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Uncle Ben's 'One Stop' stir-fry recipes Mouthwatering ideas to get you started
Be good to yourself with Tetley green tea
Ten tips to change your life in the kitchen
continued from page 2
2. Use kitchen scissors.
Instead of knives for some jobs: snipping herbs; cutting the fat off bacon, chops or ham; chopping anchovies, sun-dried tomatoes and spring onions.
2. Use kitchen scissors.
Instead of knives for some jobs: snipping herbs; cutting the fat off bacon, chops or ham; chopping anchovies, sun-dried tomatoes and spring onions.
3. Crush garlic like they do on TV.
Take a whole, unpeeled clove of garlic and lay it on a cutting board. Take a broad-bladed knife or cleaver, lay it sideways on the clove and pound it once with your fist. The skin will easily pull away. Continue chopping or crushing as needed.
NB: garlic gives out more or less of its flavour depending on what you do to it. Crushing it releases most of its 'garlicky effect', chopping it slightly less; slicing it less still, and leaving it whole the least of all.
4. Learn how to chop an onion.
It may sound simple but it's surprising how much of a job some people make of chopping onions. Read this and (don't) weep:
- There is no reason to peel a whole onion unless you are cutting it into rings or hollowing it out to stuff it.
- Lay it on its side and cut the pointed top end off first. This gives it a flat surface to stand it on while you cut it in half through the root end.
- Peel the skin back towards the root, leaving it attached to make a 'handle' to hold on to while chopping.
- Make straight, vertical cuts through the onion, taking the tip of the knife just to the root. Turn it sideways and cut in the other direction to produce a fine chop. The distance between cuts will determine how fine a dice you make.
- To slice an onion, make the vertical cuts with the blade parallel to the root. This will give you a half-moon shaped slice.
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