EJ wrote:I tried the straw through the strawberry trick this morning. Worked perfectly.dpupenya wrote:
After trying the strawberry trick I found that I prefer a single chop stick. Pokes through the bottom easy and doesn't clog shut like a straw
Kitchen Hacks & Cooking Tips: An Ideas Thread
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Re: Kitchen Hacks & Cooking Tips: An Ideas Thread
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Re: Kitchen Hacks & Cooking Tips: An Ideas Thread
that's my movedpupenya wrote:EJ wrote:I tried the straw through the strawberry trick this morning. Worked perfectly.dpupenya wrote:
After trying the strawberry trick I found that I prefer a single chop stick. Pokes through the bottom easy and doesn't clog shut like a straw
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Re: Kitchen Hacks & Cooking Tips: An Ideas Thread
I will never look back now. Too many wasted strawberry tops before.spike wrote:that's my movedpupenya wrote:EJ wrote:I tried the straw through the strawberry trick this morning. Worked perfectly.dpupenya wrote:
After trying the strawberry trick I found that I prefer a single chop stick. Pokes through the bottom easy and doesn't clog shut like a straw
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Re: Kitchen Hacks & Cooking Tips: An Ideas Thread
I usually just pull the leaves off and eat it whole. You get a little stem but oh well.EJ wrote:I will never look back now. Too many wasted strawberry tops before.spike wrote:that's my movedpupenya wrote:EJ wrote:I tried the straw through the strawberry trick this morning. Worked perfectly.dpupenya wrote:
After trying the strawberry trick I found that I prefer a single chop stick. Pokes through the bottom easy and doesn't clog shut like a straw
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Re: Kitchen Hacks & Cooking Tips: An Ideas Thread
What is the ideal oven temp for this?Greedo wrote:Like this
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Re: Kitchen Hacks & Cooking Tips: An Ideas Thread
I'd probably say 325-350 for a lil bit.
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Re: Kitchen Hacks & Cooking Tips: An Ideas Thread
Lately when I eat chocolate ice cream, I've been dipping my spoon in a jar of peanut butter first. If your ice cream is soft enough, the peanut butter will stick on your spoon long enough to flavor multiple bites. Once the peanut butter is gone, the memory still coats your taste buds and lasts for the rest of the bowl. You're welcome.
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Re: Kitchen Hacks & Cooking Tips: An Ideas Thread
i'm going to try that tonight with a pint of cherry garcia
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Re: Kitchen Hacks & Cooking Tips: An Ideas Thread
Why has trag kept this hidden from us?
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Re: Kitchen Hacks & Cooking Tips: An Ideas Thread
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Thu January 08, 2026 1:15 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Kitchen Hacks & Cooking Tips: An Ideas Thread
Word.doug rr wrote:buy better spoons
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Re: Kitchen Hacks & Cooking Tips: An Ideas Thread
my daughter has a severe peanut allergy you jerks
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Re: Kitchen Hacks & Cooking Tips: An Ideas Thread
I would die if I was allergic to peanuts.
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Re: Kitchen Hacks & Cooking Tips: An Ideas Thread
The corn cob hack did not work for me.....
I don't know if it was a lack of silk inside the husk, or if it's just too early in the season. Whatever it was, I cut the butt end off as shown but it would not slide out of the husk smoothly like the example did. After I pulled a bit of the husk away, I did manage to pull the cob out, and as I said there was very little silk inside. Unless e hack is specific to yellow corn, as mine was sweet white....
Shrug, I'll try again later in the season and/or with yellow corn.
I don't know if it was a lack of silk inside the husk, or if it's just too early in the season. Whatever it was, I cut the butt end off as shown but it would not slide out of the husk smoothly like the example did. After I pulled a bit of the husk away, I did manage to pull the cob out, and as I said there was very little silk inside. Unless e hack is specific to yellow corn, as mine was sweet white....
Shrug, I'll try again later in the season and/or with yellow corn.
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Re: Kitchen Hacks & Cooking Tips: An Ideas Thread
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Thu January 08, 2026 1:12 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Kitchen Hacks & Cooking Tips: An Ideas Thread
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Thu January 08, 2026 1:11 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Kitchen Hacks & Cooking Tips: An Ideas Thread
Nice. Let us know how it turned out.tragabigzanda wrote:So I had one filet of sockeye left from my winter fish share. I had been holding off, because it was the one vacuum-sealed filet that had been punctured somewhere along the way; the filet had been frost-bitten, so I had been avoiding using it. Going to try your salt brine tonight, then grill it. Hopefully I can pump a little life back into her.tragabigzanda wrote:Ah, that makes sense -- that's what one does with sweetbreads and milk, too.Chris_H_2 wrote:It does indeed. Soaking in milk for 10 minutes also does the trick.tragabigzanda wrote:Have never brined a fish before, but just read about it. Looks like it also minimizes the albumen that pours out -- cool tip, thanks!Chris_H_2 wrote:It's not really a recipe. But I brine the fish with a 1/4 cup of salt dissolved in a quart of room temperature water for 15 minutes. Pat dry. Sprinkle a 1/4 teaspoon of salt and pepper on the bottom of a cold skillet. Put the salmon skin side down in the cold pan and turn up heat to medium high. Cook for 6-8 minutes until the skin is browned and crisp and without moving. Flip and cook until the temp registers 140(about 6 minutes), again without moving.tragabigzanda wrote:You gonna keep it to yourself? I'll show you mine if you show me yours.Chris_H_2 wrote:I got a fantastic way to cook salmon. It turns out amazing.
Super easy. Done perfectly. Moist and awesome.
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Re: Kitchen Hacks & Cooking Tips: An Ideas Thread
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Thu January 08, 2026 1:11 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Kitchen Hacks & Cooking Tips: An Ideas Thread
awesome! i'm glad it worked out (and you were able to salvage the fish)!tragabigzanda wrote:Chris_H_2 wrote:Nice. Let us know how it turned out.tragabigzanda wrote:So I had one filet of sockeye left from my winter fish share. I had been holding off, because it was the one vacuum-sealed filet that had been punctured somewhere along the way; the filet had been frost-bitten, so I had been avoiding using it. Going to try your salt brine tonight, then grill it. Hopefully I can pump a little life back into her.tragabigzanda wrote:Ah, that makes sense -- that's what one does with sweetbreads and milk, too.Chris_H_2 wrote:It does indeed. Soaking in milk for 10 minutes also does the trick.tragabigzanda wrote:Have never brined a fish before, but just read about it. Looks like it also minimizes the albumen that pours out -- cool tip, thanks!Chris_H_2 wrote:It's not really a recipe. But I brine the fish with a 1/4 cup of salt dissolved in a quart of room temperature water for 15 minutes. Pat dry. Sprinkle a 1/4 teaspoon of salt and pepper on the bottom of a cold skillet. Put the salmon skin side down in the cold pan and turn up heat to medium high. Cook for 6-8 minutes until the skin is browned and crisp and without moving. Flip and cook until the temp registers 140(about 6 minutes), again without moving.tragabigzanda wrote:You gonna keep it to yourself? I'll show you mine if you show me yours.Chris_H_2 wrote:I got a fantastic way to cook salmon. It turns out amazing.
Super easy. Done perfectly. Moist and awesome.I did your brine, then marinated in soy, sake, Worcestershire, brown sugar, and sri racha. Because I wasn't sure when the damage to the bag occurred, I was intending to cook the fish longer than I would normally -- I was in serious danger of eating a dry, flavorless piece of salmon cardboard. But this worked wonders! The brine removed the albumen and injected a lot of moisture into the fish, and the marinade was the perfect lipstick for the pig. Grilled it to medium (I would normally do my salmon rare), and all things considered, it was a good piece of fish.
Thanks Chris -- this brine trick is gonna be foundational moving forward.
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Re: Kitchen Hacks & Cooking Tips: An Ideas Thread
tragabigzanda wrote:Chris_H_2 wrote:Nice. Let us know how it turned out.tragabigzanda wrote:So I had one filet of sockeye left from my winter fish share. I had been holding off, because it was the one vacuum-sealed filet that had been punctured somewhere along the way; the filet had been frost-bitten, so I had been avoiding using it. Going to try your salt brine tonight, then grill it. Hopefully I can pump a little life back into her.tragabigzanda wrote:Ah, that makes sense -- that's what one does with sweetbreads and milk, too.Chris_H_2 wrote:It does indeed. Soaking in milk for 10 minutes also does the trick.tragabigzanda wrote:Have never brined a fish before, but just read about it. Looks like it also minimizes the albumen that pours out -- cool tip, thanks!Chris_H_2 wrote:It's not really a recipe. But I brine the fish with a 1/4 cup of salt dissolved in a quart of room temperature water for 15 minutes. Pat dry. Sprinkle a 1/4 teaspoon of salt and pepper on the bottom of a cold skillet. Put the salmon skin side down in the cold pan and turn up heat to medium high. Cook for 6-8 minutes until the skin is browned and crisp and without moving. Flip and cook until the temp registers 140(about 6 minutes), again without moving.tragabigzanda wrote:You gonna keep it to yourself? I'll show you mine if you show me yours.Chris_H_2 wrote:I got a fantastic way to cook salmon. It turns out amazing.
Super easy. Done perfectly. Moist and awesome.I did your brine, then marinated in soy, sake, Worcestershire, brown sugar, and sri racha. Because I wasn't sure when the damage to the bag occurred, I was intending to cook the fish longer than I would normally -- I was in serious danger of eating a dry, flavorless piece of salmon cardboard. But this worked wonders! The brine removed the albumen and injected a lot of moisture into the fish, and the marinade was the perfect lipstick for the pig. Grilled it to medium (I would normally do my salmon rare), and all things considered, it was a good piece of fish.
Thanks Chris -- this brine trick is gonna be foundational moving forward.
This is going to be the worst fucking ice cream ever.
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