T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1963.1 | KEEP BANANAS YELLOW | AIMHI::DONOVAN | | Tue Aug 29 1989 14:17 | 4 |
| I haven't tried this yet but I read about it last week.
To keep bananas from getting black when you store then in a
refrigerator, put them in a white platic bag (it must be white).
Supposedly, they stay fresh as a new picked one.
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1963.2 | various hints | IOWAIT::WILDE | Ask yourself..am I a happy cow? | Tue Aug 29 1989 19:16 | 59 |
| RIPEN FRUIT (TOMATOES INCLUDED):
Place unripe fruit in paper bag with an apple for 12 hours...check for
ripeness. Leave up to 48 hours to ripen fully. This will not work for
peaches. If peaches are not ripe when picked, your only option to make
them edible is to poach them in syrup or fruit juice.
TASTIER SOUPS/BROTHS:
Save bones from chicken, pork, beef meals in a resealable plastic bag in
the freezer. When you get a good soup pot full, place bones on a
broiler pan or cookie sheet, roast in 500 degree oven until well browned.
Pour into big pot and cover with water, add 1 big onion cut in quarters,
some carrot chunks, some parsnip chunks, and some turnip chunks
and bring to a boil. Skim. Simmer for 2 - 5 hours to make broth. Strain
through a colander to get rid of bones, veggies, etc. Cool, remove fat,
and freeze broth cubes..
READY-TO-USE STOCK:
Make up a pot of your favorite stock, cooking down to
a concentrated solution. Make large ice cubes using the cooled broth.
When frozen, pop out of the tray into a plastic freezer bag. Keep on
hand to use for cooking...when you need "home-cooked" flavor for a
sauce or soup or casserole, drop in a few "cubes" of flavor. Stores
in good freezer almost indefinitely.
HEALTHY (AND TASTY) GELATIN:
Use your favorite fruit juice (no fresh pineapple or papaya), 2 or 3 cups
to 1 packet of unflavored gelatin, to make molded salads, fruit, filled
gelatins, etc. I use cran-raspberry juice to make a nice molded "jelly"
for roast birds (chicken, goose, pheasant) for nice dinners. Follow the
package directions for molded dishes (on the gelatin packet), essentially
heat 1 cup juice to boiling, add gelatin, stir to dissolve, add remaining
cold juice....chill to "egg white" consistency and stir in up to 2 cups
chopped fruit. Much healthier than JELLO, etc. Try bottled
pineapple/grapefruit juice with banannas added for a different treat.
Sugar may be added if you really feel you need it, but is usually not
necessary for commercial fruit juices. Makes nice lo-cal, no-fat treats.
DRY ROASTED TURKEY BREAST REMEDY:
Slip a layer of your favorite stuffing between the breast meat and skin on the
turkey before roasting. On the smaller birds, roast 3/4 of cooking time, on a
v-shaped rack, breast-side down and turn over for the last hour or so to brown
the breast skin. In either case, baste the bird often with chicken or turkey
broth (butter adds so much fat it should be avoided).
FAST CHOCOLATE OR BUTTERSCOTCH ICING FOR CAKE:
This is NOT for diets, but for emergencies when you need a nice cake for
an occasion and want a fool-proof icing. Mix instant pudding (chocolate
or butterscotch work very well), using whipping cream instead of milk.
Use on any cake....buy a pound cake, split into three layers, length-wise,
and fill and frost cake with the icing. Chill until approx. 20 minutes
before serving. This makes a luxury presentation and takes less than 30
minutes to put together.
|
1963.3 | Thanks, and 2 more hints | BOOKIE::AITEL | Never eat a barracuda over 3 lbs. | Mon Sep 25 1989 16:31 | 19 |
| Kristen, thanks for the hint about oiling a grater before grating
cheese. I used my PAM spray, and the cheese just rinsed off!
More hints:
When measuring shortening from a can, if you want say about
1/2 cup of shortening, get a 2 cup measure. Fill it up with one
cup of water. Spoon shortening in until the water comes up to
the 1 1/2 cup mark. Make sure the shortening is submerged when
you look at the mark. For larger amounts, use your large measuring
cup. Basically, you're measuring the shortening by water displacement,
which is a lot easier than trying to pack it into a cup.
When measuring anything sticky, like honey or molasses, use
a little oil to grease the measuring cup/spoon getting every part
of the cup/spoon. The molasses/honey will pour right out, to the
last little drop.
--Louise
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1963.4 | BLACK SPOTS ON ALUMINUM PANS | CLOSUS::HERNDON | | Wed Sep 27 1989 10:14 | 14 |
|
REMOVING BLACK SPOTS ON ALUMINUM PANS
If you have black spots on the inside of your aluminum pans, you'll
like this:
Need: Cream of tartar (in spice department)
Water
Fill pan with water up to the rim and add about 1 tablespoon
creme of tartar per quart and bring it to a boil.
Black will disappear before your eyes.
Kristen
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1963.5 | Melting chocolate | ULTRA::KROCZAK | Barbara Kroczak MS: BXB1-1/D03 | Wed Sep 27 1989 14:50 | 6 |
| When melting chocolate, the tip I was given was to boil some water in
the bottom part of a double boiler, than take it off the heat when
boiling, put the top of the double boiler on the bottom part
(containing the boiled water) and cover the part containing the
chocolate. This is enough heat to melt the chocolate and it never
curdles or burns.
|
1963.6 | more tips | SAHQ::HERNDON | Kristen, DTN 385-2154 | Thu Oct 11 1990 15:50 | 54 |
| Here's a bunch of tips from an article....
* When food is too salty add a cut raw potato, then discard the
potato once it is boiled.
* If the dish is too sweet, add salt. On a main dish you can add a
teaspoon of vinegar.
* If the food is too sharp, a teaspoon of sugar will soften the
taste.
* To prevent your salt shaker from clogging, keep a few grains
of rice inside the shaker.
* To cut a pie into five equal pieces, first cut a Y in the pie
then the two large pieces can be cut in half.
* Instant soup stock will always be on hand if you save the pan
juice from cooking meats. Pour liquid into ice cube trays and
freeze. Place solid cubes in freezer bags or foil.
* To prevent soggy salads, place an inverted saucer in the bottom
of the salad bowl. The excess dressing will drain under the
saucer and keep the greens crisp.
* Adding cold water to the bottom of the broiling pan before cooking
meat helps absorb smoke and grease and makes clean up easier.
* Pour pan drippings into a tall jar. The grease will rise to the
top in minutes and can be removed for a grease free gravy.
* Add a little lemon juice to water while boiling to make fish
firm and white.
* If a casserole dish is lined with several layers of foil and then
filled and frozen, the casserole can be lifted out when solid
and wrapped for freezing without losing the use of the dish.
It will fit right back into dish when it's time to bake. Also
makes for easier stacking of casseroles in the freezer.
* A dull warm knife works best for slicing cheese.
* Stir eggs while they are boiling to keep the yolks centered.
This makes deviled eggs prettier.
* Add vinegar to the water used to cook hard boiled eggs will
keep them from 'running' if a shell is cracked.
* Storing cheese in a tightly covered container with a few sugar cubes
will retard mold.
* Rub shortening over the top of the pot to prevent boil overs.
* Hardened cheese can be softened by soaking in buttermilk.
|
1963.7 | | SPIDER::BASSETT | Design | Fri Oct 12 1990 13:10 | 4 |
| Add a little veg. oil to water when you a cooking pasta. This will
help it not to stick.
|
1963.8 | | SPIDER::BASSETT | Design | Fri Oct 12 1990 13:13 | 5 |
| Loosely crumble up some foil and put it on the bottom of your meatloaf
pan. The fat from the meat falls to the bottom.
|
1963.9 | | UPBEAT::JFERGUSON | Leading Lady | Fri Oct 12 1990 16:40 | 4 |
| Add a few marbles to your kettle to warn you when it's boiling dry.
It makes an awful noise.
Judy
|
1963.11 | | AYOV18::TWASON | | Tue Oct 16 1990 09:04 | 9 |
|
I was chopping onions at the weekend and still there is a faint
smell of onion from my hands. Anyone know how to get rid of this
as I really hate it - even though I am the only one who can notice
it.
thanx
Tracy
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1963.12 | onion hands | SAHQ::HERNDON | Kristen, DTN 385-2154 | Tue Oct 16 1990 09:29 | 9 |
| Yeah, I have that problem too...I've tried lemon juice and that helps
but boy, if you have a paper cut....ouch! I've used Dawn right
on my hands and it helps. I wonder if a paste of baking soda would
work. Actually, I just gave up and now live with 'onion hands'
Maybe we should try the Tang everyone's talking about using in their
dishwasher? 8*)
Kristen
|
1963.13 | Baking soda does indeed work | SSGBPM::KENAH | I am the catalyst, but not the poison | Tue Oct 16 1990 10:01 | 0 |
1963.14 | salt too | VIDEO::BENOIT | | Tue Oct 16 1990 10:46 | 1 |
| Rubbing salt into your hands also helps. Ditto on the paper cut ouch.
|
1963.15 | vanilla in milk | CLUSTA::GLANTZ | Mike 227-4299 @TAY Littleton MA | Tue Oct 16 1990 11:21 | 5 |
| In the movie "Crossing Delancy", a pickle-seller from the Williamsburg
section of lower Manhattan reveals that the secret to getting rid of
onion and garlic smell is to soak your hands in milk and a little
vanilla extract. I've heard this before, but never tried it. It
couldn't hoit ...
|
1963.16 | cold water rinse helps | SHIRE::DETOTH | | Tue Oct 16 1990 13:14 | 4 |
| I have found the problem is lessened - to non-existant - if you rinse
the peeled oignon, knife, board and your hands under cold water before
starting... repeat rinsing for each new oignon... it also lessens the
amount of tears you shed in the chopping process..
|
1963.17 | | RUSTIE::NALE | Accept No Limitations | Tue Oct 16 1990 17:21 | 6 |
|
I heard that holding onto the blade of a steel knife (carefully)
and running your hands under cold water does the trick. I do it
and haven't had a problem w/my hands smelling like onions.
Sue
|
1963.19 | atta Glantz | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Wed Oct 17 1990 18:15 | 8 |
|
Mike beat me to it - I was going to tell you about the vanilla
and milk thing from "Crossing Delancy" too. It did sound like
an effective method and I've been curious, but never tried it.
If you do, please let us know, will you?
Thanks, Diane
|
1963.20 | Fresh Ginger | EVOAI1::HULLAH | Jacquie Hullah @EVO | Thu Oct 18 1990 05:25 | 8 |
| FRESH GINGER is not always available all the year round (depends on
where you live). Peel and slice it and store in sherry in the fridge -
keeps for several months. I keep mine in a small screwtop jar.
Once you've used the ginger, the sherry is excellent for Chinese
cooking!
Jacquie
|
1963.21 | freezer ginger | CSOA1::WIEGMANN | | Thu Oct 18 1990 10:05 | 7 |
| RE: fresh ginger - when it looks fresh & good, I buy a lot, then peel
and mince it and keep it in a small container in the freezer. When
cooking, just put whatever amount you want into wok or skillet.
Seems to work ok!
Terry
|
1963.22 | Keeping it Simple | SSGBPM::KENAH | I am the catalyst, not the poison | Thu Oct 18 1990 16:42 | 3 |
| I freeze the ginger root whole -- frozen ginger grates just fine...
andrew
|
1963.23 | time for a retry | CSOA1::WIEGMANN | | Thu Oct 18 1990 17:30 | 4 |
| The one time I tried freezing the whole root, it turned purple and got
mushy - Maybe it was an old root!
TW
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1963.24 | peel it first? | CUPMK::DROWNS | this has been a recording | Fri Oct 19 1990 10:52 | 7 |
|
Do you peel the ginger root before you freeze it? I froze it with
the skin still on it, when I tried to grate it the whole root
was mushy...I used it anyhow but it didn't seem to have as much
flavor as usual.
bonnie
|
1963.25 | | ATLEAD::PSS_MGR | | Fri Oct 19 1990 11:18 | 4 |
| I freeze my gingeroot with skin on, whole. I find it real easy
to grate. I just put in a freezer baggy.
Kristen
|
1963.26 | Nope, never mushy | SSGBPM::KENAH | I am the catalyst, not the poison | Fri Oct 19 1990 11:23 | 3 |
| Whole, with the skin on, in a freezer bag.
andrew
|
1963.27 | twice frozen bananas | DSTEG2::HUGHES | | Mon Oct 22 1990 12:52 | 10 |
| I read in a note somewhere in this notesfile about freezing ripe
bananas. I let a bunch of bananas get very ripe, I plan on making
bread with them. They are ready but I am not!
My question is can I freeze banana bread that I make with previously
frozen bananas? I usually make a few breads and freeze them.
Thanks
Linda
|
1963.28 | Freeze? Yes | TRACTR::OSBORNE | | Mon Oct 22 1990 14:16 | 5 |
| Yes you can freeze banana bread. Just insure it is double wrapped and
it will be just as good in three months as it was the day you baked it.
enjoy,
Stuart
|
1963.29 | re-phrase question | DSTEG2::HUGHES | | Mon Oct 22 1990 14:28 | 6 |
| The question is can I freeze the ripe bananas, defrost the bananas,
make banana bread then freeze the banana bread? Can bananas be frozen
twice?
Linda
|
1963.30 | that's ok. | NOVA::FISHER | Oakland swept, so what | Mon Oct 22 1990 14:58 | 4 |
| Sure, that's fine. They are cooked in between so it's not the
same as the meat spoilage problems resulting from twice frozen meat.
ed
|
1963.31 | I've done it and it works! | GEMVAX::NORTEMAN | | Tue Oct 23 1990 13:52 | 6 |
| Hi, Linda --
I've made banana bread from frozen bananas and refrozen the bread. It
worked just fine! Enjoy.
--Karen
|
1963.32 | Pretty poached eggs | EBBCLU::CASWELL | | Fri Oct 26 1990 09:27 | 5 |
|
Add a teaspoon of vinegar to the water when cooking poached
eggs. It will keep the eggs in one single piece.
Randy
|
1963.33 | Works On Garlic Smell | PCCAD1::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Perfection | Tue Oct 30 1990 09:41 | 5 |
| To get rid of the smell of garlic from your hands, just rub fresh
parsley between them then wash with soap and water to get rid of the parsley
smell.
Jim
|
1963.34 | freeze that banana bread | TYGON::WILDE | illegal possession of a GNU | Wed Oct 31 1990 18:21 | 11 |
| > The question is can I freeze the ripe bananas, defrost the bananas,
> make banana bread then freeze the banana bread? Can bananas be frozen
> twice?
once you cook the suckers, they ain't bananas, they're banana bread 8^}
and...yes, you can freeze it to your heart's content.
The frozen bananas were my suggestion, and I keep them around all the time.
Then whenever I feel like baking goodies, I have the stuff right there...I
also have great morning shakes made with skim milk and ultra slim fast.
|
1963.35 | | HORSEY::MACKONIS | | Thu Nov 01 1990 13:49 | 1 |
| Do you leave the skin on the Bananas?
|
1963.36 | peel before freezing | TYGON::WILDE | illegal possession of a GNU | Thu Nov 01 1990 16:53 | 12 |
| >>>Do you leave the skin on the Bananas?
no, peel and wrap each banana individually in freezer wrap. Drop them into
a freezer bag and store in the freezer. When you want to bake or make a
shake (poetic, no?) remove the desired number of bananas and unwrap - either
defrost or blend into other ingredients using a blender, depending on what
you are doing.
When they are good a ripe, they are at their most flavorful....make sure they
have NO GREEN anywhere before freezing them. In fact, I like my baking
bananas almost too ripe -- but not black....they'd be too hard to peel if
they got too soft.
|
1963.37 | | TLE::EIKENBERRY | Don't confuse activity with productivity | Tue Dec 18 1990 10:10 | 6 |
| I recently read in one of my cookbooks that scalding milk is only
necessary if you're using unpasteurized milk. So, in essence, these days
you can apparently ignore directions to scald milk.
--Sharon
|
1963.38 | do we have a question note? | EM::DROWNS | this has been a recording | Wed Sep 11 1991 14:40 | 9 |
|
I need a cooking tip...
I want to shake -n- bake my pork chops tonight but all I have is
s -n-b for chicken and fish. Can I use one of those? Which one
would be better?
bonnie
|
1963.39 | The chicken one will taste good... | AKOCOA::SCHOFIELD | | Thu Sep 12 1991 11:57 | 3 |
| Either probably, but I'd use the chicken.
beth
|
1963.40 | experiment a little | AIMHI::JUTRAS | | Thu Sep 12 1991 14:02 | 2 |
| Why not live dangerously and try combining a little of both for
something different.
|
1963.41 | | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Thu Sep 12 1991 15:52 | 3 |
| "No two foods have ever been known to explode when combined"
From "How to Repair Food.
|
1963.42 | stale cookies | SUBSYS::ARMSTRONG | sort of cast in concrete | Mon Mar 20 1995 14:46 | 6 |
| Leftover/Stale cookies: put in a ziplock bag and toss in the freezer.
When it's time to make a cookie crust, just put a few in the food
processor and pulverize them. (Add melted butter, or whatever and press
in a pan to form crust).
~beth
|