Microwave Cooking for One by Marie T Smith
Microwaving Tips
Ingredients
How often have you
denied yourself a dish of chocolate pudding because you
did not want to make and eat a whole box? You can have that pudding — along
with chocolate cake, the custard, and many of the other delights you
have been denying yourself. Thanks to the microwave, these recipes
are now practical for the person cooking for one. All of the
ingredients used in Microwave Cooking for One are available
in local food stores, not just in specialty shops.
Incorporated into the index are listings of
ingredients that do not store well if left over and of unusual
ingredients that you may not have many uses for. For example, if you
have a pound of ground beef which is usually the smallest amount you
can buy), the index can show you how to cook four ounces of it a
different way each day for the next four days. A prepackaged carton
of blueberries or strawberries can be used in a recipe and the rest
cooked into preserves; a carton of mushrooms can be used in many
recipes during the week or all at once in the Mushroom Loaf recipe
in the Vegetables section.
Most cities have at least one supermarket that does
not package all of its fresh produce, so selections of small amounts
and uniform shapes and sizes can be made. When writing my shopping
list, I note the weights of the ingredients I need so that I will only
buy enough food to make a dish. This cuts down considerable on food
costs and the throwing away of spoiled food and leftovers. Many
supermarkets will undo a package of produce on request and measure out
a certain amount. Every supermarket butcher I have ever dealt
with has cheerfully reduced the amount of meat in a package in the
meat case if I request it. However, society's changes are
helping the customer; as the number of single-occupant homes in this
country continues to increase, the food industry must gear its
packaging more and more to the individual consumer.
Visit our Pantry to
shop online for those special delicacies that are difficult to locate at
your local grocer.
Follow the Recipes
When learning to cook in the microwave, it is
important that you follow the recipes exactly. Microwave
Cooking for One is intended to be used as a workbook. Once you've
mastered a few recipes, and begin to understand how foods cook
differently in the microwave as opposed to conventional cooking, then
try adapting some of your own recipes.
Arranging Food
In conventional cooking the center of the cooking
utensil is the hottest spot. In the microwave, the food around
the outer edges cooks more quickly. Arrange food in a ring
around the outer edges of the utensil you are cooking in, placing the
thinnest parts of the food towards the center. For instance, you
would align the tails of shrimp toward the center and the meatier
parts outward.
Other Useful Hints
At the beginning of Microwave Cooking for One, I provide some
hints on how to use and store perishable ingredients without wasting
them. These are especially useful to someone living along, or
households that cook individual meals. Here are a few examples:
-
Bacon: To store bacon, wrap each slice in a piece
of waxed paper, then wrap all the slices tightly in freezer
wrap and place in freezer. Remove each slice as needed
and add to recipe frozen.
-
Butter: Butter is an optional ingredient in many
of these recipes, but it does enhance the taste of a
dish. Margarine may be substituted for butter in each
case.
-
Frozen Vegetables: Today almost any vegetable you
might need is available frozen in bags. This makes it
easy and practical to use the exact amount of vegetables
needed and return the rest to the freezer.
-
Green Peppers: Use the amount needed for a recipe,
cut the rest of the pepper into chunks and put it into a
small plastic container. Frozen green pepper will keep
quite a while and is easily chopped, minced, or
sliced. Add it frozen to recipes.
-
Onions: Chopped white
onions are used in these recipes. Chop up
several onions at a time, freeze them in a
plastic container, and add them to the
recipes frozen. Frozen chopped onion can be
minced easily.
-
Parsley: Fresh parsley adds to the flavor of a
dish and freezes well. It is sold in bunches, so chop
the entire bunch, put it into a plastic container, and
freeze.
-
Salt: Many of these recipes do not require any
salt. The microwave oven emphasizes the salt content
of food, so recipes containing a conventional amount of salt
will taste twice as salty. Canned vegetables, cheese,
bacon, and other such ingredients already contain enough
salt and can be cooked in the microwave oven without added
salt.
-
Tomato Paste: Most of the recipes call for 1
tablespoon of tomato paste, but the rest of the can freezes
well in a small plastic container and, when frozen, is easy
to cut with a dull kitchen knife.
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It is a very good cookbook and I have yet to find a recipe that didn't turn out as it was supposed to.—Norm Peterson, Arizona
My hubby keeps looking in the cookbook, and asks "when will you cook this recipe?"—Lori Hamby, Florida |












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Copyright © 1986, 2000-2008 Marie T. Smith and Tracy V. Grant, All Rights Reserved

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This Page Last Modified On
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