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Foil - use in food preparation

Where it is convenient, where it speeds up or facilitates baking, you can use foil. In other cases, for example, with scaly river fish, it is easier to do without foil, but to bake, so to speak, in the "old-fashioned way".

Foil Is a wonderful invention of our time. Thin, metal-like paper that protects food raw materials, like dishes, but does not have any of the negative aspects of dishes: the foil is non-oxidizable, it does not need to be washed, it is lightweight and compact. It is simply thrown away after use. Foil has such qualities that dishes sometimes do not have: you can bake in it, that is, imitate the technology of a Russian stove, and a fire, and ash, and coals, and all this without leaving a comfortable city apartment, clean, with a minimum expenditure of energy, time and even culinary skills. The foil provides both the consistency and aroma of products prepared in it without any additional human intervention in the cooking process.

But, like any material, and even more so new, foil must be able to use.

You can bake:
- meat, poultry (but not game!),
- pickled cheeses and feta cheese,
- fish,
- vegetables (potatoes, carrots, beets, radishes, turnips - whole, cabbage - in large chunks: half, a quarter of a head of cabbage).
- you can prepare minced meat products, fish, combined with already pre-cooked cereals or with raw vegetables.

Cannot be prepared cereals and cereals, mushrooms, soft, aerial, green vegetables.

It is not recommended to bake fruits either: apples, pears, quince, because their taste does not improve, and vitamin C is completely lost.

Can be baked or warmed all ready meals, but within an extremely short time - no more than 5 - 7 minutes.

In foil, meat and meat products acquire a taste close to stews:
- poultry - for fried dishes, but without fat and without the smell of stews and fried foods. - the fish gets the taste of boiled, but closer to baked.
- vegetables (root vegetables) get the taste of baked in ash.
The consistency of all foods cooked in foil is immeasurably better (softer, more tender) than the consistency of the same foods, but boiled and fried.

Since all dishes baked in foil do not require the participation of fat (oil) and acquire a consistency closer to boiled, but softer, then everything that is cooked in foil can be quite recommended for dietary nutrition, including for children.

Cooking time in foil does not obey the usual rules.
First, it depends on the heat of each specific oven. If the oven is capable of providing a temperature of 380 - 400 degrees Celsius (with good heat chamber insulation), then cooking in foil goes quite quickly: within 15 minutes - half an hour.

If the oven does not reach a similar temperature level (less than 380-400 degrees), then the cooking time:
- a kilogram of meat (one piece) is 1 hour or 1 hour 15 minutes (tough old meat),
- a kilogram of fish - 25-30 minutes,
- large potatoes - 20 minutes,
- feta cheese - 7 minutes,
- chicken-poultry - 25 minutes,
- chicken - 40 minutes,
- ducks - 45 minutes - 1 hour.

This time is usually stable and can fluctuate only within 5 minutes. Such accuracy allows the hostess to freely engage in other activities, noticing only the time when the product in foil is placed in the oven, and monitor it only during the last five minutes of cooking.

Readiness is checked by smell or by the appearance of blackening, smoky corners on the folds of the foil, where part of the meat or fish juice burns when full readiness is reached.

The readiness of the potatoes can be checked in the usual way: by piercing with a sharp knife through the foil (if the potatoes are still raw, then the puncture will not affect the readiness of the product in the future).

One of the first signals of readiness in meat products, fish, feta cheese, and poultry may be the so-called “raising of the foil” (this phenomenon, however, occurs only if it is properly wrapped).

Wrapping food in foil.
First of all, all large pieces (from half a kilogram and more), regardless of the meat is it or fish, should be closed only hermetically, otherwise they will be spoiled: the juice will flow out of them, they will lose their taste, their consistency will deteriorate, they will become tough or burn.

Bird, especially fat (duck) and tender, young (chickens), can only be edged with foil on three sides and open at the top. In the same way, they can be wrapped and roots.

Full wrapping in foil, but without preserving tightness, is unacceptable. This inevitably leads to the outflow of juice from the product, to its drying and spoilage.

Tight wrapping is performed as follows.
For large pieces of meat and whole poultry, double foil (if it is of a thin type) is required, from which one sheet is folded. The food product is placed on one of the halves of this sheet and is freely, without stretching, covered with the other half, so that a free edge remains, which must be folded several times in order to form an airtight seam. Then the same seams are made on the other two sides. The longest side closes first, then both short ones. Thus, a package is obtained. This bag is carefully crimped around the product it contains.

When heated and the beginning of readiness, the bag is straightened, and the foil is inflated (heaving), but the tightness of the bag is not violated and its correct geometric shape (square or rectangle) is preserved. When fully prepared, the corners of this rectangle, and sometimes all the folds, turn black. But not a single drop of juice or fat flows out of the bag.

But it would be naive to think that the foil does everything by itself. The chef should give the dish a taste, aroma, typical for it according to the recipe, according to national traditions. This is why it is of utmost importance to properly prepare the product before placing it in the foil.
The main feature is that each product has its own preparation rules.

Meat and poultry, fish and vegetables behave differently in foil.
Meat... Meat is freed in a piece from everything inedible and from any damage, pollution, but not washed (cleaned, cut off the pollution). Even if the meat had to be washed, then before placing it in foil, it should be dried with a towel or wiped (rolled) with coarser flour (best of all with bran, if any). In addition, bone or bones must be cut out of the meat if they protrude from the meat, are not hidden by it or do not lie with it in the same plane. This is an exceptional feature of cooking in foil. The fact is that when baked, the bone will remain unchanged, and the meat will first increase slightly in volume, and then decrease, fall off. A change in the volume of meat will inevitably cause movement not only of soft meat, but also of the bone on which it is strengthened. And if the bone has even the slightest sharp protrusion, it will break through the foil even if the piece is displaced by 1 millimeter. An insignificant hole, imperceptible at first, will quickly break through under the pressure of steam from the inside, and this will lead to a breach of the tightness and damage the entire dish.

Bird... It is on this basis that the bird is firmly tied, stitched, before being placed in foil, to make it motionless.
And individual pieces of poultry, halves, etc., are beaten with a wooden hammer on bones, joints in order to knock down their sharp protrusions and break a strong connection with meat or weaken this connection.

Fish... They release only from the fins, tail, all protrusions from the carcass and everything that can burn earlier than the carcass itself is baked.

Vegetables... They are thoroughly washed and cleaned of any inclusions and damage. "They can be baked whole, keeping their natural shape, and in this case they are baked. But they can also be cut into thin pieces, slices, bars, as for cooking in dishes, and placed (not wrapped ) in a pre-prepared foil bag, in which case the vegetables are ready-made faster, but turn into boiled rather than baked ones.

Since food baked in foil must be completely ready to serve, it must receive all the necessary recipes before being placed in foil condiments, spices, salt, etc.... But there is also something non-unusual here.

a) Meat is not salted if it is baked in a piece. Minced meat products are salted, flavored with everything necessary according to the recipe (onion, garlic) and must be rolled in flour, which absorbs some of the salt.

b) The bird is flavored with dry spices, but not raw, vegetable, which can impair its taste in foil. She is not salted, or salted extremely moderately, imperceptibly if young.

c) The fish is salted several times more than usual, mainly with coarse salt (a handful, a tablespoon - one and a half per kilogram of fish). Simultaneously with the fish, an increased dose of bay leaves and onions is placed in the foil. At the same time, the packaging is not made of double foil, but single, but double - overlapping the seams of the previous shell, to ensure that the liquid formed during baking of the fish does not run out.

d) Vegetables are not salted or flavored with anything. But after cooking, they need seasoning with salt, oil, spices or sour cream, mustard, ketchup - depending on the nature of the dish.

As you can see, baking, this ancient method of cooking, is very simple and convenient. And the sealing used at the same time allows you to preserve all the best that is in the baked product.
strong
I read recipes and often come across: "cover the baking sheet with baking paper." Explain why this is necessary Once I tried to bake with paper ... I barely tore the food from that paper Yesterday's cake, the first cake, baked with paper, and the next two - without. Without paper it's better somehow
Lika
Quote: Silena

I read recipes and often come across: "cover the baking sheet with baking paper." Explain why this is necessary Once I tried to bake with paper ... I barely tore the food from that paper Yesterday's cake, the first cake, baked with paper, and the next two - without. Somehow better without paper
Apparently the paper came across unsuccessful. Usually on special baking paper, you can bake several times and not grease it with anything, while the baking sheet remains clean.
If the paper sticks, you can allow the baked goods to cool slightly and then the paper will come off without problems. If it is "fried" anyway, turn the pastry over with the paper and sprinkle a little water on the paper from a spray bottle, it will come off perfectly.
lina
Quote: Silena

I read recipes and often come across: "cover the baking sheet with baking paper." Explain what it is for Once I tried to bake with paper ... I barely tore the food from that paper Yesterday's cake, the first cake, baked with paper, and the next two - without. Without paper it's better somehow
exactly good paper "freken bok" and "paklan". nothing sticks to it. even a ciabatta. good paper is definitely better to bake! and the baking sheet does not need to be washed)))
agata116
I also constantly use paper and silicone mats, it is very convenient, to be honest, I can’t even imagine how you can bake without them.
lina
another proven good baking paper - "just clean", white.
celfh
And I have a non-stick mat JOSKO, Germany. I'm not overjoyed.
Ruru
And my paper never lags behind the test. True, I always use tracing paper, maybe from this
Pogremushka
still excellent paper "Extra", only necessarily with a blue label (with red - it burns) with a double-sided silicone coating.
Foil and baking paper
celfh
Girls, boys! Tell me. Yesterday I baked muffins in disposable foil tins. To get it, ready-made muffins had to be literally cut out of molds.
Baking, as in silicone, that is, it did not lubricate with anything. Probably you had to go through the molds with a brush with vegetable oil?
Roxolana
And lately I have been disappointed in parchment paper.
I bought "freken bok" baked goods not that stick to it, but simply eaten. I made an egg roll, greased the paper, threw it away along with this paper because they became one whole ...
Lenusya
It's strange, for the last couple of years I have been using only Freken Bock parchment paper, I have never had any complaints, the pastries are falling off of it.
Likely to use a non-stick material or a silicone mat for dishes like egg roll?
lina
I often have freken side paper (white), all the pastries fly off. And sometimes I use one piece of paper several times.
Crochet
Personally, I have to "Freken Bock" no complaints / complaints, everything is fine!

Quote: Lina

sometimes I use one piece of paper several times.
Linochka
And I always do this, I can bake on one sheet 4-5-6 times ...
Roxolana
I don't even know what to say .... I have a "frecken bok" brownish, waxed, in appearance very good. good.
Absolutely everything sticks, even the pies, even the Easter cake .... tears off right with the baked goods. This was not the case before.
Gin
Once I came across paper (this was my first experience with paper), to which nothing stuck. Unfortunately, I did not remember the name. It didn’t even occur to me - I thought nothing sticks to any baking paper. The roll ran out, I bought more - horror. It grows into food. Then I bought Frekn Bock (it was white and brown) - the same thing. I no longer use baking paper (the leftovers are gone for wrapping sandwiches). I can't understand - why did I use it at all? Protvinechki or Teflon, or silicone - there is no point in paper. Here. I don't suffer anymore
Lozja
"Frekken Bock" never saw brown, and white has never failed. Who bothers - maybe what a fake? I once thought that there was no difference - what kind of paper to take, and after the first successful experience of use (I just got "Frekken Bock"), I bought some other, brown, company I don't remember. It was something! We just ate pizza with paper
After that I don’t change my Frekken, so that it doesn’t work out more for myself. I always buy it, little white Frecken, and I am glad - I am not overjoyed, as a talker - everything itself flies off this piece of paper.
Rina
I have been using white baking paper for many years. Usually everything: ok: I recently bought a brown one, I don't remember which company, I used it twice, and then sent it to the trash - if it could be torn off from baking, then only in small pieces.
Crochet
Girls and boys, and someone uses baking paper CLIN CLIN (Poland)? Like ?
Gin
but something reminds me that newspaper ink is somewhat poisonous ... there is lead or something else ... not? although the idea is nothing like that
sweetka
the idea, however, is funny. but it's better not to use our newspapers. they are often printed on the cheapest paper with the cheapest paints that fade like contagions. three newspapers, if you hold them in your hands, paint those same hands better than any spray paint.
Gypsy
She writes there at first a little smell of burnt paint, it is safe and does not burn


and smelly newspapers can be attached like garbage bags, economically and environmentally friendly, how? let's go look here:
Foil and baking paper
sweetka
my mother praised the communist newspaper in the last elections. says, the size of a trash can - a tunic in a tunic. and other parties are curmudgeons! we had to shove two newspapers into a bucket.
Luysia
No, girls, we are lazy with buckets to go to the trash can!

So he took the little bag and threw it away on the way.
Aunt Besya
And me is our Star I supplied such luxurious paper from Finland, I am not overjoyed !! The sheet can be used a couple of times, already cut to the size of the baking sheet !! Well super-duper just!
matroskin_kot
Quote: Gin

but something reminds me that newspaper ink is somewhat poisonous ... there is lead or something else ... not? although the idea is nothing like that
There has been no lead in the newspapers for a long time, and other rubbish in bulk ...
And I have reusable teflon paper, if you don't fold it, fold it and cut pies on it, it lasts a long, long time ... I took it from the White Cat. And I come across a bad parchment, everything sticks to it ... Or I don't know how to handle it, although before, everything was baked on drawing paper and parchment and tracing paper and nothing was sticky ...
metel_007
And I have a brown one, I don't know which company, but the muck is rare - everything sticks
nut
Is this your case? I usually buy a Paclan and was always white, but this time brown
Foil and baking paper
metel_007
No, not like that. I don't remember which one any more, I printed it out and threw away the wrapper. But now I will take the white one.
rinishek
Quote: gypsy

In Japan, there are also such * forms * for baking biscuits

gypsy, I'm in shock! and this is a country that is a leader in nanotechnology!
laughed for ten minutes ...
and they also make wicker boxes and baskets from newspapers
Foil and baking paper
went to the topic about the trash can read
Gypsy
Quote: rinishek

gypsy, I'm in shock! and this is a country that is a leader in nanotechnology!
laughed for ten minutes ...
And nothing funny, it's just a rational approach to everything in everyday life. Do not forget that the country is small, there are many people, housing is in short supply, prices are higher than anywhere else. Their kitchens are small, they keep all sorts of baking dishes, which they do not use often, nowhere, and paper is always at hand. Origami is in their blood

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