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Secret
To Cooking Vegetables
by Sharon Stajda
Vegetables are essential to the human diet. We get a great deal
of our daily vitamin content from vegetables. We need to make sure
that how we cook them does not drain vitamin contents and benefits
of consumption.
Cooking vegetables can be tricky. Over cooking can make vegetables
bland and soggy. My belief is that vegetables should not be boiled.
Boling not only rob us of vitamin content, it is the main culprit
in turning vegetables to a lifeless, tasteless form.
If we cannot boil, how do we proceed?
First option, steaming vegetables is always a good choice. This
will leave vegetables full of life. They will be crisp and colorful.
It will also not deplete the vegetables of their vitamin content.
By rule of thumb, vegetables will only need a few minutes in the
steam.
For those who do not have official vegetable steamers, an easy
steamer can be fashioned out a of pot, a metal colander, and a pot
lid. Place a small amount of water in the bottom of a given pot.
Fit the metal colander into the pot. Start to boil the water.
You will begin the see the steam rise. Place your vegetables into
the metal colander and place the pot lid over the metal colander
and pot. This collection of kitchen items will allow you to steam
vegetables as good as any fancy store bought steamer.
Another good option is to cook your vegetables in a wok. The secret
to the wok is that it cooks quickly at a very high temperature.
Vegetables retain their flavors, textures, and colors with small
amount of nutrient loss.
My favorite wok recipe for vegetables is to cook broccoli, carrots,
bok choy, and snow peas in a very light garlic sauce. The vegetables
remain crisp and the garlic adds just the right amount of flavoring.
This combination can be served with any cut of meat.
I hope you will see that secret to cooking vegetables is not to
over cook. Vegetables need to remain crisp, full of color. As you
learn different tricks to bringing your vegetables to life, these
will become the most requested dishes on your dinner table.
About the Author
Sharon Stajda loves cooking and entertaining. For more information,
visit Cooking
Vegetables
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