Anonymous wrote:I use dry white vermouth when a recipe calls for white wine - it's like $6 a bottle, lasts forever in the fridge, and leaves the good stuff for drinking, not cooking![]()
Couple more:
- I use instant mashed potatoes (the flakes in a box) to thicken soups and stews. I don't use them for anything else.
-Frozen diced hash browns are your friend. They are just potatoes (and sometimes salt) and are a time-saver when you need to add to a soup/stew/stirfry/breakfast tacos filling/etc.
- Microwave a sponge for 1 minute to kill bacteria, or run it through the dishwasher with your dishes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Put a clove of garlic on a cutting board. Lay the FLAT side of a knife blade on the garlic. Smack the other flat side with your hand to smash the garlic clove. Remove paper easy peasy. Then chop. I used to hate peeling the paper off
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Yes - bang or crush and and then peel. I sometimes use the bottom of a mug and press (non glass).
I also never cry from onions because I keep them in the fridge. tear free when I chop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I use dry white vermouth when a recipe calls for white wine - it's like $6 a bottle, lasts forever in the fridge, and leaves the good stuff for drinking, not cooking
Never cook with a wine (even a cheap wine) that you wouldn't drink. Those 'cooking' wines at the grocery are gross.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Put a clove of garlic on a cutting board. Lay the FLAT side of a knife blade on the garlic. Smack the other flat side with your hand to smash the garlic clove. Remove paper easy peasy. Then chop. I used to hate peeling the paper off
!
Yes - bang or crush and and then peel. I sometimes use the bottom of a mug and press (non glass).
I also never cry from onions because I keep them in the fridge. tear free when I chop.