Basic Terminologis in Cooking
Basic Terminologis in Cooking
Basic Terminologis in Cooking
COOKING
Au Jus
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AGING
-
Al dente
-
Bake
To cook in the oven as baking a
cake, but also may be used in meat
cookery such as baked leg of lamb.
Baste
To brush or spoon liquid fat or
juices over meat, fish poultry or
vegetables during cooking to help
keep moisture on the surface area.
Allemande
Batter
-
Aromatics
-
Aspic
-
Bind
-
Bouillabaisse
-
Bisque
Bouillon
-A rich thick shellfish soup with
cream.
Blackened
-
Blanch
-
Blend
-
Boil
Buttercream
Broil
Butterfly
Broth or stock
A liquid made by gently simmering
meats, fish, or vegetables and/or
their by-products, such as bones
and trimming with herbs, in liquid,
usually water. Broths usually have
a higher proportion of meat to
bones than stock.
Brown
-
A quick sauting/searing
done either at the beginning
or end of meal preparation,
often to enhance flavor,
texture, or eye appeal.
Brush
-
Bundt pan
-
Cake pan
Round baking pan with straight
sides. It comes in 8", 9" and other
sizes.
Calamari
Plural for squid in Italian.
Caramel
Brunt sugar used for sauces,
coloring, flavoring and candy.
Caramelization
Natural sugars turn brown when
exposed to direct heat over a
flame, with or without the addition
of some oil to aid the process.
Onions when fried in butter over
Chiffonade
Coat
Lettuces, sorrel, basil leaves and
other leafy vegetables cut into
julienne strips.
Chinoise
Coddle
Crystallize
To form sugar or honey syrups into
crystals buy cooking it to hard
crack and letting it cool on an oiled
surface. The term also describes a
sugar coating surrounding a fruit
dipped in a egg white and
granulated sugar mixture.
Cube
To cut in even pieces. May be 1/4
inch/ 1/2 inch or 1 inch. Sides must
be of even size to be conceded
cubed. This is a description used in
dicing as an exact dice.
Curd
Custard-like pie or tart filling made
with whole eggs, sugar,juice and
zest of citrus the fruit, usually
lemon. May also be the solidified
nuggets of milk after citric acid has
been added and rennet introduced.
The curding process is an
important stage in the cheese
making process.
Marinating to preserve an
ingredient with salt and/or sugar
and spices. Preparing gravlax,
marinated salmon, is an example
of curing.
Custard
A mixture of beaten egg, egg yolks,
milk, and other ingredients. Which
is cooked with gentle heat, often in
a water bath. A custard differs from
a pudding in that it isn't stirred
during the cooking process.
Cut in
Working butter or vegetable
shortening, margarine, into dry
ingredients for equal distribution.
This is done with the help of a
pastry blender and is an important
procedure in making flaky pie
crusts.
Dash
A measure approximately equal to
1/16 teaspoon, a pinch or less.
Deep-fry
Curdle
Separation of a milk/cream based
sauce or the cooking of eggs when
over cooked. Sauces look like egg
drop soup when curdled.
Cure
Deglaze
Dough
A combination of ingredients
usually including flour, water or
milk, and, sometimes, a leavener,
producing a pliable mixture for
making baked goods.
Dice
To cut food into cubes. The cubes
can be small, medium or large.
Dicing is slightly less exact as
cubing is but still should have
uniformity.
Direct heat
A grilling method that allows food
to be cooked directly over the high
heat of a flame source.
Dot
To place small bits of an ingredient
such as butter on foods at random
intervals for the purpose of adding
flavor and to aid in browning during
cooking.
Double a recipe
To increase recipe amounts by two.
Dredge
Completely coating in flour and
shaking off the excess.
Drippings
Drippings are the liquids and bits of
food left in the bottom of a roasting
or frying pan after meat is cooked.
Drizzle
Pouring a liquid such as as melted
butter, olive oil or other liquid in a
slow trickle over food.
Dust
Sprinkling flour on a work surface
to evenly coat it, or as with spices,
sugar, or bread crumbs, light
coating a food item.
Egg wash
A mixture of beaten eggs, yolks,
whites, or both with milk or water.
Emulsion
Filter
A mixture of oil and liquid in which
tiny globules of one are suspended
in the other. Stabilizers, such as
egg or mustard may be used.
Classic example is vinaigrette salad
dressing.
Entre
Firm-ball stage
Espresso
A strong dark coffee brewed under
steam pressure. Popular in many
European countries, it is the base
for other coffee drinks such as
Cappuccino
Filet
Flamb
To ignite liquid that contains an
alcoholic substance so that it
flames.
Flan
Open tart filled with sweet or
savory ingredients, i.e. a chocolate
ganache flan. Second it is a
Spanish dessert of baked custard
covered with caramel.
Florentine
It is food garnished or cooked with
spinach.
Flute
To create a decorative scalloped
edge on a pie crust or pastry. Also
mushrooms and vegetables are
fluted to give them an attractive
cut and rolled symmetric edging.
Fold
To gently combine and aerate two
or more ingredients using a
bottom-to-top or side-to-side
motion with a spoon or spatula.
Fondue
A warm creamy dish made of
cheese, eggs, wine, brandy and or
other items. Served warm with
toasted bread cubes, vegetables or
stale bread cubes in which the
bread is skewered and then dipped
in the hot creamy mixture before
eating it.
Fricassee
A stew in which usually poultry is
cut up, fried in butter, and then
simmered in a liquid with
vegetables until done.
Frittata
Giblets
Glaze
Green Meat
Gluten
Grill
Grind
To mechanically cut a food into
small pieces.
Halve a recipe
Reduce the amounts of a recipe by
50%.
Hard-ball stage
In candy making, the point at
which syrup has cooked long
enough to form a solid ball in cold
water. Between 250-268 degrees F.
Hash
A dish made of onions, leftover
meats, potatoes and seasonings. It
is molded and then crisply panfried and served with poached eggs
and or demi-glace and vegetables.
Herbes de Provence
Hominy
Jellyroll pan
A baking pan with sides about an
inch high. Commonly called a sheet
pan.
Jerk
A dry mixture of various spices
such as habenaro chilies, thyme,
garlic, onions, allspice, ginger and
cinnamon used to season meats
such as chicken or pork, a Jamaican
BBQ specialty. If made well and
grilled over a wood fire you will
twitch "Jerk" when eating this very
spicy dish!
Infusion
Julienne
Making tea is an example.
Extracting flavors by soaking them
in liquid heated in a covered pan.
Chefs make herbal infusions to
Loin
Kosher salt
Macaroni
Larding
Inserting strips of fat into pieces of
meat, helping the braised meat
stays moist and juicy during
cooking. This isn't used as much as
it was in the earlier days of
cooking.
Leavener
Macedoine
A chopped or diced mixture of
several fruits or vegetables cooked
or uncooked. A macedoine of
vegetables may include celery,
carrots, turnips, peas, mushrooms,
chestnuts and pearl onions sauted
in butter.
Marble
To gently swirl or layer one food
into another to create a ribbon
effect when cooked and sliced.
Marinade
Medallion
Small round or oval of lightly
pounded meat such as chicken,
tenderloin, pork and veal.
Meringue
Sweetened egg whites beaten until
they are stiff, light and airy. There
are 3 types---Swiss, Italian and
common.
Mince
To chop or dice food into tiny, 1/8
inch or less irregular pieces.
Mirepoix
A mixture of vegetables, 2 parts
onions, 1 part celery, 1 part carrots
and may also contain leeks and
mushrooms in which case the
amount of onions would be
decreased. It's used as a seasoning
and flavor enhancer for the sauce
that be made from it and the pan
drippings.
Mix
To stir two or more foods together
until they are completely
combined.
Moisten
Mozzarella
Parboil
A cheese that has a mild flavor and
used in Italian-style recipes. This
cheese is best fresh and can be
found in many supermarkets in this
fresh state.
Mull
Parchment
Oleo
Pare
Pan broil
Cooking food in a heavy bottom
pan without added fat, then
removing any fat as it accumulates
so it doesn't burn.
Panfry
Cooking in a hot pan with small
amount of hot oil, butter, or other
fat, turning the food over once or
twice.
Papillote
A cooking technique in which food
is wrapped in paper or foil pouch
Peaks
The mounds and swirls made in a
mixture; egg whites that has been
whipped are stiff if they stay
upright, or soft if they fall over. The
same applies to whipped cream.
Pesto
A sauce made of fresh basil, garlic,
olive oil, pine nuts, cheese and
water. Modern pesto may be made
with any fresh herbs and variety of
ingredients as long as it isn't
cooked.
Pie pan
Round baking pan with slanted
sides, it may be glass (Pyrex) or
aluminum.
Pinch/Dash
A small inexact measurement
amount that basically add up to
1/16 of a teaspoon.
Pipe
Using a pastry bag to squeeze a
soft food through a decorative tip
to create swirled and artful wisps of
the product on to another surface.
Pit
To take out the center stone or
seed of a fruit, such as a nectarine
or a plum.
Poach
Reconstitute
To simmer in liquid that is just
below the boiling point. Usually
about 208 degree F.
Pressure cooking
Cooking method that uses steam
under a locked lid to produce high
temperatures and achieve a faster
cooking time.
Proof
Reduction
Refresh
Roux
Royal icing
Rest
Salamander
Render
Rise
With yeast dough's, to leave the
dough in a warm place and allow to
double in volume.
Roast
A method of cooking in an oven
where the item isn't covered
allowing the dry heat to surround
the item.
Rolling boil
Sauce
A lightly thickened liquid that adds,
flavor, moisture and visual appeal
to foods.
Saut
To cook food quickly in a small
amount of fat in a pan over
regulated direct heat.
Scald
Seize
Score
To tenderize meat, fish or shellfish
by making a number of shallow
often diagonal cuts across its
surface.
Scraper/Spatula
A scraper is a flexible piece of
rubber attached to a handle and
used for scraping food down the
sides of a pan, bowl or jar. A
spatula is used to turn food in a
pan, like what is used to turn eggs
over.
Sear
To quickly brown and caramelize
the outside of meats at a high
temperature.
Season
To enhance the flavor of foods by
adding ingredients such as salt,
pepper, and a variety of other
herbs, and spices. Also to treat a
pan so it becomes non-stick.
Set
Let food become solid.
Shred
To cut or tear into narrow strips,
either by hand or by using a grater
or food processor.
Sieving
Pressing items through a screen or
strainer to break up the mass. It
produces a lump free mixture that
won't clog a pastry tip during
filling.
Sift
Removing lumps from dry
ingredients such as flour or
confectioners' sugar by passing it
through a strainer. It also aerates
the item making them lighter.
Simmer
Cooking food in a liquid at just
below a boil point so that small
bubbles begin to rise the surface.
Simple syrup
Skim
Removing the top layer of fat and
impurities that rise to the top of
stocks, soups, sauces, or other
liquids.
Slivered
A cutting shape usually meaning
thin slices 1/4 inch by 1/8 inch by
1/8 inch.
Smoking Point
Temperature at which a fat begins
to break down and emit smoke.
Spin a thread
Creating a thread that appears
between the spoon and candy
when the spoon is lifted and
turned. A popular garnish on
modern dessert presentations is to
Streusel
Unleavened
A crumbly baked good topping,
made by combining butter, sugar,
ground nuts, spices and flour.
Sweat
Cooking vegetables over low heat
in a small amount of fat to release
their moisture, flavor and to have
them look translucent..
Thin
Reducing thickness with the
addition of more liquid.
Toss
To completely combine several
ingredients by mixing lightly in an
upward motion.
Truss
To tie with twine to hold together a
roast to maintain its shape while it
cooks.
Tube pan
Whitewash
A thin mixture of 1/3 flour and 2/3
cold water that is used to quickly
thicken soups, sauces and stocks in
an emergency..
Zest
The thin outer part of the rind of
citrus cut into a thin narrow strip. It
contains none of the white pith on
the inside of the skin.