Pkg Shake & Bake (chicken type)
fresh lemon (or bottled)
follow the instructions for the Shake & Bake (place chicken, after
washing in plastic bag provided with Shake & Bake, coat chicken
well). Bake as instructed(on ungreased cookie sheet). 10 minutes
before the chicken is done, squeeze lemon juice on it. continue
baking til done.
|