User-agent: Mediapartners-Google* Disallow: handy tips: more tips for kitchen

Thursday, January 31, 2008

more tips for kitchen

Add 1 tbsp. vinegar to a litre of water in a blackened cooker. Cover and boil for a few minutes. Wash regularly. This will remove blackening of the cooker.

To clean a blocked metal tea strainer, heat gently or place in a hot oven. When fully heated, the tea particles between the mesh will burn out. Scrub out particles now, with a stiff toothbrush or a metal bristle brush, and they will fall out easily. Wash with warm soap water and metal scrubber to finish off.

Place a small clean kitchen towel at the bottom of a pile of hot rotis, moongdis, etc. so that the layer of moisture created with heat, is absorbed by it. Or else the lower ones will become moist and soggy. Remove towel when the rotis have cooled comepletely. For soft rotis, place in a tin, also place a napkin on top of the pile before placing lid. This will soak droplets formed inside the tin.

To clean dirty copper utensils: Fill a spray bottle with vinegar in which 3 tbsp. of salt has been added. Spray solution on utensil liberally. Set aside for a while. Rub clean with a soft cloth.

Place sheets of thick papertowels at the bottom of a soiled sink. Pour diluted bleach to soak them. Keep for 3-4 hour. Press out the liquid into the sink, remove towels, add very little detergent and scrub gently. The result will be a sparkling clean sink.

To clean stains from melamine cups and suacers, fill them with liquid bleach, leave aside for 2 hours, rinse with water. If you clean one piece at a time, the same bleach can be poured into all pieces one by one, and very little bleach will be required to clean many pieces of melamineware.

To assemble a steamer at home, just take a large deep vessel, a colander which fits on the rim of the vessel and a lid which when used inverted will fit well on the rim of the vessel. Place some water in the vessel, place the colander and add the contents. Cover with inverted lid and place a small weight over it to keep the lid firmly down. Use a metallic colander which has holes punched into it.

Boil onion peels with a little water and vinegar in burnt and greasy pans. Simmer covered for 3-4 minutes. Wash with washing powder and scrubber. They will come out clean easily.

When coring whole jackfruit, handle with kitchen gloves or grease palms to avoid the resulting discolouration.

Use a woodhandled rubber kitchen spatula to scrape or empty any cooked dish or chutneys. This way, the vessels comes clean and washing is eased, and saving of soaps etc. is quite a bit.

Cover jar labels, etc. with transparent scotchtape, to keep its ink from fading, running, etc. and the label from tearing with use.

Always store kitchen ingredients in see through containers of either clear glass or plastic, for ease in locating, cleaning and keeping track of whats required to be refilled.

Wrap hands in either plastic kitchen gloves or just plain plastic bags while handling chillies. These will keep the hands from the burning sensation later on. Rub ghee on palms if chillies cause burning hands. After the sensation cools, rub the peel of a used lemon for 2-3 minutes and wash off.

Never scrape burnt leftovers from casseroles. Soak in a weak solution of vinegar, salt and soapy warm water for an hour or so. The stuck particles will come off very easily, without scratching the dish.

Use the silver foil wrappings of used medicines to scrub greasy utensils like tawas, pans, etc. Embed them at the base of plastic scrubbers for easy use and grip.

Never take your cookbook to the kistchen. Always make a rough note of your recipe on a piece of paper, pin/magnetically stick it over your workplace at eye level. This way: You preserve you cookbooks better and your recipe is bang in front of your eyes so reference is easier with less chances of mistakes. Also, you've automatically gone through you recipe once before proceeding to make it.

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