Cooking Methods
Mirepoix
A French word that refers to the mixture of coarsely chopped onions, carrots, and celery. This mixture provides a flavor base for stock or when braising food
saute
Cook food quickly in a small amount of fat or oil over high heat; in French language, the word saute means "jump"
boiling
Cooking food in a liquid at a temperature of 100°C
roasting
Food is cooked by conduction and convection in an oven at a high temperature
Shallow frying
The cooking style in which fat covers about 1/2 to 3/4 of the food
simmering
To cook food in liquid at 90°C, low enough so that tiny bubbles break the surface
steaming
To cook foods in a closed environment using vapours
Dry frying
Used for foods that are high in fat e.g. sausages, the food is placed on a dry pan
deep fry
When food is cooked in a large amount of fat at a very high temperature
grilling
a dry-heat cooking method in which foods are cooked by heat radiating from a source located above or below the cooking surface
pressure cooking
cooks at high temperature and pressure using a specialized pot with locking lid
baking
dry heat method of cooking to create bread, cakes, pies, and other foods in an oven
braising
fry (food) lightly and then stew it slowly in a closed container on a bed of vegetables
radiation
heat is transferred as waves of energy e.g grilling
convection
movement of molecules through air or liquid e.g. baking bread in an oven or cooking pasta in boiling water
poach
to cook food gently at 85°C in a small amount of liquid
stewing
to cover small pieces of food in liquid and simmer until done
conduction
transferring heat by direct contact. e.g. cooking a pancake on a griddle
stir frying
uses a large rounded saute pan called a wok and a small amount of oil