fish cooking times - Glossary Search
Top 57 glossary terms found
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Term Name |
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A cooking utensil that creates pressurized steam to cook foods. A traditional pressure cooker consists of a steel pot with an aluminum base, a locking lid containing an airtight seal, and a removable safety valve (on older models) that attaches to the lid or a built-in value with easy to read pressure markings (newer models).
A small electric appliance that slowly cooks food with a low, moist heat. This piece of cookware allows food to be prepared at a consistent low temperature and is designed to cook for a period of six to twelve hours.
A cooking bag manufactured with heat tempered plastic enabling it to withstand the high temperatures of an oven.
Turn your basic slow cooker into a programmable unit by purchasing a programmable timer module. This module plugs into an electrical outlet and then the slow cooker is plugged into the module.
The process of letting meat rest after cooking. Since meat continues to cook when removed from any heat source such as an oven, it has become referred to as Carryover Cooking or giving food a rest, a time during which the temperature of the meat increases 5 to 15ºF.
A controlled method of cooking foods by heating the air within a lidded pot to a very high temperature (above the boiling point), allowing air pressure and steam to build inside and cook foods faster at higher temperatures.
The process that occurs as food continues to cook despite being removed from the oven, the stovetop, the grill, or a roasting fire.
The process of "dry" cooking food totally covered in hot cooking fat or oil. This process produces evenly cooked food with a golden, crisp surface on the outside.
A type of pot that is commonly used to cook a variety of sauces, stews, egg, potato, vegetable, meat, poultry, and fish dishes.
1. A method of cooking food, such as meat, poultry, and fish, in an open pan and using dry heat (usually in an oven) to cook the food.
Meat that has been cooked for a period of time that is considered to not be long or short, leaving the center sliightly warm and somewhat dark pink to dark in color.
A flavored liquid made from the juices remaining after cooking meat, fish, seafood, vegetables, or similar ingredients in water.
A type of egg that is cooked in the shell until the yolk and the white are completely solid. In order to accomplish this use fresh eggs that are warmed to room temperature.
French in origin, this term means "to preserve" which has been a traditional French method of keeping food in storage for longer periods of time.
Flat, disk shaped dried beans, high in protein, that have a rich, somewhat sweet and peppery flavor when cooked.
A cooking process that places foods above, not in, water that is boiling or hot enough to produce steam that cooks the foods with a moist hot air.
1. A basic Asian cooking method that generally uses a wok for the cooking, but also can be prepared in a frying pan.
A traditional Mediterranean fish stew made with a variety of fish and seafood, such as lobster, scallops, shrimp, clams and mussels, which are typically cooked in saffron flavored broth.
A South American specialty dish that originated in either Ecuador or Peru: there seems to be a dispute as to which country the dish first appeared.
A thickening agent made from fat mixed with flour that is cooked together to be used to stiffen the texture of sauces, gravies, and soups.
Top 57 glossary terms found