Love What You Eat: 250 Recipes to Tempt Your Taste Buds
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About this ebook
The first chapter is a perfect crash course for kitchen novices, but experienced cooks can learn a few things too.
Here's a taste from the other chapters:
From APPETIZERS AND SNACKS:
• Crab Bites
• The Pickled Garden
From SOUPS, SAUCES, AND MARINADES:
• Caribbean Black Bean Soup
• Tuscan White Bean and Barley Soup
From SALADS:
• Luscious Lime Salad
• Confetti Rice Salad
In SEAFOOD, you'll find 21 scrumptious recipes, including:
• Mixed Seafood Cioppino
• Baked Trout with a Crusty Topping
Poultry Pointers is a handy start to the poultry chapter, where you'll find delicious dishes like Chicken and Sausages with Polenta and Olives and Chicken Rolls in Mushroom Sauce.
Some recipes in the meats chapter, like Zesty Pork Pinwheels, require time and close attention. Others, like Lamb Chops Dijon, are so quick the chops might beat you to the table.
Vegetable recipes bring you savory delights, like Crispy Roasted Potato Bites. You'll also find dishes to impress at Thanksgiving, like Sweet Potato and Apple Casserole. Vegetarians have much to choose from with many meatless recipes, like Pasta with Creamy Basil Sauce, Risotto Like a Chef Made It, and Pumpkin Polenta with Pepitas and Nuts.
For dessert, start with "The Scoop on Pies," then learn how to make three unusual crusts: Lemony Pie Pastry, Nutty Pie Pastry, and Shortbread-Macadamia Pie Crust. After that, roll up your sleeves and turn out the delicacies: Mile-High Apple Pie, "Roaring Twenties" Lemon Chiffon Pie, and Strawberries in the Snow Pie. Cake recipes include Triple Chocolate Whammy Cake and the more nuanced Lemon-Anise Cake. If cheesecake is what you're looking for, try Baby Cheesecakes and Inimitable Chocolate Cheesecake. Want something to jazz up a plain cake or ice cream? Rum-Raisin Glaze or Sauce and Amaretto-Raisin Glaze or Sauce can do the trick.
You're in good hands with Norma Borelli. Each recipe has been tested multiple times and tweaked to perfection. Preparation times, do-ahead directions, and alternate cooking methods are given, and Borelli's amusing quips make for a fun read even when you're not planning to cook. But chances are you won't want to wait to grab a mixing spoon and discover what kitchen magic you can create.
Norma Borelli is the author of Bake Yourself Happy: Cookie Recipes to Banish the Blues and Breaking Bread: Step by Step to Perfect Muffins, Biscuits, and Loaves.
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Love What You Eat - Norma Borelli
Also by Norma Borelli
Bake Yourself Happy: Cookie Recipes to Banish the Blues
Breaking Bread: Step by Step to Perfect Muffins,
Biscuits and Loaves
Copyright © 2020 by Norma Borelli
All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced, transmitted, or distributed in any form or by any means, including by photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
ISBN: 978-1-09833-708-7 (print)
ISBN: 978-1-09833-709-4 (ebook)
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
Cooking for the Fun of It
GETTING READY
What You Can Expect From This Book
EMERGENCY SUBSTITUTIONS
APPETIZERS AND SNACKS
Whatchamacallits
A Multinational Collection
Caraway Runaways
Cheddar and Bacon Crisps
Cheese Patty with Parmesan, Pesto, and
Sun-Dried Tomatoes
Chili-Cheese Crisps
Colorful Salami Cornucopias
Crab Bites
Di Maggio’s Market Crushed Olives
Drunken Dogs
Garlic Crostini (Garlic Toasts)
Italian Flag Appetizer
Liptauer Cheese Spread
Magic Mushrooms
Marinated Garlic Mushrooms
Mexican Bean Dip
Mini Sausage and Pepper Melts
Molded Salmon Mousse
Nacho Grande
Payday Crab Spread
The Pickled Garden
Roca-Olive Cheese Ball
Salmon Spread with Dill and Capers
Sausage Balls in Cheese Pastry
Shrimp and Water Chestnut Spread
Shrimp Bites
Simple Cheese Ball
Smoked Salmon Spread
Thirty Second Appetizer
Tortilla Pinwheels with Olives and Chili Peppers
Tortilla-Prosciutto Pinwheels
Jet Set Harvey Sandwiches
Home-Based Hare Sandwiches
Italian Hero Sandwiches
Upgraded Tuna Melts
SOUPS, SAUCES, AND MARINADES
What’s All This Nonsense About Soups?
Caribbean Black Bean Soup
Carrot and Leek Soup
Down-Home Chicken Broth
Main-Dish Minestrone
Minestrone with Pasta
Minestrone with Meatballs
Vegetarian Minestrone
Neptune’s Chowder
Pasta and Bean Soup (Pasta e Fagioli)
Popeye’s Chowder
Red, White, or Black Bean Soup
Soothing Split Pea Soup
Split Pea and Lentil Soup
Tuscan White Bean and Barley Soup
Zucchini Zoop
As You Like It Pasta Sauce
Basil and Parsley Pesto
Lemon-Caper Sauce for Fish
Magic Marinara Sauce
My Mother’s Barbecue Sauce
Secret Barbecue Sauce for Beef
MARINADES AND BASTING SAUCES
What You Should Know About Marinating
Basic Marinade and Basting Sauce
Herb Marinade and Basting Sauce
Lemon-Dill Marinade and Basting Sauce
Lemon-Thyme Marinade and Basting Sauce
Four Generation Marinade and Basting Sauce for
Chicken or Fish
Marinade or Basting Sauce for Beef
Soy-Sesame Marinade and Basting Sauce
SALADS AND SALAD DRESSINGS
The All-American Salad
Broccoli-Raisin Salad
California Carrot and Raisin Salad
Confetti Rice Salad
Creamy Cranberry Molded Salad
Crunchy Pea and Peanut Salad
Fruity Spinach Salad
Green Salad with Apples, Cranberries, and Seeds
Green Salad with Oranges and Almonds
Green Salad with Pears and Walnuts
Green Salad with Gorgonzola, Apple, and Pecans
Italian Tuna and Bean Salad
Jazzy Potato Salad
Luscious Lime Salad
New-fashioned Pasta Salad
Old King Coleslaw
Tico Taco Salads
Tomato and Cucumber Salad
Tomato and Mozzarella Salad
Two Bean Salad
Updated Old-Fashioned Macaroni Salad
Basic Oil and Vinegar Dressing
Italian Salad Dressing
Greek Salad Dressing
Piquant Salad Dressing
SEAFOOD
Now Hear This About Fish
Bad Day Calamari Fillets
Baked Squid Steaks
Baked Trout with a Crusty Topping
Breaded Baked White Fish
Fish Fillets Baked with Wine and Herbs
Fish Fillets with Tomatoes and Olives
Fish Under a Dotted White Blanket
Fish with Lemon Sauce and Almonds
Fish Under a Red Blanket
Mixed Seafood Cioppino
Moist and Tasty Halibut
Neptune’s Calamari Rings
Salmon with Lemon and Dill
Savory Salmon Roast
Saucy Seafood and Polenta
Seafood Stew
Shrimp Creole
Shrimp Sauté
Shrimp with Rice
Tilapia Parmesan
POULTRY
POULTRY POINTERS
Cashew Chicken
Chicken and Sausages with Beans
Chicken and Sausages with Polenta and Olives
Chicken Breasts Simmered in Mushroom Sauce
Chicken Breasts with Walnut Stuffing
Chicken Creole
Chicken Deluxe
Chicken Rolls in Mushroom Sauce
Chicken Rolls with Wine Sauce
Chicken with Mushrooms and Herbs
Chicken with Pecans
Chicken with Potatoes and Rosemary
Chicken with Prosciutto and Sage
Herb-Baked Chicken or Game Hens
International Hodgepodge
Italian Breaded Chicken
Lazy Day Chicken
Lemon-Oregano Chicken
Maui Chicken and Rice
Pollo Piccato Presto
Roman Chicken Medley
Sesame Chicken
Transcontinental Chicken with Rice
Topsy-Turvy Turkey
MEATS
Come Back to Meat
Beef Kabobs
Beef Tenderloin with Garlic and Herbs
Beef Stuffed Peppers
Frosted Meat and Potato Cake
Head Start Beef Stew
Homebody’s Beef Stew
Slow-Baked Beef Stew
Homey Meat Loaf with Roasted Root Vegetables
Irish Corned Beef Dinner
One Pot Meatball Dinner
Roman Beef Medley
Super Juicy Smoky Burgers
Mama Mia Meatballs
Lamb Chops Dijon
Bacon Three Ways
Hawaiian Pork Chops
Hawaiian Chicken
Polish Sausage and Cabbage
Polish Sausage with Potatoes
Pork Tenderloin with Roasted Garlic, Fennel, and Herbs
Rolled Pork with Prosciutto and Provolone
Zesty Pork Pinwheels
Luigi’s Veal and Peppers
Osso Buco (Veal Shanks Braised with
Vegetables and Wine)
Gremolata
Veal Piccata
Veal Roast Meant to Impress
Veal Scaloppini
VEGETABLES
It’s Not Nice to Fool Mother Nature
Dressing for Hot Vegetables
Asparagus and Mushroom Sauté with Cranberries
Green Bean and Mushroom Sauté with Cranberries
Savory Roasted Asparagus
Broccoli with Garlic and Cheese
Sweet and Sour Brussel Sprouts
Baby Carrots and Onions with Thyme
Do Ahead Vegetables
Take it Easy Eggplant
Green Beans with Basil
Green Beans with Crunchy Water Chestnuts and Bacon
Herbed Mushrooms
Peas with Prosciutto and Onion
Crispy Roasted Potato Bites
Herbed Cheese Potatoes
Lemon-Parsley Potatoes
Mashed Potato Casserole
Oven Fries
Potatoes with Onion, Garlic, and Parsley
Stuffed Potatoes with Bacon and Cheese
Sweet Potato and Apple Casserole
Crunchy-Topped Zucchini
Not Fried Zucchini Sticks
Zucchini with Onion and Tomato
Zucchini Supreme
PASTA, GRAINS, AND BEANS
Pasta Bella
Copycat Ravioli Casserole
Lasagna with Béchamel Sauce
Lasagna with Ricotta
Linguine and Clams
Pasta Puttanesca
Pasta Shells in Clam Sauce
Pasta with Creamy Basil Sauce
Pasta with Garlic Sauce
Pasta with Red Clam Sauce
Pasta with Tomato Sauce and Ricotta
Pasta with Tomato Sauce and Tuna
Rice with Fresh Mushrooms
Risotto Like a Chef Made It
Barley with Fresh Mushrooms
Crunchy Granola
Easy Polenta
Cheese-Topped Broiled Polenta
Polenta with Cheese and Herbs
Pumpkin Polenta with Pepitas and Nuts
California Chili Beans
DESSERTS
SATISFY YOUR ID, KID
THE SCOOP ON PIES
The Perfect Pie Pastry
The Trouble-With-Bragging Pie Pastry
Lemony Pie Pastry
Nutty Pie Pastry
Shortbread-Macadamia Pie Crust
Cosmopolitan Apple Pie
Mile-High Apple Pie
Fancy Fruit Dessert Pizza
Fresh Apricot Pie
Roaring Twenties Lemon Chiffon Pie
Lovers’ Rhubarb Pie
Strawberry Rhubarb Pie
Rum-Raisin Pie
Berry Berry Nice Strawberry Pie
Strawberries in the Snow Pie
Sumptuous Pumpkin Chiffon Pie
Weep-No-More Pineapple Meringue Pie
Cherry-Almond Cobbler
Happy Apple Whatever
It’s a Piece of Cake
Better Than Potpourri Cake
Cinnamon Swirl Applesauce Cake
Down-Home Apple Cake
Jiffy Apple Cake
Jiffy Pear Cake
Lemon-Anise Cake
Maple-Nut Banana Cake
Maple Frosting
Peaches and Wine Cake
Pear and Applesauce Cake
Pistachio Cake
Pumpkin-Pineapple Cake
Rum-Raisin Cake
Speedy Pear Cake
Spicy Raisin Cake
Poppy Seed Cake
Sweet Spiced Applesauce Cake
Triple Chocolate Whammy Cake
Two in One Cake
Whole Wheat Carrot Cake
Baby Cheesecakes
Little Chocolate Cheesecakes
Inimitable Chocolate Cheesecake
Cream Cheese Frosting
Raspberry Glaze or Sauce
Strawberry Glaze or Sauce
Rum-Raisin Glaze or Sauce
Amaretto-Raisin Glaze or Sauce
Introduction
Cooking for the Fun of It
Cooking can be fun. I figured this out when I was still in a playpen in a corner of the kitchen, watching my mom and dad laughing and singing as they stirred and chopped. My parents loved to cook and made a game of it. In fact, so did my brother, my grandparents and most of my twenty-eight aunts and uncles. No wonder I could barely wait to get into the game and started cooking, with supervision, of course, just as soon as I could reach the stove. And, from that moment on, I have been addicted to cooking and cookbooks.
From the start, I loved to putter around the kitchen, experimenting with old recipes and inventing new ones. Sometimes I created spectacular disasters and that gave my brother a chance to playfully heckle me. So, I practiced, practiced, practiced, often spending whole days making one thing over and over. At one point, there were enough pie crusts in the freezer to house a whole generation of blackbirds. But I mastered pie crusts and had fun doing it!
My brother became a restaurateur and I wound up teaching cooking classes. And all around us, people got busier and busier and time got scarcer and scarcer. Nowadays, cooks may need to schedule meal preparation around jobs and kids’ tennis lessons, scout meetings, and ball games. We need shortcuts. We need recipes we can prepare on the slow days and fall back on on the crazy days. Sometimes we don’t even have time to shop, so we need recipes we can put together from scanty pantry staples. And because there’s a bit of artist in us all, we also need a few fussy recipes to satisfy our muses. But most of all, since we plan to go on eating and restaurant and take-out food can get boring, we need to enjoy cooking.
Whether you cook with one eye on the clock or you have all the time in the world, I hope this book helps you produce delicious and healthy meals and you’ll enjoy doing it.
And remember, there is no better aid to digestion than laughter, so celebrate each meal with joy!
CHAPTER 1
GETTING READY
What You Can Expect From This Book
There are many Italian recipes since I am of Italian ancestry. Several recipes are eclectic, mixing ideas from more than one nation. Some recipes require time and close attention for the days when you feel like fussing, and some can be slapped together quickly on the days that you don’t. But every recipe is delicious and can be served with confidence.
Each recipe tells you how much time you need to prepare it. Several recipes also give you do-ahead directions and many recipes offer a choice of preparation methods.
I don’t buy all this talk about good fats
and bad fats.
To paraphrase Gertrude Stein, I contend, A fat is a fat is a fat.
Even good fats
will latch on to your thighs if you eat too many of them. So, I’ve treated all fats, especially animal fats, like bad guys and tossed out as many from my recipes as I could without sacrificing taste.
I use a good quality extra-virgin olive oil for most cooking, not only because it is monounsaturated and is supposed to help break down cholesterol but because of its wonderful flavor.
If you are looking for recipes for deep-fried foods, try another book. I consider deep frying a crime against food and waistlines.
By now, you have probably picked up on the fact that I am health conscious and diligent about fat and calories. But sometimes I relax my vigilance when it comes to party foods. My rationale is that, if we eat on the lean side on most days, an occasional treat won’t do a healthy body harm.
Most of the recipes tell you to use salt and pepper to taste. Where that isn’t feasible, I lean toward too little rather than too much. Anyone who wants more can add it at the table.
I use a lot of grated Parmesan and Romano cheeses. Since the taste of Parmesan is rather unassuming and Romano is a bit too assertive, I usually mix them half-and-half. I prefer Italian Parmigiano-Reggiano and imported Pecorino Romano but feel free to substitute whatever aged cheese you like. To pick your favorites, go to a friendly Italian delicatessen or cheese specialty shop and ask to taste different cheeses. You may decide you prefer an aged Monterey Jack, asiago, or provolone. That’s okay, but whatever you choose, promise me you’ll never buy cheese that is already grated, especially if it comes in a shaker-top container. You can only be sure of the quality of grated cheese if you grate it yourself. Besides, it is not only cheaper to buy cheese by the chunk, but it tastes much better when it is grated as needed.
Since you might not have an herb garden and it is seldom practical to buy a whole bunch of a fresh herbs when you only need a smidgen, I tested the recipes in this book with dried herbs, except in a few instances where dried herbs just wouldn’t do. However, if you have fresh herbs at hand, use them. (Please see About Herbs in this chapter for directions on how to substitute fresh herbs for dried.)
The quality of the ingredients used in cooking will greatly affect the finished product, so use the freshest and the best ingredients available.
It’s Good To Know These Things
About Asparagus
The ends of asparagus are tough and woody and need to be discarded. To ascertain how much of the spear should be tossed out, hold a spear by both ends. Gently bend the spear until it snaps. It will naturally break at the point where the spear starts to get woody. Line up the broken spear with the remaining spears. Use the broken spear as a guide and cut off the ends of the remaining spears even with it.
Soak asparagus in cold water for 5 to 10 minutes to loosen sand, then rinse the asparagus well under cold running water.
The trick to cooking asparagus to perfection is to boil the tougher stalks while steaming the tender tips. Special asparagus pots are available to accomplish this, but a tall coffeepot will work too. Stuff a wad of aluminum foil in the spout to keep the steam in. Or submerge the stalks in water in a large pot and keep the tips out of the water by propping them up on wads of crumpled aluminum foil.
About Broth Mix or Bouillon
For added flavor, use an envelope of broth mix or a bouillon cube in place of a teaspoon of salt when cooking vegetables, rice, soups, sauces or stews.
About Butter
I always use pure butter, never margarine. It was once thought that margarine was healthier than butter, but new findings show that the trans fats in margarine are more damaging to your health than the fats they are meant to replace. Tub margarines have less trans fats than stick margarines and some have no trans fats at all, but tub margarines contain more water than stick margarines or butter and they will not give you the same results.
About Clams and Mussels
Sand will be easier to remove if you soak clams and mussels in cold water for at least 20 minutes before scrubbing them with a stiff brush.
About Corn
For juicy sweet corn and to make the kernels easy to remove, add 2 tablespoons each of sugar and vinegar to the cooking water. To prevent toughness, add salt toward the end of the cooking time.
Add corn to rapidly boiling water, then bring the water back to a full boil and boil for 1 minute. Remove the pot from the heat and cover it. Let the corn stand in the cooking water for 10 minutes or up to an hour before serving.
About Crumbs
The best way to make dry crumbs is to zap about a cupful at a time of cereal, crackers, cookies, or dried bread in a blender or a food processor fitted with a metal blade. Or put whatever you are crumbing in a baking sheet with sides and roll over it a few times with a rolling pin or a can. (The sides of the pan will help keep the crumbs from flying all over your counter and will facilitate pouring the crumbs out.)
About Cutting Boards
The trouble with wooden cutting boards is that they can’t be sterilized easily. I prefer to keep several dishwasher-safe polyethylene boards on hand. After using one for cutting raw meat or poultry, which may contain salmonella bacteria, I immediately tuck the board in the dishwasher to be sterilized.
Put a rubber mat or a damp cloth under a polyethylene board to keep it from sliding on the counter as you chop.
About Eggs
To reduce cholesterol and fat in your recipes, use ¼ cup egg substitute or two large egg whites in place of one whole large egg.
The best way to hard cook eggs is to steam them. Put the eggs in a steamer basket and steam them over simmering water for 15 minutes. Immediately immerse the cooked eggs in ice water. Leave them in the water for about a minute before peeling them. The eggs should be very easy to peel when cooked this way.
If you prefer to boil the eggs, rub the shells with a cut lemon or put a jigger of vinegar in the cooking water. (Red vinegar will stain the shells, but it won’t affect the egg inside.) Or make one or two small pricks in the shells with a pin or needle before cooking. If you do one of these things and don’t let the eggs boil too hard, the eggs shouldn’t crack, but if you still feel insecure, add some salt to the cooking water to help seal any cracks that may occur. The salt will also make the cooked eggs easier to peel. Plunge the cooked eggs into ice water for about a minute before peeling them.
About Freezer Containers
Save empty milk cartons and cottage cheese, yogurt, and sour cream containers to freeze food in, especially tomato sauces that may stain plastic. When you must thaw food quickly, the throwaway containers can be cut away from the food so it can be thawed in a pot.
To help prevent staining, spray nonstick cooking spray on your plastic containers before storing tomato sauces. Ordinarily, tomato sauces won’t stain plastic containers if the sauce is cool when the containers are filled.
About freezing broths and sauces
If you sometimes need only small amounts of broth or sauce, freeze them in ice cube trays, then transfer the cubes to freezer bags. That way, you can take out only as much as you need for one meal. Besides, cubes thaw faster than large masses.
About Fruit
Fruit will ripen faster if you put it in a plastic bag in which you have poked a few holes. Or wrap green bananas and tomatoes in a wet dishtowel and put them in a paper bag.
Cut-up fruit, such as apples or bananas, won’t darken if you give it a quick dip in cold water spiked with a little lemon juice or cider vinegar.
About Garlic
Remove the skins from garlic cloves easily by smashing the cloves slightly with the smooth side of a meat mallet or the flat side of a knife.
Don’t sauté garlic beyond the golden point or it may get bitter.
About Ginger
Wrap unpeeled gingerroot tightly with aluminum foil and keep it handy in your freezer. When you need just a bit, peel a section of the frozen root with a vegetable peeler, shred or grate off as much ginger as you need, and return the root to the freezer. In a pinch, substitute ¾ teaspoon ground ginger for 1 tablespoon fresh.
About handling hot turkeys or roasts
Wear a clean pair of rubber gloves to lift or turn a hot turkey or roast by hand. The gloves will ensure a good grip and will protect your hands.
About Herbs
Although most herbs do well with long cooking, the flavor of basil and thyme deteriorates when the herbs are cooked too long, so add these herbs toward the end of the cooking time in long-cooked dishes.
Mediterranean oregano, usually found in food specialty stores, is mellower than the Mexican variety found in most markets.
If you don’t have space or time for an outdoor herb garden, do consider buying some potted herb plants to keep in a sunny spot of your kitchen. A small herb plant costs about the same as a bunch of cut herbs and most will keep fresh herbs at your fingertips year-round. Although they grow slowly in the winter, basil, chervil, chives, mint, oregano, parsley, rosemary, sage, summer savory, sweet marjoram, tarragon, and thyme all do well indoors.
To substitute fresh herbs for dried, use three times more chopped fresh herb than dried herb, except when using thyme or sage. Use a little less fresh thyme and a little more sage to allow for varying intensities.
To keep fresh herbs (like parsley, basil, chives, dill, and mint) fresh for several days, wash them, pat them dry with paper towels and store them in screw top jars in the refrigerator. Or, stick the stems of bunches of fresh herbs in water, cover them with a plastic bag and store them in the refrigerator.
To freeze fresh herbs, wash them under cold running water and pat them dry with paper towels. To make the leaves easy to separate when frozen, arrange the leaves in a single layer on a plate or a baking sheet. Put the herbs in the freezer until frozen solid, then put them in plastic freezer containers and return them to the freezer. Or put recipe-sized amounts of washed and dried herbs in small plastic bags and put the bags in plastic freezer containers. Herbs can be chopped or simply crumbled while still frozen; no thawing is necessary. Although they will be too limp to use raw, they will have the same seasoning strength as fresh herbs when used for cooking.
Crumbling dried herbs releases their flavor. I usually put the herbs in the palm of one hand and crush them with the thumb of my other hand. Measure dried herbs before crumbling them.
About Lemons
Zap a lemon in the microwave for 15 seconds and it will give you more juice. Rolling it between your palm and the counter also helps.
A squirt or two of lemon juice in your guacamole will help prevent it from darkening. It will also keep cauliflower white and artichokes green when added to the cooking water.
About Mushrooms
Mushrooms will keep longer if they are stored on the bottom shelf of the refrigerator in a paper bag. Never store mushrooms in a plastic bag.
If you wet mushrooms too much while cleaning them, the little darlings will slurp up the water and then spit it out when they hit the pan. All mushrooms need is a gentle wipe with a damp paper towel or a quick brush-off with a mushroom brush. You can also clean them with a cut lemon. This will also help keep them white. But if you simply must wash the little guys, wash them fast and dry them even faster. Never peel mushrooms because most of the flavor is in the skin.
To help prevent drawing juices, cook mushrooms over high heat. To keep them light, sprinkle them with lemon juice or white wine before or during cooking.
About Nuts
Because the oil in nuts is susceptible to going rancid quickly at room temperature, store nuts in the refrigerator or freezer. Double bag them in tightly sealed freezer bags or store them in tightly sealed hard plastic or glass containers, as light, heat, moisture, and proximity to metal conspire to spoil nuts. Nuts will keep up to 8 months in the freezer and up to 4 months in the refrigerator.
Lightly toasting nuts enhances their flavor and crunchiness. You can toast a variety of nuts and store them in the refrigerator so they’ll be handy when you’re in a nutty mood or toast them as you go when the recipe calls for it. To toast chopped or whole shelled nuts in the oven, spread them in a single layer on a baking sheet and bake them in a preheated 325 degree oven for 8 to 10 minutes or just until they are lightly browned and aromatic, shaking the pan once or twice during baking. To toast nuts on the stovetop, use a dry skillet over medium-low heat and toast them for 3 to 5 minutes or just until the nuts are lightly colored, stirring constantly. To toast nuts in the microwave, spread them on a plate and heat on high for 2 to 3 minutes, stirring every minute. Be aware that they will continue to cook for about a minute after removal. A note about toasting pine nuts: Watch them carefully. They go from lightly browned to scorched in a blink.
About Onions
You’ll save tears if you sprinkle a little vinegar on the