kellan_the_tabby: My face, reflected in a round mirror I'm holding up; the rest of the image is the side of my head, hair shorn short. (food)
kellan ([personal profile] kellan_the_tabby) wrote2006-05-04 10:23 pm
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About cooking something new

1) Read the recipe. No, again. Again. Make sure you have the entire clue, not just half of it.

2) Check to see if you have the ingredients. Not just 'parsley', but 'fresh parsley'.

3) If it calls for 'chicken cutlets' but talks about said cutlets, read what it says, too. If they're supposed to be an eve quarter-inch thick? The ones from the grocery store might just not cut it.

4) Prep the ingredients first. A good chef might have the brain cells to remember to make chicken broth while dealing with chicken cutlets that are too thick, but that doesn't mean I will. Also? Juicing lemons causes lemon juice. Everywhere.

5) It says 'softened butter' for a reason. Reread #4. Twice.

6) When it works out anyway? Have a glass of wine, and enjoy.

[identity profile] goldsquare.livejournal.com 2006-05-09 10:40 am (UTC)(link)
Food geekery. Delete if you hate it.

Spicing the flour mixture has two advantages. It is easier, and it allows you to premix, so there is a more even layer of spicing. Chicken stock is good - but I like the wine flavors even more.

The shallots/onions would be pre-cooked, just to flavor the oil. They have to come out so they won't burn.

Slicing and putting in the lemon is good - either way you want the lemon oil in the zest to come out. Putting the rounds in will do that, although not as much. The juice's flavor evaporates and can diminish. That's why I suggested adding the juice at the last minute.

An egg layer makes the covering stick, and is a bit crunchier. The classic forms are either egg-wash plus flour, or for a bread crumb crust (which is not really piccata) flour, then egg wash, then bread crumbs.

Yes, I hack in the kitchen. Things get strange. :-)