Attending culinary school is no easy feat. Believe it or not, cooking is way more than just throwing stuff in a pot โ when you are studying it and trying to become a professional in the food industry, it can be really intense. There are so many technical skills you need, as well as good taste (duh).
But believe it or not, even after putting your blood, sweat, and tears into culinary school, there are some things you end up learning just by living your every day life. Culinary school may teach you how to properly chop an onion, but there are some things you just learn on your own, like the importance of cleaning up after yourself.
These pro chefs spilled the deets on some of the most helpful cooking tips they know โ and they learned it themselves, not through culinary school.
โWhen making a sauce for your pasta, you should add some of the water you used to boil the pasta into the sauce. This will help the sauce bind better to the pasta and make it taste better.โ
โIf youโre a home cook always clean up after your self while youโre cooking. Youโll thank yourself after youโve eaten and youโre full and you donโt have a sink full of dishes and stuff to put away everywhere.โ
โPay attention to all your senses. Sauteing things like onions sound different at different stages. More of a hiss at the start as the steam escapes settling down to a crackle once all thatโs left its vegetable and fatโฆโ
โโฆSimilarly, everything you cook will have subtle changes to the way they smell as they cook. There have been many times when I have been multitasking and my nose has alerted me to check on whatever I have in the oven. Iโm not talking about smelling burning but just the subtle changes as certain stages of cooking are reached. Eventually, it becomes second nature.โ
4. Stay away from pre-marinated grocery store meat
โPlease donโt buy pre-marinated meats in butchers and grocery stores, theyโre usually older cuts of meat being โrescuedโ with a marinade to cover the unfreshness and smell.โ
โYouโll move faster if you maintain the saying of โEverything has a home, and if itโs not in my hand, itโs in its home.โ This way, you can rely on everything being exactly in its place.โ
โAlso, stay clean. Not just by wiping up crumbs after you use a cutting board (keep a sanitized towel nearby for a quick wipe and itโll become second nature), but by always keeping โlanding spacesโ clear. You go faster when your space is flexible, and that only happens if you stay clean.โ
If you accidentally drop a knife, do not try to catch it. Getting out of the way is the main priority. If it hits the ground, just wash it afterwards โ thatโs better than getting chopped up.
โYou can use soy sauce or fish sauce as a substitute for salt for a better umami taste. Also, because youโll need less due to the concentrated flavor, itโll naturally be less sodium.โ
โExtra Virgin Olive Oil is not for frying things! It has a very low smoke point and will break down. For higher (but still not very high) heat, you want regular Olive Oil, not Extra Virgin.โ
โA few drops of a hot sauce like Crystal or a fish sauce can be unrecognizable in a vinaigrette, dip or sauce but it can take it to otherworldly levels. A touch of heat, umami, sugar or acid can turn a flat dish into something people crave. Little drops, add more. Stop when you taste it and start salivating.โ
14. Donโt follow recipes perfectly, if youโre cooking
โRecipes are a road map. You donโt have to follow them exactly, its ok to deviate. Unless you are baking, in which case, follow the recipe exactly.โ
Donโt approach recipes like theyโre magic spells in the Harry Potter universe. If you wiggle your nose wrong or put in a spec to much of some seasoning youโre not going to end up with a completely different dish.
Alton Brown does an incredible job of teaching a cooking technique and then showing you a recipe that applies that technique. If you learn a process instead of a rote recipe you will know how to cook dozens of dishes, and itโs really the only way to develop skills in the kitchen.โ
โSave the parts of veggies you didnโt use like ends of onions, inners of peppers, and chicken bones in a ziplock in the freezer. Just make sure you donโt put anything bitter like cabbage or brocolli in. Also never put lemon rind in, it will make it super bitter and inedible. Sweet things like carrots or squash are a must, even pieces of apples are delicious. And I always make sure to put in some celery. Put it all straight from freezer bag to pot, cover with water, throw in a few bay leaves and salt and pepper and simmer for like two hours.
I always try to have chicken stock on handโฆ so much better than store-bought broth, and you control the sodium. Your soups will never be the same. Also delicious to use to cook rice.โ
โMise en place. Have all your stuff lined up and ready to go before you start. You donโt want something to burn because youโre busy looking for the tablespoon or opening a can of something.โ
โA master chef told me this in culinary school: โyou can always stop cooking.โ Take it off the burner or out of the oven if you need to. Surprisingly helpful tip.โ
โUsing scissors to cut things. Cherry tomatoes, dough, pizza, some cuts of meat, veggiesโฆ. So much faster, less to clean up and way cleaner cuts.โ
โKeep it simple. Something with 3-4 ingredients that go really well together is better than something with 12 ingredients that clash with each other.โ
โCut all the ends off, then peel everything, then split everything, then slice. Having 500 veggies to chop will take so long if you do each, from beginning to end, individually. When you change jobs or motions or tools, you slow down to recalibrate. The less you change actions, the faster you can get.โ
โTake a small hand towel and either loop it through a belt loop or between your waist and your belt so it hangs over your leg. As you move around, then, you always have something to wipe your hands/your instruments on and you donโt need to go out of your way to do it!โ
โElectric stoves are much hotter than gas. A high setting on gas will get you a nice sear, but the same on electric will burn. Itโs not something to worry about in the kitchen, but definitely at home.โ
Attending culinary school is no easy feat. Believe it or not, cooking is way more than just throwing stuff in a pot โ when you are studying it and trying to become a professional in the food industry, it can be really intense. There are so many technical skills you need, as well as good taste (duh).
But believe it or not, even after putting your blood, sweat, and tears into culinary school, there are some things you end up learning just by living your every day life. Culinary school may teach you how to properly chop an onion, but there are some things you just learn on your own, like the importance of cleaning up after yourself.
These pro chefs spilled the deets on some of the most helpful cooking tips they know โ and they learned it themselves, not through culinary school.