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Things I Wish Someone Told Me When I Started Cooking

By October 3, 2011June 19th, 201548 Comments

I wasnโ€™t sure I heard her right.

โ€œExcuse me?โ€ I asked.

โ€œWhatโ€™s up with the flat bags?โ€

I heard her right.ย The question came from the photographerโ€™s assistant during theย DALS Book photo shoot a few weeks ago. She was in her twenties, hailed from Williamsburg. I didnโ€™t get a peek at her iPod, but I feel certain it would be loaded with songs by the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and the New Pornographers. In other words, bands Iโ€™d never heard before. She was referring to the bags ofย chilis andย soups in my freezer โ€” I always freeze dinners in flattened Ziplocs. When you do it that way, you save time (by thawing whatever is frozen under running water for 60 seconds) and you save space. (After your soup or stew is frozen, you can file the bag in your freezer like a book in a bookshelf.) How did she not know this?

Most likely because she hadnโ€™t spent six years of her life atย Real Simple or four years editing the food pages ofย Cookie. I need to remember that not everyone is a former magazine editor walking around with a mental catalog of time-saving, money-saving, energy-saving, sanity-saving, life-saving, surefire, guilt-free, guaranteed fool-proof, plan-ahead, stress-free, problem-solving shortcuts, tips and tricks. (And yes, in case you are wondering, all those words consistently scored the highest with the focus groups.) I need to remember that not everyone out there feels comfortable with recipe-writing language that calls for a โ€œhandful of beansโ€ or a โ€œpinch of cayenne.โ€ (Donโ€™tย literally pinch cayenne, especially if you are using those same pinchers to remove contact lenses an hour later.) I need to remember that calling for lemongrass in a recipe is a potentialย deal-breaker and that calling for a ย โ€œlargeโ€ can of whole tomatoes is going to elicit this comment from my book editor, Lee: โ€œOunces please! Lord, define large!โ€ This is why she is so awesome. Not only because I can hear her southern drawl through the most miniscule of notes, but because she yells at me now so you wonโ€™t have to later.

Anyway, in honor of all of you out there who donโ€™t know to store your folded garbage bags inside the garbage can (so you can conveniently grab a replacement as soon as you discard the full one โ€“classicย Real Simple tip ) or that adding skim milk to boiling liquid is going to result in curdling (classic Jenny screw-up), here are a list of things I wish someone told me fifteen years ago, when I was the one with the loaded iPod (Sony Walkman?) who did not understand the kind of happiness that a quick-thaw might someday bring me.

1. Donโ€™t ever make recipes (or trust cookbooks) that have overly cutesy recipe titles like โ€œStruttinโ€™ Chicken.โ€ These kinds of dishes rarely have the kind of staying power that a good simpleย Roast Chicken will. (Grilled Chicken for People Who Hate Grilled Chicken is the obvious exception.)

2. Buy ย yourself a pair of kitchen scissors. You will use them to snip herbs. You will use them to chop canned whole peeled tomatoes that have been dumped and contained in a 4-cup Pyrex. You will use them to snip spinach right in the skillet as the spinach wilts. Spinach! As long as weโ€™re on the subject: always make more of it than you think you need. This way you will not find yourself in the position of having one cupcake-sized mound ofย sesame spinach for your whole family of four to share.

3. Some Type-A behaviors worth stealing: Do everything you can in advance when you are having people over for dinner. No matter how easy and tossed-off the task ย may be. No matter how many times your partner-in-crime says,ย Why donโ€™t we just do that later?ย Filling a sippy cup takes 30 seconds! If you forgo this advice and do nothing in advance, at least make sure you start off the evening with an empty dishwasher. You will thank yourself a few hours and a few cocktails later when staring at the mountain of greasy plates in the sink. Lastly, if at all possible, go to sleep with a fresh trash bag in the kitchen garbage can. I find it somewhat soul-crushing to see last nightโ€™s dinner scraps piled up before Iโ€™ve had my morning coffee. And I sleep better when I know itโ€™s empty. (See: Type A.)

4. Brushing dough with a quick egg-wash is the secret to getting that shiny, lacquered, Iโ€™m-worth-something-after-all glow to your pies, breads, andย cherry galettes (pictured above). This comes in especially handy when trying toย pass off storebought crust as homemade. Whisk one egg with a fork, then use a pastry brush to cover every inch of the exposed crust before baking.

5. Meat will never brown properly if you add it to the pan when itโ€™s freezing cold and wet. (And browning properly is where youโ€™re going to get most of your flavor.) It should be patted dry and room temperature. Unless you have just walked in the door, itโ€™s 7:30, the kids are screaming and the instruction to โ€œbring it to room temperatureโ€ is the instruction that will make you swear off family dinner forever.

6. Add acid. A drizzle of vinegar, a spoonful of tangy buttermilk, a simple squeeze of lemon or lime will always add brightness to an otherwise boring and flat dish. Iโ€™ll never forget an interview I read with Mario Batali that reconfirmed this: He said the easiest way to pretend you know what youโ€™re doing in the kitchen is to talk about the โ€œacidityโ€ level of a dish.

7. Never use the phrase โ€œpun intendedโ€ or โ€œno pun intended.โ€ Oh sorry! Thatโ€™s from my โ€œThings I Wish Someone Told Me When I Started Writingโ€ list.

8. Learn the correct way toย slice and dice an avocado. You will not only save time, energy, sanity [insert up to 4 more Real Simple focus group words here] by doing this,ย but you will find yourself giving tutorials to awed, in-the-dark observers every time you make guacamole in front of them.

9. Ice in the cocktails, people. Donโ€™t be stingy. Nothing worse than a lukewarm Gin and Tonic.

10. You wonโ€™t get arrested if you leave out an ingredient or replace it with something thatโ€™s not called for. That doesnโ€™t mean leave the shrimp out of theย shrimp and grits, but if you donโ€™t have scallions for the chopped salad, or if you donโ€™t have red wine called for in theย braised pork, take a look around and see what else might stand in for whatโ€™s missing. Every time you do this and it works, youโ€™ll be a little more confident in the kitchen. And every time you do this and itย doesnโ€™tย work, you have one more good story to tell.

Flattened freezer bag photo by Jennifer Causey for DALS.

48 Comments

  • Avatar Anne says:

    Totally with you on the scissors and the ice! Thanks for another informative and entertaining post.

  • Avatar Melissa@Julia's Bookbag says:

    Alright, now I have to know what โ€œStruttinโ€™ chickenโ€ is all aboutโ€ฆ.:) You are SO right about the egg wash on pastry โ€” These are some fab tips Miss Jenny!

  • Avatar Susanne says:

    Lemongrass is no longer a deal-breaker for me since my sister-in-law told me it can be frozen! I buy a small bunch, trim, and cut the stalks into 3-4โ€ณ sections. Throw those in a baggie and put it in the freezer. When a recipe calls for it, just pull out a piece and proceed. They stay fresh for months.

  • Avatar Dave at eRecipeCards says:

    SUCH A GREAT POST!

    Greetings. This is my first time on your blog, but you have a terrific one. I am always on the look out for new blogs, new ideas. I especially appreciate all the details you do. Great photos makes it seem like anyone can replicate the recipe!

  • Kate says:

    Amen to all of these! If only my husband would stop stealing my kitchen shears for garage/construction usesโ€ฆ..

  • Jen @ Living a Brighter Life says:

    Never thought to freeze soup/chili in freezer bags. Wish I had know this last week when I froze a bunch of chili in Snapware. A baggie would have been SOOO much easier!

  • Avatar KateB says:

    *Love* the freezing tip โ€“ am starting to do the same myself. Do you have a secondary freezer/refrigerator? Or do you just clean your out waaaayyyy more often than I do?

  • Avatar Debbie Koenig says:

    Love this post! Iโ€™m so with you on the freezer bags. My freezer capacity is increased about a thousandfold thanks to them. Just opening it up and seeing the array of chicken broth, spaghetti sauce, and cooked brown rice makes me happy.

  • Avatar Paloma says:

    Great post!!! So inspiring and useful! ๐Ÿ™‚

  • Corey @ Learning Patience says:

    Great Post! I just learned about flat bagsโ€ฆwhy didnโ€™t I think about that before? I was just going to post about itโ€ฆ. Awesome tip!
    xoxo from Trinidad

  • Avatar jen v says:

    LOVED this whole post. true story about the avocado slicing i have had people watch me like iโ€™m a magician when using this techniqueโ€ฆand i still squirm when watching my 60 something mom butcher an avocado with a dull pairing knife.

  • Christine says:

    Uh, question: how else would you store bags in the freezer other than flat?

  • Jenny Jenny says:

    Christine-Iโ€™m impressed that you even ask. For years and years, Iโ€™d freeze my soups either in blocky Tupperware containers or ziplocs that get bottom-heavy when you plunk them in the freezer sitting upright. To thaw I used to hack the icy blocks with a chefโ€™s knife (please do not try this at home) and melt the chunks in a saucepan. I didnโ€™t say I was the sharpest knife in the drawerโ€ฆ.

  • Avatar meg w says:

    i have been a budding chef for about 2 years now, since i got married, received my first apron as a shower gift from my 95-year-old great grandmother, and for some reason developed the insatiable urge to be part-modern-feminist, part-adorable-housewife, part-amazing-dinner-party-hostess. i make my own chicken stock from carcasses left over from my weekly roast chickens, i buy baskets of peppers & tomatoes from the farmerโ€™s market to make delicious vats of roasted bell pepper & tomato soup, and yet i never realized that i should be freezing my liquids flat in baggies. like jenny, i would plunk the freezer bag in the freezer, and then all the liquid would freeze in a chunk. then either defrost the whole bag in a pot of warmed water (take forever) of iโ€™d ACTUALLY CUT THE PLASTIC BAG AWAY FROM THE FROZEN LIQUID UNTIL I COULD SQUEEZE THE ROCK-SOLID CHUNK OUT OF THE BAG and let it melt in a pot on the stove. your solution was like a heavenly light shining out at me from my computer screen. and now, on my way home, iโ€™ll be buying freezer bags ๐Ÿ™‚

  • Meg says:

    Nice! I really like Real Simple and can totally relate to the Type A behaviors advice.

  • Avatar Travelingthispath says:

    Thank you so much for this post! Can you make this a series? I totally need ideas and instructions on that garbage bag thing!

  • Avatar mamacita says:

    More freezer love:

    1. Shred cheese in advance and store it in the freezer.
    2. Store precooked rice in the freezer.
    3. Buy nuts in bulk at Costco and store the extras in the freezer.
    4. Actually, many high-fat foods do well in the freezer: butter, bacon, bacon drippingsโ€ฆ
    5. Freeze small bottles of water and put them in the lunchkitโ€“they keep the food cold all morning and thaw just in time for afternoon recess.
    6. Make cookie dough and scoop it out on to a baking sheet. Pop that in the freezer until the dough balls are frozen solid, then store them in a baggie. Cook as many as you want at a time, instead of all 4 dozen at once.
    7. Buy bread at the โ€œOops we baked too muchโ€ section in the bakery; when you get home, slice it, butter it, and store it in the freezer. The next time your culinary efforts are rejected at the dinner table, the critic will at least have bread and water.
    8. If you make your own bread, or even muffins, you can freeze them and they will be ready pretty quickly in the toaster oven.
    9. Tear up leftover bread crusts and the dreaded heel of the loaf and freeze the pieces; these can be turned into breadcrumbs or croutons.
    10. Freeze overripe bananas broken into small pieces; these can go straight into smoothies.

    And yes, I have an extra freezer. My house is less than 1000 square feet, but it is totally worth the space.

    [Sorry for hijacking your post.]

  • Sarah says:

    Great work! I think this is my favorite of your posts since Iโ€™ve been reading. Iโ€™d add: Learn to sharpen your knives correctly! Thanks for your awesome blog ๐Ÿ™‚

  • Beth @ Remarkably Domestic says:

    This is just about the greatest post ever. I am so delighted to get all these tips. Thankfully I already knew #8 (and have done a few tutorials on that one, plus on dicing mango!), but Iโ€™m definitely going to have to work on #3. Iโ€™m always running around at the last minute.

  • Avatar tracy says:

    great post. (and can not wait for the book!)

  • Avatar Crissy says:

    I found these freezer bags on line by accident, I purchased
    a box and they are the best bags ever. The pre-printed info on the
    bag is genius. You have to try them.

    http://dontfahget.com/FreezerBags.html

  • Avatar Rachel says:

    Awesome post, as usual, Jenny. Another use for kitchen scissors: Use them to cut foods for the little people (like 3 years and under) in your house. I use scissors to cut up pizza slices, toast, quesadillas, grilled cheese for my kids. Much easier than breaking out the sharp knives and the kids think itโ€™s funny to use scissors on food.

  • Avatar Sara says:

    This post is so wonderful! Iโ€™m a frequent visitor of your blog but have to say, this may be my favorite post yet! I just started my own blog, and while I already have you up in my link list, I will definitely be putting in a special link to this post today! As a self-taught cook and food lover, I tend to learn things by trial and error and until just 15 minutes ago, I never knew that meat needed to be at room temperature before browning. This just might change my life! Thanks, Jenny โ€“ youโ€™re the best!

  • Avatar Alec says:

    Regarding tip #5 and the statement that โ€œbrowning properly is where youโ€™re going to get most of your flavorโ€: Thatโ€™s not always true. For years I accepted that you must brown meat before braising it (as for pot roasts and beef stews). Then I read in one of the Americaโ€™s Test Kitchen cookbooks that you can skip that step. I tried it and itโ€™s true. No need to brown the meat, and no need to create, and clean up, the attendant grease spatter.

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