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Weston & Somerset Mercury

Over 60s men's cooking course
Weston & Somerset Mercury
Age UK Somerset is running the basic cookery classes for over 60s at Backwell School for the next five weeks after starting on January 24. The students, led by cookery teacher Sandra Law, were assisted by 17-year-old Nat Fudge, a lower sixth form ...



Chef advocates 'eating right' on his cooking show
Hometownlife.com
Rapitis, who also teaches continuing education classes at Schoolcraft College, has a degree in culinary arts from Schoolcraft, and a degree in dietetics from Madonna University. With that background in nutrition and culinary arts, he gives cooking ...

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Cookery course at fire station
The Star
Rotherham fire station is to play host to a series of courses to teach the community basic cooking skills. Every Tuesday evening, a group of up to 10 residents will be invited to the Fitzwilliam Road building for cookery classes from a Rotherham ...



Palm Beach Daily News

Chefs teach cooking class to aid St. Edward food pantry
Palm Beach Daily News
The evening featured a cooking class given by a brigade of some of Palm Beach's finest executive chefs and restaurant owners. They included Jean-Pierre Leverrier assisted by his son Guillaume of Chez Jean-Pierre; Gianni Minervini and Juan Rivera of ...

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Chen Chow Brasserie Of Birmingham Visits Fox 2 Cooking School
MyFox Detroit
Participating Birmingham restaurants will offer three-course lunches for $15 and three-course dinners for $30. Chef Benjamin Meyer from Chen Chow Brasserie stopped by the Fox 2 Cooking School Saturday morning with a sample of his gourmet dishes.



Malaya

Nadine Tengco shares sizzling cooking secrets at the CCA Podium
Malaya
Now you can learn the secrets from Nadine herself at special classes called "350 Calorie Plates for Weight Loss" at the Center for Culinary Arts – Podium Market Café, the first culinary school and market café in the Philippines, at the posh Podium Mall ...



Chef offers cooking classes in the off-season, much to the delight of diners
Seacoastonline.com
As chef at the popular French restaurant 98 Provence, and former owner, Gignac is hosting cooking classes for small groups as a much-beloved hobby. And, while 98 Provence, located on Shore Road in Ogunquit, is being renovated, it's also a way to stay ...

and more »


Taste la difference! The Cordon Bleu culinary school has a lavish new London ...
The Independent
"Out of curiosity, I dropped by L'Ecole du Cordon Bleu, Paris's famous cooking school," she writes. "There, professional chefs taught traditional French cooking to serious students from all over the world. After attending a demonstration one afternoon, ...

and more »


Garrett Weber-Gale combines two passions: swimming and cooking
SI.com
"I never used to cook anything," he says. "My parents and sister cooked for me. I didn't know what I was doing." After the diagnosis, Weber-Gale, then 20, took cooking lessons in Austin, where he swam for the University of Texas, and became hooked.

and more »


Atlanta Journal Constitution

Slip up to Charleston for a culinary experience
Atlanta Journal Constitution
By Tracey Teo Charleston, SC, has long enjoyed a reputation as one of the hottest culinary destinations in the South, and it doesn't take many tasty meals for visitors to acknowledge it's well deserved. Wesley KH Teo Magnolias chef Don Drake enjoys ...
Lowdown on Lowcountry CuisineEvansville Courier & Press

all 2 news articles »

Google News

Cooking Tips Featured Article

Your Oven: Kitchen Ally or Public Enemy Number One?

02/05/12

 by: Skip Lombardi

As Thanksgiving approaches, newspapers, mega-stores, and food producers have recently begun their annual advertising assault to get your turkey dollars. Yet I suspect that huge numbers of people are living in dread and anxiety because they're uncertain about how their turkeys will turn out. Some will produce turkeys that are a long way from being fully cooked, while others will produce overcooked, tough birds in need of resuscitation.

Has this been a problem for you? Do you follow a recipe to the letter, dutifully preheating the oven, timing the recipe precisely, only to have your dish come out nearly raw, or burned beyond recognition?

I suggest that for an investment of approximately $5.00, you can improve your chances for cooking well-roasted foods by 90%. Another investment of approximately $10.00 will bring your chances to near perfection. And when I use the term investment, I mean that your $5.00 will pay you dividends in the form of well-roasted food for the indefinite future. I'm talking about thermometers; specifically, oven thermometers.

If your oven is more than ten years old, the cooking temperature could vary-in the worst case-by as much as fifty degrees from the temperature you've set on the dial. So if a recipe tells you to cook a roast of beef at 375 F., you could be cooking at anywhere from 325 F to 425 F. and have no way of knowing, until you discover that when you remove your dish from the oven, what you've cooked is overcooked, undercooked, or somewhere in between. But not well cooked.

For approximately the price of a meal for one at McDonald's, you can feel assured that your oven is set at the temperature you're seeking, even if you've had to set the dial at 350 F. in order to arrive at a temperature of 375 F. The typical recipe that calls for, say, cooking something for fifteen minutes per pound, was very likely tested in an oven calibrated to cook at the expected temperature, or an oven fitted with an inexpensive oven thermometer.

Oven thermometers are readily available at the local chain hardware store, or in the kitchen gadget aisle at the local mega-store. The two most popular types, are coil (or dial) thermometers, and liquid, in which a colored liquid-usually alcohol-expands in glass as it heats, and registers the temperature on a scale. In both cases, the thermometers will have a kind of hook at the top that will enable you to hang them from one of the racks in the oven.

When you've bought your thermometer, it's a good idea to put it into boiling water for about five minutes, to see that it registers somewhere close to 212 F. If not, it may have some mechanism for adjustment, or you can simply return it to the store for another.

To test your oven's thermostat, hang the thermometer from the middle shelf, and pre-heat the oven to 350 F. If your thermometer reads 350 F. you're home free. But if the thermometer is, say, ten or twenty degrees off one way or another, try the experiment again, setting the oven to 375 F. If the temperature is off by the same factor, then you'll know to set the thermostat with that factor taken into account when you want a particular temperature; 360 F. in order to get 375 F., e.g.

Equipped now with an oven thermometer, and having calculated the necessary adjustment on your oven to produce the desired cooking temperature, I recommend an additional $10.00 investment in an instant-read meat thermometer. By inserting this type of thermometer into meats as they are cooking, it will provide you with-as the name suggests-an instant reading of the meat's internal temperature. This is an extremely useful device, because it helps you to account for the vagaries of cooking that go beyond simply knowing that your oven is set to the correct cooking temperature. Your standing rib roast of beef may look photogenic after two hours at 375 F., but until it reaches an internal temperature of 130 F. for medium-rare, it isn't fully cooked.

Gaining the confidence that your oven is set to the correct temperature is not then, the full story. It may be the case that the rear of the oven is hotter than the front, for example. You may notice, as you continue to experiment, that your roast browns far more quickly in the back than in the front. This is where you need to begin to improvise. Very likely, it will simply be a matter of turning your roasting pan one hundred eighty degrees midway through cooking. It could also be the case that you'll need to cook foods on a lower rack of the oven. But knowing that you're cooking at the correct temperature is 90% of the battle. The sorts of problems I've mentioned will be obvious-as will their solutions.

Finally-and this doesn't have to do with ovens, per se-is the issue of carry-over cooking. Nearly any recipe you read for roasted meat of any kind, will instruct you to let the meat rest for a period of time before carving. During this resting period, the meat will continue to cook in varying amounts. For example, a standing rib roast of beef will add about five to ten degrees to its internal temperature while resting for approximately twenty minutes. Therefore, it's a good idea to remove your dish from the oven at about five degrees shy of your target temperature. Again, this is a task that would be impossible without an instant-read meat thermometer.

You could certainly buy more sophisticated timers for your roasting tasks. One popular model that retails for between $30.00 and $40.00 is digital, magnetic, so that it sticks to the oven door, and has a fireproof probe that can go into the meat roasting in your oven. And you can program it to beep when your meat has reached the desired internal temperature. Another, more expensive model, has a remote timer that you can carry up to seventy feet from the oven, and it too will beep to remind you that your meat is done. But you can get wonderful results with the least expensive models too.

So make a small investment in your oven. It will repay you with huge dividends in confidence that your roast will be medium rare; that your chicken will have a wonderful crust, yet be moist and juicy; that your meat loaf will make you a legend in the kitchen. And when your friends and family gather around your holiday table, they will proclaim this year's turkey to be the best one ever.

About The Author

Skip Lombardi is the author of two cookbooks: "La Cucina dei Poveri: Recipes from my Sicilian Grandparents," and "Almost Italian: Recipes from America's Little Italys." He has been a Broadway musician, high-school math teacher, software engineer, and a fledgeling blogger. But he has never let any of those pursuits get in the way of his passion for cooking and eating. Visit his Web site to learn more about his cookbooks. http://www.skiplombardi.com or send questions or comments to info@skiplombardi.com.


skip@skiplombardi.com


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