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Culinary Grads Share Tips They Didn't Learn In School But Find Very Useful (30 Tips)
CuriositiesOCT 30, 2020

Culinary Grads Share Tips They Didn't Learn In School But Find Very Useful (30 Tips)

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A single episode of Hell’s Kitchen or MasterChef is enough to realize how much guts it takes to become a chef. Working under so much pressure, your blood boiling like it was on the menu is the norm in a restaurant kitchen. And being shouted at is a polite way to confirm you’re still in. On the other side of the cooking industry, crashing hopes and dreams are washed ashore on moldy food containers as seen on Kitchen Nightmares. Whether you’re doing good or not, it never gets easier.
So this time, we are looking at the culinary school grads who have likely been to hell and back to see what cooking tips they have to share. Thanks to one Redditor who posed the question “What are some golden tips to cooking you didn’t learn in culinary school?” on r/Cooking, we can now learn their useful tricks without selling our sanity to the kitchen.
It turns out, learning stuff the "normal way," aka tuning in to a "how to make an omelet" video on YouTube, may just as well do the job.

#1

Culinary Grads Share Tips They Didn't Learn In School But Find Very Useful (30 Tips)
Not a food tip but a cooking tip.... a falling knife has no handle. If you drop a knife, get the hell out of the way and let it hit the floor. Washing it is easy enough. Try to catch it and you could be visiting the emergency room.
111points

#2

Culinary Grads Share Tips They Didn't Learn In School But Find Very Useful (30 Tips)
If you're a home cook always clean up after your self while you're cooking. You'll thank yourself after you've eaten and you're full and you don't have a sink full of dishes and stuff to put away everywhere.
80points

#3

Culinary Grads Share Tips They Didn't Learn In School But Find Very Useful (30 Tips)
Recipes are a road map. You don't have to follow them exactly, its ok to deviate. Unless you are baking, in which case, follow the recipe exactly.
76points

To find out more about the subreddit r/Cooking, where the “What are some golden tips to cooking you didn’t learn in culinary school?” question was posted, Bored Panda reached out to the moderator u/zem, who told us more about the community.

The Reddit user u/zem explained that r/cooking has evolved over time “to stress the fact the membership is interested in cooking rather than just food.” Hence, the moderator team has disallowed pictures of food without a complete recipe attached.

“Compare r/tonightsdinner to see what we were trying to discourage; that's a great subreddit too, but it's focused more on the food than on how the reader can make it for themselves,” u/zem added.

#4

Culinary Grads Share Tips They Didn't Learn In School But Find Very Useful (30 Tips)
You can use the stem of broccoli. Just peel, slice and fry it in the pan, it's delicious.
76points

#5

Professional chef here. Hot pans make a world of difference. Never start anything in a cold pan.
76points

#6

Culinary Grads Share Tips They Didn't Learn In School But Find Very Useful (30 Tips)
Learn cooking techniques instead of recipes.
Don't approach recipes like they're magic spells in the Harry Potter universe. If you wiggle your nose wrong or put in a spec to much of some seasoning you're 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 it's really the only way to develop skills in the kitchen.
71points

The moderator also said that the team behind the community is here not because they’re cooking experts, but rather because “we spend a lot of time on Reddit and are basically volunteering some time and effort to keep the community running smoothly.”

The subreddit, which now has 2.2 million members, describes itself as “a place for the cooks of Reddit and those who want to learn how to cook.”

#7

Take 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 don't need to go out of your way to do it!
66points

#8

The only recipe that should have only one clove of garlic in it is a recipe for one clove of garlic. Two MINIMUM people.
65points

#9

When 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.
63points

#10

ALWAYS use real butter, not margarine.
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62points

#11

Culinary Grads Share Tips They Didn't Learn In School But Find Very Useful (30 Tips)
Pay 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 that's left its vegetable and fat. Similarly 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. I'm not talking about smelling burning but just the subtle changes as certain stages of cooking are reached. Eventually it becomes second nature.
57points

#12

Add about a half of a tablespoon of sugar to your chili or spaghetti sauce. It takes some of the acidity out.
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57points

#13

Extra 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.
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57points

#14

Culinary Grads Share Tips They Didn't Learn In School But Find Very Useful (30 Tips)
You can use soy sauce or fish sauce as a substitute for salt for a better umami taste. Also, because you'll need less due to the concentrated flavour, it'll naturally be less sodium.
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54points

#15

Culinary Grads Share Tips They Didn't Learn In School But Find Very Useful (30 Tips)
Salt in the hand, not in the pan. When adding salt to a dish, try not to hang a 5 pound box over it.
50points

#16

Mise en place. Have all your stuff lined up and ready to go before you start. You don't want something to burn because you're busy looking for the tablespoon or opening a can of something.
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49points

#17

Always scrape the ingredients from the cutting board into a pot with the back of the knife, it will help the blade stay sharp longer
49points

#18

Keep it simple. Something with 3-4 ingredients that go really well together is better than something with 12 ingredients that clash with each other.
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47points

#19

Culinary Grads Share Tips They Didn't Learn In School But Find Very Useful (30 Tips)
Salt early, salt late. Adding salt at different points in cooking dramatically affects results.
45points

#20

Culinary Grads Share Tips They Didn't Learn In School But Find Very Useful (30 Tips)
There’s literally no point, and even a health hazard, to “rinse” pre-cut chicken and salmon.
42points
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