Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Lifestyle
Daniel Neman

Rookie cooks: 4 meals and some basics for absolute beginner cooks

In these viral days, we are witnessing the collision of two forces having one somewhat happy result.

People suddenly have loads of enforced time to stay at home. And people who eat out for every meal have fewer options to do so.

The result? People who have never cooked before are, one hopes, giving some thought to cooking.

We're talking about people who are absolute beginners, people who have never before even turned on a stove.

We thought we would turn our attention this week to those folks, to beginning cooks who don't know a spatula from a rolling pin. I made four simple, basic recipes that are easy to re-create and hard to mess up.

They don't have many ingredients. They don't have many steps. And each one introduces the first-time cook to a different, easy-to-master technique that can be used in countless other recipes.

Most important of all, each one makes a meal that is hearty and satisfying. Even when your cooking skills improve _ and they will _ you'll want to return to them over and over again.

The four techniques are simmering, roasting, braising and searing.

Simmering

Simmering is cooking a liquid at a relatively high temperature, but not so high that it boils. When a liquid simmers, small bubbles rise to the surface.

Simmering nicely takes care of two desirable actions while the food cooks: Some of the water in the liquid evaporates, which intensifies the taste of the liquid that is left and often thickens it; and the flavors of the ingredients in the liquid have the chance to blend together harmoniously.

I made a very simple tomato sauce that takes full advantage of these actions. Not only is the sauce easy, it also has a bright, pure flavor that I crave. To be honest, it is my go-to sauce for pasta, and I usually don't embellish it in any way.

I use canned whole tomatoes, which I crush with my hands, but you could also use canned crushed tomatoes, pureed tomatoes or diced tomatoes (do not use stewed tomatoes or tomato sauce). The hand-crushed tomatoes yield a lovely chunky and rustic sauce, but you'll get the same great flavor from any of the varieties. Canned diced tomatoes won't break down as much in the sauce, and they will remain a little firmer than the other varieties.

Roasting

Roasting is cooking meat or vegetables in the oven (or over a flame, technically) in an uncovered pot with no liquid. The meat or vegetables are cooked entirely and evenly by the dry heat of the air around them.

I roasted a hunk of pork _ it happened to be a sirloin, but that doesn't really matter. The best cuts for roasting are the ones that aren't put to better use in other ways, such as chops and ribs. A lot of people like to roast a pork loin because it is of a fairly uniform size, so it cooks all at the same time. Do not confuse it with a tenderloin, which will dry out very quickly if you overcook it at all.

I cooked my roast in a classic preparation, with sauerkraut and apples. It's also very easy _ just the three ingredients, plus salt and pepper. And yet, the flavors blend together in a most miraculous way, with the sweetness of the pork and the apples playing off the salty tanginess of the sauerkraut. It is comfort food that is unusually comforting.

Braising

Braising is cooking meat (and occasionally vegetables) in a small-to-medium amount of liquid in a covered pot or pan. The food is cooked with a wet heat, and is ideal for using with large pieces of fairly tough meat. A long, slow braise at a low temperature will make it tender and moist.

Despite its name, pot roast isn't a roast at all; it is actually a braise (which is needed to make the tough meat delicious). There are a million ways to make it, but I chose the method that is perhaps the most basic and simple.

I tossed a large hunk of beef in a pot _ it was a cap bottom round roast, because that was cheapest, but any beef cut with the word "roast" in it will be fine. I added two carrots cut into 2-inch lengths, two ribs of celery cut into 2-inch lengths, one onion cut into wedges, a can of beef broth and a sprig of oregano.

I covered it, stuck it in the oven at 300 degrees for about three hours, and when I took it out it was amazing. Then I cut a couple of slices and put them on homemade toast, and it was amazinger.

Searing

Searing is cooking meat in a pan at a high temperature until the surface that is touching the pan turns a deep shade of brown.

The brown indicates that the sugars inherent in the meat actually caramelize, which gives the meat a warm and rich flavor.

Searing meat, however, does not actually cook it, or at least no more than just the barest surface. If you leave the meat over high heat for longer than it takes to sear, you will only end up burning it.

So the meat, once seared, has to be cooked in another way. One of my favorite dishes to cook is chicken that is first seared and then braised. This is the best of all worlds. The chicken first picks up the depth from the browning and searing, and then it is imbued with flavor from the braising liquid.

I used white wine, but water works surprisingly well (it creates its own chicken broth to braise in); you can even use beer. I also added a sprig of fresh tarragon, because its faint licorice taste is, improbably, a perfect flavoring for chicken, but several other herbs _ fresh or dried _ will do just as well.

Nothing this easy should taste this good.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.