It's an easy shortcut you'll quickly regret. One quick spin in the microwave and your creamy bisque turns into a broken, grainy mess. The soup didn't "go bad," per se; the issue is the distribution of heat. Microwaves work fast but not evenly, and cream hates that kind of chaos. Hot spots form, proteins seize, and the equilibrium that made your once-smooth soup serene, collapses into chunky cacophony.
There are some incredibly easy to follow cooking tips that can dramatically elevate your culinary game. Toasting spices before adding them to a dish is one example; scrambling eggs over low heat is another. The expert tip we're introducing today is guaranteed to take your grilled chicken to the next level: When pre-cooking your chicken before grilling it, skip boiling and poach it instead.
Whether it is kombucha, kefir, sauerkraut, kimchi, or sourdough, today's foodies are not short of fermented treats to tantalise their tastebuds. But for the adventurous, the menu may be about to get wilder. How about a spoonful of ant yoghurt? Making it does not involve milking any ants. Instead, the unfortunate insects are dropped into a jar of warm milk, which is tucked into an ant mound and left to ferment overnight.
A big part of Chick-fil-A's massive success is just how much flavor it squeezes into a simple fried chicken sandwich. Normally, an essential part of any fried chicken recipe is the oil it's cooked in. Like KFC, the chain uses a secret blend of spices to give its chicken that special Chick-fil-A taste, and it's also known for using higher-quality chicken and a pressure cooker that helps keep the breasts extra juicy.
In 1969, Kraft launched a dessert that looked like a magic trick: one packet of powder, three distinct layers. Called Jell-O 1-2-3, it promised three tantalizing textures - mousse, custard, and jelly - all separating neatly in the fridge without any extra tricky technique or work. The result was a parfait-like tower of pastels which would be spongy on top, creamy in the middle, and wobbly at the base. For a culture already leaning hard into convenience, it was a giant leap for mankind.
There's a little kitchen trick that looks like a magic act: You take something already silky and spoonable, whisk it briefly, and it becomes a cloud with staying power. At first glance, you might expect it to behave exactly like the familiar, feather-light whipped cream that melts away if left too long. The texture is different - a touch denser, a little tangier - and that difference is the clue that something useful (and pleasantly stubborn) is happening under the whisk.
This simple step, recommended by Marissa Stevens of Pinch and Swirl and shared in a recent interview with our sister site The Takeout, does more than just pre-cook the surface. It begins tightening the skin, draws out surface moisture, and primes the pork for the kind of high-heat blast that leads to the crunch you crave. What makes this trick especially useful for home cooks is that it mimics the results of restaurant techniques without needing special tools.
Mayonnaise is an emulsion, known for its difficulty to achieve stability. Costco's attempt to launch a Kirkland Signature mayonnaise was halted due to this challenge.