cooking Guide

New Orleans School Of Cooking Section


 

New Orleans School Of Cooking Navigation


|

Cooking Guide Home Page
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Cooking With Marijuana |
Cooking Knives |
Cooking Crock Home Pot |
Neopets Cooking Pot Recipes |
Cooking Meat |
Low Fat Cooking |
Outdoor Cooking Mat |
Vegetarian Cooking |
Taste Of Home Cooking School |
Chocolate Cooking |
Tv Cooking Shows |
Cooking Crock Pot Tip |
Camping Cooking Equipment |
Cooking Course Florence |
Cooking Dictionary |

List of cooking Articles


New Orleans School Of Cooking Best seller

Buy it Now!





Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on cooking
First Name:
Email:



Main New Orleans School Of Cooking sponsors

 

Latest New Orleans School Of Cooking link added

...

Submit your link on New Orleans School Of Cooking!



Joy of Cooking: 75th Anniversary Edition - 2006
-By: Irma S. Rombauer, Marion Rombauer Becker, Ethan Becker
-Price: $15.90 (New)
$15.27 (Used)

Martha Stewart's Cooking School: Lessons and Recipes for the Home Cook
-By: Martha Stewart
-Price: $16.55 (New)
$14.99 (Used)

On Food and Cooking: The Science and Lore of the Kitchen
-By: Harold McGee
-Price: $23.24 (New)
$17.16 (Used)

Cooking Light Annual Recipes 2009: Every Recipe...A Year's Worth of Cooking Light Magazine (Cooking Light Annual Recipes)
-By: Cooking Light Magazine
-Price: $23.07 (New)

Cooking with All Things Trader Joe's
-By: Deana Gunn, Wona Miniati
-Price: $19.77 (New)
$39.63 (Used)

Cooking Light Slow Cooker (Cooking Light)
-Price: $10.73 (New)
$12.05 (Used)

Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone
-By: Deborah Madison
-Price: $23.99 (New)
$25.08 (Used)

 

Welcome to cooking Guide

 

New Orleans School Of Cooking Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.


You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.

Cooking Tips For The Beginner Baker

from:

Baking can be complicated if an individual does not know what they are doing. Here are some cooking tips and guidelines to assist these individuals.

Before an individual gets started, there are a few steps that should be followed first. These cooking tips will prevent most disasters from happening. Always read through the entire recipe before beginning. This ensures that all necessary ingredients are on hand before starting. Check expiration dates on all non perishable supplies, so that running to the store happens in the middle of baking. Preheat the oven and check with an oven thermometer. Most ovens can run anywhere from twenty five degrees to cooler to twenty five degrees warmer. This ensures that the proper temperature is obtained for the recipe. Follow directions on adjusting oven racks, prepping baking sheets, and using the right baking pan. Measure ingredients accurately this means holding it up to eye level especially with liquids. To measure dry ingredients over fill then level off with flat edge of knife. Finally bake with love, if an individual is angry or rushed the recipe may not turn out right.

These next cooking tips are about ingredients. There are many different kinds of flour, and they are not all the same. Wheat flour is important for all yeast breads. Bread flour works for yeast loaves, however put it in yeast bread and it will turn into a heavy cake. Cake flour is very fine. All purpose flour can be used for most any baking. Bleached and unbleached flours can be used interchangeably. Make sure to store flour in an airtight container, in a spot that cool and dry for up to six months.

Baking powder and baking soda are not interchangeable. Baking powder is a combination of baking soda and an acid. Its leavening power works when mixed with wet ingredients and then baked into the oven. Baking soda is sodium bicarbonate. When it mixes with an acid ingredient like buttermilk, yogurt or molasses, it makes carbon dioxide bubbles that make baked goods light and airy.

Cooking tips for handling chocolate are important. First there are different types of chocolate. Unsweetened chocolate is chocolate liquor that has at least fifty percent cocoa butter and no added sugar. Various amounts of sugar added create bittersweet, semisweet, and dark chocolate. Milk chocolate is dried milk powder, cocoa butter and added sugar. White chocolate is made with cocoa butter instead of chocolate liquor. Unsweetened cocoa is made from chocolate liquor with seventy five percent cocoa butter removed and then dried and ground into a paste. When melting chocolate it is easy to burn, so always melt it over very low heat. Individuals can choose the double boiler method, the direct heat method, or the microwave oven method.

Using these cooking tips will make almost any baked goodie turn out great.


Other New Orleans School Of Cooking related Articles

Cooking Supplies
The Potato A Pantry Staple
Using Spice Well Is A Grind
Cooking Measurements And The Inexperienced Cook
Cooking With Children

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE


 

New Orleans School Of Cooking News

No relevant info was found on this topic.

 

Warning: fopen(./cache/new-orleans-school-of-cooking.html) [function.fopen]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home/bestcook/public_html/cooking/datas/pages.php on line 105

Warning: fwrite(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/bestcook/public_html/cooking/datas/pages.php on line 106

Warning: fclose(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/bestcook/public_html/cooking/datas/pages.php on line 107