Read I'm Just Here for the Food Online
Authors: Alton Brown
Tags: #General, #Courses & Dishes, #Cooking, #Cookery
grilling directly on natural chunk charcoal coals
Master Recipe (searing)
Slaw, Roasted Beet and Broccoli
Slow-cooker cookery:
Posole
Split Pea Soup
Smith, Jeff
Smoked and Braised Beef Short Ribs
Smoke points
Smoking
cardboard box smoker for
smoke making elements for
Soda water
Software
see also
Ingredients
Soufflés
Soups:
Roasted Tomato
Split Pea
stock in
Sources
Soybean oil
Spareribs
Sparkling water
Spatulas
Spencer, Percy
Spice House
Spice mixes, commercial
Spice rubs
application of
Beef
Chicken
choosing
Fish
Haste Makes Paste
proportions in recipes for
Rub Number
salt and
Spices
buying
grinding
peppercorns
rules for
storing
toasting
whole vs. ground
Spinach, in Get Breakfast
Splatter guards
Split Pea Soup
Spray bottles
Spring water
Sputnik paradigm
Stainless steel bowls
Stainless steel cookware
fond and
10-inch fry pans
Stainless-steel knives
Stamped knives
Standing rib roast
Dry-Aged
Starch:
for gravy
thickening and
Staub
Steaks:
Blue Butter for
Cube, à la Salisbury
cuts of
filet of tenderloin, butterflying
Flank, Marinated
grilling experiment with
serving sliced vs. whole
skirt, grilling directly on natural chunk charcoal coals
Skirt: The Master Recipe (searing)
Steam
pressure cooking and
Steamed dishes
Cauliflower and Broccoli
Eggs, Hard-Cooked
Fish, Whole
Onion Custard, Sweet
Ramen Radiator
Savoy Wraps, Savory
Steamer baskets
Steaming
equipment for
Master Profile for
Short Form guidelines for
Stephen, George
Stevens, Patricia Bunning
Stewing
transformation of collagen to gelatin in
see also
Braising
Stews:
Beef Stroganoff
Chili
Posole
Stir-frying
Stock
cooling
defoaming
freezing
ingredients for
in pan sauces
simmering
straining
uses for
Stock pots
Stroganoff, Beef
Stuffings, for turkey
Substitutions:
of equipment
of ingredients
Suet
Sugar Snap Peas with Spicy Lemon Dipping Sauce
Sunflower oil
Surface tension
Sweating aromatic vegetables
Sweet-and-Sour Tofu
Sweet Onion Custard
Sweet potatoes:
grilling
immersion-frying strips of
Tropical Mash
Swiss chard
with Garlic and Tomato
T
“Table” grills
Table salt
Tapioca
Taste, of warm vs. cool foods
Taylor, John Martin
Teflon
8-inch fry pans
possible health hazards of
Temperature:
safety concerns and
see also
Thermometers
Tempura (Batter Up)
Tenderizing, acids and
Tenderloin (beef cut)
Terra-cotta pots, roasting chicken in
Thawing
Thermal coasting
Thermometers
frying/candy
grilling and
instant-read
meat
oven
pop-up
probe
Thermoworks
Thickeners
for gravy
starch chemistry and
Thorne, John
Times, in recipes
Tofu:
Bar-B-Fu
sauté scampi-style
Sweet-and-Sour
Tomato(es):
Green, Fried
Red Onion Jam
Roasted, Soup
Sauce Rosie
Slow-Roast
Tongs, spring-loaded
Tortillas
Towels
paper, draining fried foods on
Toxins
Trager, James
Trans fatty acids
Transporting food, safety concerns and
Travel
Tres Amigos
Trichinella spiralis
Triglycerides
Tropical Mash
Trout, Miller Thyme
Tuna Steak, Blackened
Turkey
basting
brining
and Fig Breakfast Meatloaf
pop-up thermometers in
Roast
stuffing for
Typhoid Mary
U
Unilids
V
Vanilla
Veal:
bones, for stock
shanks
Vegetable(s):
Batter Up
blanching
cooked vs. raw
Marinated, Salad
for pressure cooking
safety concerns and
see also
specific vegetables
Vegetable shortening
Ventilation
Vermont Butter & Cheese Co.
Vinaigrettes
as marinades
Mignonette
Volume equivalents
W
Walnut oil
Water
bottled, types of
brining and
as deglazing option
filtering
frying and
hard and soft
heat and molecular structure of
microorganisms and
surface tension and
see also
Blanching; Boiling; Poaching; Simmering; Steaming
Water conversion
Wax beans, in Marinated Vegetable
Salad
Weber grills
modification of
Websites, food-related
Weight equivalents
Welding gloves
Well water
Whisks
White Clam Sauce
White Lily Foods Co.
Wine:
Champagne, in Mignonette Sauce/Vinaigrette
deglazing with
poaching in
Wontons, Artichoke and Feta
Wood:
burning
chips or chunks, smoking and
Z
Zip-top freezer bags, marinating and brining in
Zucchini and Carrots with Garlic and Ginger
Epilogue
Unless you’re one of those folks who check out the ending of a book first, you’ve probably plowed through almost three pounds of paper to reach this spot. Thanks for sticking with it. I hope it didn’t take as much work to read as it did to write it.
In the end, I certainly don’t expect you to remember every manic message contained herein, but there are a few things I hope you take away for the long term.
Although the act of cooking involves a great many things, at its core it’s about the marriage of food and heat. Being a good cook means understanding the food enough to know how to apply that heat. Do you deliver a massive dose via cast iron or do you dole it out slowly via water in a warm oven? Therein lies the core question of cooking. Everything else is secondary.
Just as voltage is but one factor in determining the potential of an electrical current, temperature is but one factor in determining the potential of heat. The mode of transmission, radiation, conduction, and convection are as crucial to the equation as the temperature itself. That’s why you can stick your hand inside a 500° F oven but not into a pot of 200° F water.
Searing is, in the residential milieu at least, the fastest way to get heat into food. The primary goal: browning via the Maillard reaction (for meat) and caramelization (fruits and vegetables). Depending on their size and shape, target foods may be seared until done or finished by another method. Since searing takes place in a dry pan, no flour or other coatings should be employed. Certain spice rubs, however, are definitely allowed.
Don’t fear the fryer. Since it takes a lot less energy to bring a pound of oil to 350° F than it does to boil a pound of water, fat is an amazingly efficient cooking medium. What’s more, frying adds flavor because it delivers enough of a thermal punch to create browning, something water just can’t do. And remember, when done correctly, most of the cooking fat stays in the pan. What constitutes correctness?
• The temperature of the cooking fat must be kept high enough so that the water under the surface of the food boils. Miss this mark, and fat will invade the food with a vengeance.
• Don’t crowd the fryer.
• All excess dredge or batter should be removed prior to frying.
• Once cooked, fried foods must be thoroughly drained.
Buy yourself a grill that can be controlled. Better to load it up with burning charcoal and choke it back via air control than not to have enough heat to begin with. Lubricate grillables with only enough oil to give the seasoning something to hold on to. This is less than you think. If the grill grates are dirty, the grill is useless. Grill by zone. Most foods, be they animal or vegetable, fare best when moved between areas of direct and indirect heat. Buy good charcoal and use a chimney starter so that you can add burning coals to your fire. I’ve never believed in adding cold charcoal to an existing fire.
When pan frying, you’ll rarely need as much oil as you think. What looks like a pitiful puddle in an empty pan will rise considerably once the food moves in.
A successful sauté depends on high heat, a small amount of oil, and constant movement. Pan crowding is the number-one problem facing the sauté. Work in batches if you’re in doubt. Remember, if you see liquid bubbling in the bottom of the pan, you’re not sautéing, you’re boiling. And since water-type liquids can’t move past 212° F, your food won’t brown no matter how hot the pan was when you started.
Water is tricky stuff. Don’t turn your back on it.
Despite new “smart” appliance designs, it’s still darned difficult to maintain a constant and gentle simmer on a cook top. So whenever possible, I move my simmerables off the stove and into the oven. Evaporation is inevitable, so keep hot liquid nearby to maintain the liquid level.
Braising is nothing more than simmering something that’s been seared in as little liquid as possible. Maintain food-liquid contact by cooking in the smallest vessel possible or (my favorite) an aluminum foil enclosure set inside another pan. Cooking in aluminum is perfectly safe (yes, even when acidic foods are concerned), though foods cooked in foil should be removed from the foil as soon after cooking as possible.
Due to the way in which collagen converts into gelatin, meat braises and stews are always better the next day. I know of no exceptions.
Buy a pressure cooker, read the instructions, and then use it often.
Homemade stock makes sense—and sense is what I like making best.
If there’s something left in the pot when the cooking is done, there’s a sauce waiting to happen. The same goes for leftover marinades—just make sure you always bring them to a boil before serving.
If you’re using flour to thicken a sauce, remember that it won’t thicken until the liquid in question reaches a boil. Cornstarch thickens at much lower temperatures, as do arrowroot and potato starch.
Give your microwave oven another chance.
Buy the biggest cutting board your sink can accommodate.
Unless it’s got a rapid-cool section, your refrigerator was designed to keep things cold, not make them cold. So don’t expect it to chill a pot of hot soup and keep everything else in it out of the danger zone.
Buy a pair of spring-loaded tongs and don’t pay more than ten bucks for them.
Thermometers are tools, as are your tongue, nose, and fingers. Your brain is also a tool, so don’t run with scissors (or knives), and think before you cook.
Now you know, and knowin’s half the battle.
—GI JOE
Acknowledgments
The author wishes to acknowledge the works of those who inspired this one—as well as those the author just couldn’t have done it without.
Professional
John and Matte Thorne: food writers (
Outlaw Cook
provided the spark for just about everything I’ve done); Shirley O. Corriher: food teacher and writer (her book
Cookwise
is the best of the last decade); Harold McGee: food-science deity (every time I thought I was breaking new ground, I found his footprints); Patrick Matecat: chef and darned fine teacher; New England Culinary Institute: darned fine culinary school; Sother Teague: chef and brother in arms; Stacey Geary: editor (on my end); Marisa Bulzone: editor (Stewart, Tabori & Chang); Michael Kann: chef and writer; Athalie White: marketing manager; Paul Nuesslein: recipe tester; Eileen Opatut: Food Network program director—a wonderful client; Dana Popoff: producer of
Good Eats
; Tamie Cook, culinary director of BeSquare Productions.
Personal
DeAnna Brown: wife (behind every writer there’s...)/executive producer of
Good Eats
; Zoey Brown: daughter/beacon of light; Matilda: dog; Steve Markey: friend since forever; Phyllis Sauls: Mom and recipe tester.
Random
W. Shakespeare: dead but good writer; Coffee: beverage; Knob Creek Bourbon: ditto; Little Debbie Nutty Bars: delicious treat; Beef; Apple Computer: manufacturers of the Macintosh G4 powerbook on which book was written; Steely Dan: band/source of good vocabulary words; Airstream: makers of fine travel trailers and my office; All Clad Cookware: who have given me free stuff and lots of it; Lodge Manufacturing: sole keepers of the American cast-iron flame; Weber: makers of the best charcoal grill known to man; General Electric: most of the recipes herein were tested in and on their Profile gas range, a very reliable piece of ordnance indeed. Thanks to BMW and Triumph motorcycles for saving my life.