cooking Guide

Remote Cooking Thermometers Section


 

Remote Cooking Thermometers Navigation


|

Cooking Guide Home Page
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Cooking Scallops |
Everyday Cooking |
Holiday Cooking |
Cooking Ranges |
Smoker Cooking |
Healthy Cooking And Recipes |
Cooking Cuisines Home World |
Easy Cooking Recipes |
Cooking Magazines |
Dutch Oven Cooking |
Turkey Cooking Times |
Books Cooking |
Cooking Cuisines Home World |
Fine Cooking Magazine |
Cooking Receipes |

List of cooking Articles


Remote Cooking Thermometers 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 Remote Cooking Thermometers sponsors

 

Latest Remote Cooking Thermometers link added

...

Submit your link on Remote Cooking Thermometers!



Joy of Cooking: 75th Anniversary Edition - 2006
-By: Irma S. Rombauer, Marion Rombauer Becker, Ethan Becker
-Price: $16.95 (New)
$15.27 (Used)

Martha Stewart's Cooking School: Lessons and Recipes for the Home Cook
-By: Martha Stewart
-Price: $19.99 (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

 

Remote Cooking Thermometers 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.

The Food in Puerto Rico - A Gringo's Look

from:

Before I visited Puerto Rico for the first time, I asked my girlfriend "What kinds of food should I expect?" With a puzzled look she replied that Puerto Rico has all kinds of food and restaurants. What was I thinking? After visiting and subsequently moving to San Juan, I think I can begin to describe what culinary offerings are available to the would-be visitor.

There are two main types of cuisine that I would classify: Native Puerto Rican and Other. First, the native cuisine consists of plantains (those large banana-type things you see in your grocery store but have no idea how you would use them), other tubers, rice, meat and some seafood. From my experience, plantains are used throughout Puerto Rico either as an ingredient or as a side dish. As an ingredient, one of the most common is its use in "mofongo", which consists of mashed plantain, some spices, and sometimes filled with meat, crab, or other meat. While they may look like bananas on the outside, the unripened ones have a consistency and flavor not unlike potatoes. Tostones, flattened slices of plantains that are fried, are often served on the side, like large french fries. In addition, tostones are used as a bread or bruschetta replacement in appetizers. Plantains are also served when ripe, which gives them a sweet flavor (no, they do not taste like bananas at all). Pieces of these can be mixed into rice and beans or other dishes to add a little sweetness to them.

Being an island in the middle of the Caribbean, you'd think there would be an abundance of fish and seafood available, but there is surprisingly little. Most restaurants serving Puerto Rican cuisine will have some Mahi Mahi, red snapper, and shrimp on the menu. Fancier ones may have lobster available, too (usually Caribbean spiny lobster, which is smaller than a Maine lobster). More common than seafood, a variety of traditional meat is available for your protein needs. Churrasco or skirt steak is a favorite, along with pork and chicken prepared in many ways. The preparation of these is pretty standard, either grilled, baked, or otherwise cooked through until done. I've noticed most places tend to cook their beef on the rare side, so be prepared to bump your preference to the next level or deal with your meat cooked a little less than you prefer. Whole pigs slow-roasted on a spit is also a delicacy in the interior of the island should you happen to venture that way.

In restaurants, deep-frying of appetizers and snacks is very common. From bacalao, a type of cod fish pancake (tastes a lot better than it sounds) to croquetas (cornmeal and ham stick resembling a cheese stick) to alcapurrias (mashed plantains and/or yucca filled with meat or crab), if you like your food fried, Puerto Rican cuisine has something to offer.

The second type of food available I'll just call Other because it consists of pretty much everything else available in the world today. Fast food joints seen all over the United States are certainly available, as are some of the larger chain restaurants. Restaurants range from a walk-up window selling hot dogs to lavish multi-course meals in the hundreds of dollars. And the variety of styles will accommodate everyone visiting from anywhere, whether it's vegetarian, sushi, Chinese, Mexican, Italian, Cuban, pizza, or anything else you desire. Chances are excellent that you will find a restaurant to fit your needs.

I now see that my original question about what food to expect was a little naïve and ignorant on my part. Like most places in the modern world, you can dine on pretty much anything you like. Visitors should not be afraid to try some of the local dishes, however. They are filled with flavors and textures that are unique to Puerto Rican culture. But if you choose to go for something that is familiar to you, you should have no problem finding what you need.

For more information on restaurants in Puerto Rico, visit http://restaurantsinpr.com

Search menus, read reviews or post your own.





 

Remote Cooking Thermometers News

Chef's Choice: Easy Entertaining - Annapolis Capital


Chef's Choice: Easy Entertaining
Annapolis Capital, MD - Dec 3, 2008
While restaurant chefs rely on the inexpensive meat thermometers easily found in most grocery stores, the remote thermometers found at specialty retailers ...

Read more...


CONSUMER REPORTS: Meat thermometers - 9NEWS.com


CONSUMER REPORTS: Meat thermometers
9NEWS.com, CO - Nov 26, 2008
One of the top-rated thermometers, a $30 Polder, offers that feature. It's one you leave in while cooking. If you want to save some money, consider the $16 ...

Read more...


Christmas gifts for Foodies - Top 10 must-have kitchen gadgets - Examiner.com


Examiner.com

Christmas gifts for Foodies - Top 10 must-have kitchen gadgets
Examiner.com - Nov 29, 2008
And you can explore your inner geek with new wireless and remote thermometers now on the market. Who’s texting you now? It’s the oven: The roast is done! 8. ...

Read more...


This Thanksgiving, try barbecuing your turkey - Bellingham Herald


This Thanksgiving, try barbecuing your turkey
Bellingham Herald, WA - Nov 18, 2008
Good thermometers are worth what they cost. (The love of my barbecue life is a battery-powered remote thermometer. I push the temperature sensor into the ...

Read more...


Alderfer Auction Company - Antiques and the Arts Online


Antiques and the Arts Online

Alderfer Auction Company
Antiques and the Arts Online, CT - Nov 27, 2008
Over 200 signs, thermometers and blackboard advertising pieces. Lots of tobacco tins, boxes, packs, cartons, giveaways (cigar, chewing, smoking). ...

Read more...


 

Warning: fopen(./cache/remote-cooking-thermometers.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