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Tips, Tricks, Recipes and Things
You did not Know You needed to Know
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Spice preparations
First, remember, you can always ADD more spice, but you can not remove
it. Therefore, start with less than what you think you want then taste
and repeat as desired.
There are several ways to prepare and use spices.
Heating foods over 170 degrees kills things. Sometimes this is
what you want, often it is not what you want. Many people try to
cook their food FAST and this brings consequences.
The process of cooking is a factor of time vs heat. Often, you
can cook at higher temperature for less time or you can cook at lower
temperatures for longer times. But, never should you cook at high
temperature for a long time. This has an effect on texture and
nutrients.
Cooking at higher temperatures will cook the outside much faster than
the inside, leading to dry and tough meat.
With modern people trying to cook FAST, they opt for the high heat and
a minimum time (which often becomes to too much time). Using
chicken as an example, you might could use 350 degrees for 20 minutes,
or 225 degrees for 60 minutes (much better).
Slow cooking your meat makes it more tasty, juicy and tender.
On a related note regarding
temperature:
Vegetables are also being killed by most cooks.
Most vegetables are edible WITHOUT cooking. If you have a reason
to “cook” them, then usually the best method is to bring water to a
boil and add vegetables for a minute or two, then promptly remove from
the water. This helps keep them crispy and tasty with much of
their nutrients.
The next time you order a pizza try this. Order what you want on
the pizza but have veggies put on AFTER it comes from the oven.
If they look funny at you, then simply point to the salad bar.
Reheating leftovers
Ever heat pot roast as a leftover and find you can hardly chew it or
swallow it? Try this.
For most of your leftovers, bring water to a boil in a deep enough pan
to cover you food. Then add the food you want to eat, for about a
minute or two. Remove and enjoy the succulence.
This will work for all meats and vegetables, with few exceptions - like
mashed potatoes.
Tips for cooking and using herb
& spices
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Mixing Spices with food ((((
Some foods will simply need to have the spice added by sprinkling or
folding (mixing) into food. Other foods will better if spices are
prepared separately added to the food.
Fowl are an example of preparing the spice separately. After
cooking the fowl, use the drippings of the fowl to mix with the
spice. Add oil or water as needed or desired. After
preparing the spice you can roll the fowl pieces in the spice or use
the spice as a dip.
Chili and rice are examples of adding the spice to the food and folding
(mixing) it together.
There is also the method of sprinkling the spice on the food.
Remember, spices taste differently when wet or dry. Eggs and
potatoes are examples of sprinkling.
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Baking soda & vinegar ((((
From your clothes to your dishes to your hair to your body, baking soda
and vinegar may be the best cleaning agents you get use.
While using Dawn dish soap to remove greasy messes, using baking soda
will cost less and work beautifully. The difficulty in using
baking soda is that does not lather, leaving a trail of where you have
washed, and confuses people as to where they have cleaned.
The same is true for your hair and body. Rinsing your hair and
body with vinegar is refreshing and exfoliating. The smell is NOT
a problem as it is gone in minutes.
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All oil and grease are NOT the same ((((
There is some heady research involved in this, so you will have to do
your own research. But, first choice for cooking is coconut oil,
with second choice being olive oil.
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Herbs and Spices are FOOD ((((
Treat them as such. Think in terms of putting food on your
spice. The point is, think of using more than a sprinkle.
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SALT ((((
First, let us make something perfectly clear. As far as you are
concerned, ALL SALT IS SEA SALT. It matters not if it is
separated from seawater, dug from ground pits. Pits are ancient
sea beds, a collection of salt when that sea disappeared long
ago. The only difference in salts is not the salt, but the
surrounding minerals. The minerals are washed or not washed from
the salt. If you buy grey or pink “sea” salt, it merely is not
cleaned of surrounding minerals. If you buy “white” salt, it is
merely cleaned of surrounding minerals.
The salts that have not been cleaned probably do contain desireable
minerals, but that may or may not be enough reason to pay extra.
When using herbs and spices, remember SALT can be your friend.
You can use SALT to enhance flavor and to extend the use of your herbs
and spices. If you want to make your spice fit into more
servings, then use a little less and a dash of SALT. BE CAREFUL –
if you cross the fine line the SALT will ruin the food. Maybe you
could rinse it off, but you have to determine that.
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170 degree ((((
If you heat vegetable or animal things to over 170 degrees, you kill
bacteria (GOOD and bad). You also will damage or kill other
things of nutrient value. Many people cook meats at around 350 or
so degrees and for WAY TOO long.
Here are a couple examples of needed temperatures for some food:
• Beef is cooked after it reaches an internal
temperature of 145-160 degrees (depending on rare, med, well) for about
10 minutes.
• Chicken is cooked after it reaches an internal
temperature of 160-165 degrees for about 10 minutes.
If you want to sear whole spice, that might be OK, but not ground spice.
Being mindful of the temperatures will keep your oil from being a
concern for cancer.
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Sodium hypochlorite (bleach) ((((
a short overview
Many people do not understand simple chemistry (and why should
they????) and are easily frightened by technical words. If you
tell many people that “dihydro monoxide” is rampant in factory and
restaraunts and even in their homes, they would agree to ban it.
The same would be true if you tell them the same about “sodium
chloride”, they would agree to ban it. And again if you tell them
about “sodium hypochlorite”, they would agree to ban it.
“dihydro monoxide” is WATER
“sodium chloride” is table SALT
“sodium hypochlorite” is BLEACH
Sodium hypochlorite is one of the two elements which makes
SALT. The other is sodium, a metal. When sodium and
sodium hypochlorite are combine (do not try this at home) the result is
sodium chloride – SALT. Conversely, when you separate SALT into
its parts, you get sodium and sodium hypochlorite - BLEACH
The promoted fears for bleach may be genuine, but you can drown in
water. Should we avoid water? Vinegar will NOT kill
Listeria.
Exposing something to sodium hypochlorite for at least 3 minutes and as
long as 10 minutes will effectively rid it of all germs (bacteria,
virus, etc). Sodium hypochlorite once exposed to air is
neutralized after about ½ hour to 1 hour, and no longer
useful. The remaining residue is sodium (salt), which rinses
easily.
If you use sodium hypochlorite to disinfect something, including food,
it should be adequately rinsed. Typical ratio of use is about 1
cap (1/4oz) bleach to 1 gallon water. This is not a critical
ratio.
The smell of bleach is NOT bad. It indicates the item is treated
and germ free.
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Deer meat ((((
When using game meat such as deer – it is a very DRY meat. It may
help to include some cow fat added to the deer meat. Maybe 25 %
fat, (maybe 1 lb of venison, and 1/2 lb of cow meat [for fat content]),
otherwise your results will be dry. Experiment.
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To butter or not to butter ((((
This is closely related to the oil issue. Butter is GOOD for
you.
Ants and flies will not touch margarine. It is hydrogenated and
causes heart disease. AND it does not spoil. See the
section of sodium hypochlorite.
But having said all that, coconut oil is a great replacement for butter.
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Why cook food? ((((
That is a trick question. If it is food, you do not need to cook
it. If it is something you can not eat in the raw, then heating
it helps break down elements of the item so you can digest it. As
a rule, raw vegetables are usually food right off the plant. They
do not need “cooking”. Have you ever eaten a tomato off the
vine? What of corn? You have never really tasted them till
you eat them fresh from the plant.
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