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Aerate
A synonym for sift; to pass ingredients through
a fine-mesh device to break up large pieces and
to incorporate air into the ingredients to make
them lighter.
Al dente
"To the tooth," in Italian. The pasta is cooked
just enough to maintain a firm, chewy texture.
Bake
To cook in the oven. Food is cooked slowly with
gentle heat, causing the natural moisture to
evaporate slowly, concentrating the flavor.
Baste
To brush or spoon liquid fat or juices over meat
during roasting to add flavor and to prevent it
from drying out.
Batter
A mixture of flour, fat, and liquid that is thin
enough in consistency to require a pan to encase
it. Used in such preparations as cakes and some
cookies. A batter is different from dough, which
maintains its shape.
Beat
To smoothen a mixture
by briskly whipping or stirring it with a spoon,
fork, wire whisk, rotary beater, or electric
mixer.
Bias-slice
To slice a food crosswise at a 45-degree angle.
Bind
To thicken a sauce or hot liquid by stirring in
ingredients such as eggs, flour, butter, or
cream.
Blackened
A popular Cajun-style cooking method in which
seasoned foods are cooked over high heat in a
super-heated heavy skillet until charred.
Blanch
To boil briefly to loosen the skin of a fruit or
a vegetable. After 30 seconds in boiling water,
the fruit or vegetable should be plunged into
ice water to stop the cooking action, and then
the skin easily slices off.
Blend
To mix or fold two or more ingredients together
to obtain equal distribution throughout the
mixture.
Boil
To cook food in heated water or other liquid
that is bubbling vigorously.
Braise
A cooking technique that requires browning meat
in oil or other fat and then cooking slowly in
liquid. The effect of braising is to tenderize
the meat.
Bread
To coat the food with crumbs (usually with soft
or dry bread crumbs), sometimes seasoned.
Broil
To cook food directly under the heat source.
Broth or stock
A flavorful liquid made by gently cooking meat,
seafood, or vegetables (and/or their
by-products, such as bones and trimming) often
with herbs, in liquid, usually water.
Brown
A quick sautéing, pan/oven broiling, or grilling
method done either at the beginning or end of
meal preparation, often to enhance flavor,
texture, or eye appeal.
Brush
Using a pastry brush, to coat a food such as
meat or bread with melted butter, glaze, or
other liquid.
Bundt
pan
The generic name for any tube baking pan having
fluted sides (though it was once a trademarked
name).
Butterfly
To cut open a food such as pork chops down the
center without cutting all the way through, and
then spread apart.
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Caramelization
Browning sugar over a flame, with or without the
addition of some water to aid the process. The
temperature range in which sugar caramelizes is
approximately 320º F to 360º F (160º C to 182º
C).
Chiffon
Pie filling made light and fluffy with
stabilized gelatin and beaten egg whites.
Chop
To cut into irregular pieces.
Clarify
Remove impurities from butter or stock by
heating the liquid, then straining or skimming
it.
Coat
To evenly cover food with flour, crumbs, or a
batter.
Coddle
A cooking method in which foods (such as eggs)
are put in separate containers and placed in a
pan of simmering water for slow, gentle cooking.
Combine
To blend two or more ingredients into a single
mixture.
Confit
To slowly cook pieces of meat in their own
gently rendered fat.
Core
To remove the inedible center of fruits such as
pineapples.
Cream
To beat vegetable shortening, butter, or
margarine, with or without sugar, until light
and fluffy. This process traps in air bubbles,
later used to create height in cookies and
cakes.
Crimp
To create a decorative edge on a piecrust. On a
double piecrust, this also seals the edges
together.
Crisp
To restore the crunch to foods; vegetables such
as celery and carrots can be crisped with an ice
water bath, and foods such as stale crackers can
be heated in a medium oven.
Crush
To condense a food to its smallest particles,
usually using a mortar and pestle or a rolling
pin.
Crystallize
To form sugar- or honey-based syrups into
crystals. The term also describes the coating.
Curd
Custard-like pie or tart filling flavored with
juice and zest of citrus fruit, usually lemon,
although lime and orange may also be used.
Curdle
To cause semisolid pieces of coagulated protein
to develop in food, usually as a result of the
addition of an acid substance, or the
overheating of milk or egg-based sauces.
Cure
To preserve or add flavor with an ingredient,
usually salt and/or sugar.
Custard
A mixture of beaten egg, milk, and possibly
other ingredients such as sweet or savory
flavorings, which is cooked with gentle heat,
often in a water bath or double boiler. As pie
filling, the custard is frequently cooked and
chilled before being layered into a
prebaked crust.
Cut in
To work vegetable shortening, margarine, or
butter into dry ingredients.
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Dash
A measure approximately equal to 1/16 teaspoon.
Deep-fry
To completely submerge the food in hot oil.
Deglaze
To add liquid to a pan in which foods have been
fried or roasted, in order to dissolve the
caramelized juices stuck to the bottom of the
pan.
Devil
To add hot or spicy ingredients such as cayenne
pepper or Tabasco sauce to a food.
Dice
To cut into cubes.
Direct heat
A cooking method that allows heat to meet food
directly, such as grilling, broiling, or
toasting.
Dot
To sprinkle food with small bits of an
ingredient such as butter to allow for even
melting.
Dough
A combination of ingredients including flour,
water or milk, and, sometimes, a
leavener, producing
a firm but workable mixture for making baked
goods.
Dredge
To sprinkle lightly and evenly with sugar or
flour. A dredger has holes pierced on the lid to
sprinkle evenly.
Drizzle
To pour a liquid such as a sweet glaze or melted
butter in a slow, light trickle over food.
Drippings
Used for gravies and sauces, drippings are the
liquids left in the bottom of a roasting or
frying pan after meat is cooked.
Dust
To sprinkle food lightly with spices, sugar, or
flour for a light coating.
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Egg wash
A mixture of beaten eggs (yolks, whites, or
whole eggs) with either milk or water. Used to
coat cookies and other baked goods to give them
a shine when baked.
Emulsion
A mixture of liquids, one being a fat or oil and
the other being water based so that tiny
globules of one are suspended in the other. This
may involve the use of stabilizers, such as egg
or mustard. Emulsions may be temporary or
permanent.
Entrée
A French term that originally referred to the
first course of a meal, served after the soup
and before the meat courses. In the United
States, it refers to the main dish of a meal.
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Fillet
To remove the bones from meat or fish for
cooking.
Filter
To remove lumps, excess liquid, or impurities by
passing through paper or cheesecloth.
Firm-ball stage
In candy making, the point where boiling syrup
dropped in cold water forms a ball that is
compact yet gives slightly to the touch.
Flambé
To ignite a sauce or other liquid so that it
flames.
Flan
An open pie filled with sweet or savory
ingredients; also, a Spanish dessert of baked
custard covered with caramel.
Flute
To create a decorative scalloped or undulating
edge on a piecrust or other pastry.
Fold
To cut and mix lightly with a spoon to keep as
much air in the mixture as possible.
Fricassee
Usually a stew in which the meat is cut up,
lightly cooked in butter, and then simmered in
liquid until done.
Fritter
Sweet or savory foods coated or mixed into
batter, then deep fried (also, in French,
beignet).
Frizzle
To cook thin slices of meat in hot oil until
crisp and slightly curly.
Fry
To cook food in hot cooking oil, usually until a
crisp brown crust forms.
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Ganache
A rich chocolate filling or coating made with
chocolate, vegetable shortening, and possibly
heavy cream. It can coat cakes or cookies, and
be used as a filling for truffles.
Garnish
A decorative piece of an edible ingredient such
as parsley, lemon wedges, croutons, or chocolate
curls placed as a finishing touch to dishes or
drinks.
Glaze
A liquid that gives an item a shiny surface.
Examples are fruit jams that have been heated or
chocolate thinned with melted vegetable
shortening. Also, to cover a food with such a
liquid.
Gluten
A protein formed when hard wheat flour is
moistened and agitated. Gluten is what gives
yeast dough its characteristic elasticity.
Grate
To shred or cut down a food into fine pieces by
rubbing it against a rough surface.
Gratin
To bind together or combine food with a liquid
such as cream, milk, béchamel sauce, or tomato
sauce, in a shallow dish. The mixture is then
baked until cooked and set.
Grease
To coat a pan or skillet with a thin layer of
oil.
Grill
To cook over the heat source (traditionally over
wood coals) in the open air.
Grind
To mechanically cut a food into small pieces.
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Hard-ball stage
In candy making, the point at which syrup has
cooked long enough to form a solid ball in cold
water.
Hull (also husk)
To remove the leafy parts of soft fruits, such
as strawberries or blackberries.
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Ice
To cool down cooked food by placing in ice;
also, to spread frosting on a cake.
Infusion
Extracting flavors by soaking them in liquid
heated in a covered pan. The term also refers to
the liquid resulting from this process.
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Jell (also gel)
To cause a food to set or solidify, usually by
adding gelatin.
Jerk or Jamaican jerk seasoning
A dry mixture of various spices such as chilies,
thyme, garlic, onions, and cinnamon or cloves
used to season meats such as chicken or pork.
Julienne
To cut into long, thin strips.
Jus
The natural juices released by roasting meats.
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Knead
To work dough with the heels of your hands in a
pressing and folding motion until it becomes
smooth and elastic.
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Larding
Inserting strips of fat into pieces of meat, so
that the braised meat stays moist and juicy.
Leavener
An ingredient or process that produces air
bubbles and causes the rising of baked goods
such as cookies and cakes.
Line
To place layers of edible (cake or bread slices)
or inedible (foil or wax paper) ingredients in a
pan to provide structure for a dish or to
prevent sticking.
Loin
A cut of meat that typically comes from the back
of the animal.
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Marble
To gently swirl one food into another.
Marinate
To combine food with aromatic ingredients to add
flavor.
Marzipan
A paste (of ground almonds, sugar, and egg
whites) used to fill and decorate pastries.
Mash
To beat or press a food to remove lumps and make
a smooth mixture.
Medallion
A small round or oval bit of meat.
Meringue
Egg whites beaten until they are stiff, then
sweetened. It can be used as the topping for
pies, or baked as cookies.
Mince
To chop food into tiny, irregular pieces.
Mix
To beat or stir two or more foods together until
they are thoroughly combined.
Moisten
Adding enough liquid to dry ingredients to
dampen but not soak them.
Mull
To slowly heat wine or cider with spices and
sugar.
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Panbroil
To cook a food in a skillet without added fat,
removing any fat as it accumulates.
Panfry
To cook in a hot pan with small amount of hot
oil, butter, or other fat, turning the food over
once or twice.
Parboil
To partly cook in a boiling liquid.
Parchment
A heavy, heat-resistant paper used in cooking.
Pare
To peel or trim a food, usually vegetables.
Peaks
The mounds made in a mixture. For example, egg
white that has been whipped to stiffness. Peaks
are "stiff" if they stay
upright, or "soft" if they curl over.
Pesto
A sauce usually made of fresh basil, garlic,
olive oil, pine nuts, and cheese. The
ingredients are finely chopped and then mixed,
uncooked, with pasta. Generally, the term refers
to any uncooked sauce made of finely chopped
herbs and nuts.
Pinch
Same as "dash."
Pipe
To force a semisoft
food through a bag (either a pastry bag or a
plastic bag with one corner cut off) to decorate
food.
Pit
Using a sharp knife to take out the center stone
or seed of a fruit, such as a peach or a mango.
Poach
To simmer in liquid.
Pressure cooking
A cooking method that uses steam trapped under a
locked lid to produce high temperatures and
achieve fast cooking time.
Proof
To let yeast dough rise.
Purée
To mash or sieve food into a thick liquid.
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Ramekin
A small baking dish used for individual servings
of sweet and savory dishes.
Reconstitute
To take a dried food such as milk back to its
original state by adding liquid.
Reduce
To cook liquids down so that some of the water
evaporates.
Refresh
To pour cold water over freshly cooked
vegetables to prevent further cooking and to
retain color.
Render
To melt down fat to make drippings.
Roast
To cook uncovered in the oven.
Roux
A cooked paste usually made from flour and
butter used to thicken sauces.
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Sauté
To cook food quickly in a small amount of oil in
a skillet or sauté pan over direct heat.
Scald
Cooking a liquid such as milk to just below the
point of boiling; also to loosen the skin of
fruits or vegetables by dipping them in boiling
water.
Score
To tenderize meat by making a number of shallow
(often diagonal) cuts across its surface. This
technique is also useful in marinating, as it
allows for better absorption of the marinade.
Sear
Sealing in a meat's juices by cooking it quickly
under very high heat.
Season
To enhance the flavor of foods by adding
ingredients such as salt, pepper, oregano,
basil, cinnamon, and a variety of other herbs,
spices, condiments, and vinegars. Also, to treat
a pot or pan (usually cast iron) with a coating
of cooking oil and baking it in a 350° F oven
for approximately 1 hour; this process seals any
tiny rough spots on the pan's surface that may
cause food to stick.
Seize
To form a thick, lumpy mass when melted (usually
applied to chocolate).
Set
Let food become solid. (See also "Jell.")
Shred
To cut or tear into long narrow strips, either
by hand or by using a grater or food processor.
Sift
To remove large lumps from a dry ingredient such
as flour or confectioners' sugar by passing it
through a fine mesh. This process also
incorporates air into the ingredients, making
them lighter.
Simmer
Cooking food in a liquid at a low enough
temperature that small bubble begin to break the
surface.
Skim
To remove the top fat layer from stocks, soups,
sauces, or other liquids such as cream from
milk.
Springform
pan
A two-part baking pan in which a spring-loaded
collar fits around a base; the collar is removed
after baking is complete. Used for foods that
may be difficult to remove from regular pans,
such as cheesecake.
Steam
To cook over boiling water in a covered pan,
this method keeps foods' shape, texture, and
nutritional value intact better than methods
such as boiling.
Steep
To soak dry ingredients (tea leaves, ground
coffee, herbs, spices, etc.) in liquid until the
flavor is infused into the liquid.
Stewing
Browning small pieces of meat, poultry, or fish,
then simmering them with vegetables or other
ingredients in enough liquid to cover them,
usually in a closed pot on the stove, in the
oven, or with a slow cooker.
Stir-Fry
The fast frying of small pieces of meat and
vegetables over very high heat with continual
and rapid stirring.
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Thin
To reduce a mixture's thickness with the
addition of more liquid.
Toss
To thoroughly combine several ingredients by
mixing lightly.
Truss
To use string, skewers, or pins to hold together
a food to maintain its shape while it cooks
(usually applied to meat or poultry).
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Unleavened
Baked goods that contain no agents to give them
volume, such as baking powder, baking soda, or
yeast.
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Vinaigrette
A general term referring to any sauce made with
vinegar, oil, and seasonings.
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Water bath
A gentle cooking technique in which a container
is set in a pan of simmering water. (See also
"Coddle.")
Whip
To incorporate air into ingredients such as
cream or egg whites by beating until light and
fluffy; also refers to the utensil used for this
action.
Whisk
To mix or fluff by beating; also refers to the
utensil used for this action.
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Zest
The thin, brightly colored outer part of the
rind of citrus fruits. It contains volatile
oils, used as a flavoring.
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