Oftentimes, cooking-related New Year's resolutions are too ambitious to actually keep. This year, instead of vowing to master a daunting baking project or difficult recipe, start small! Think of each of these small cooking challenges as mini resolutions to master that will collectively make you a much better cook — a skill that will last far beyond 2017. From finally making the perfect scrambled eggs to learning more efficient ways to store vegetables, these are the cooking resolutions you'll be glad you made.
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One of a few crucial secrets to scrambling the perfect eggs is using a nonstick agent that's best for high-heat cooking, like ghee (clarified butter). Butter can easily burn, and olive oil isn't best suited for high heat.
3Buy a block of parmesan cheese instead of the preshredded kind.
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I hate to break it to you, but your parmesan cheese is probably sawdust! Buy a block of parmesan cheese instead, and you'll taste all the difference — it's worth the few extra dollars.
You'll never make mashed potatoes another way once you try Tyler Florence's recipe, which calls for cooking the potatoes in the cream (plus garlic and herbs) and then folding the cream back into the potatoes after draining them. The result is much creamier and more flavorful mashed potatoes than ones cooked in water.
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One of those cooking basics that's tough to nail if you're unsure is adding the correct amount of salt to boiling water for pasta. Make this the year that you finally use the right amount every time — which is probably a lot more than you're using.
You know how it's basically impossible to measure out a perfect portion of spaghetti? The secret to getting it spot on every time is using your spaghetti spoon to measure the dry pasta.
11Try making breakfast for the whole week on a Sunday.
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If you've never tried grab-and-go egg muffins, now's the time to get on board. You'll stop skipping breakfast once and for all if you prep these cheesy bite-size muffins at the beginning of the week.
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Some one-pot pasta recipes turn out to be failures, but once you find one that actually works, you'll want to make it over and over again. Postdinner cleanup becomes an absolute breeze.
Streamline the tedious task of mincing garlic with a knife by using a microplane instead. Not only is this a much faster method, but it also allows the garlic to infuse butter and olive oil even more, creating a more flavorful dish.
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If you're making bacon and eggs anyway, you might as well cook the eggs in the residual bacon fat. The fatty liquid adds a lot of flavor to scrambled eggs, and it's a substitution for butter or oil.