For Better Browned Meat and Veggies, Just Add Water | Techniquely With Lan Lam
Cook’s Illustrated's Lan Lam delves into the cooking techniques and science behind some of our most innovative recipes. In this episode, show shows you a counterintuitive, yet highly effective method of browning food in water.
Get our Caramelized Onions recipe: bit.ly/3YilXwt
Get our Sautéed Mushrooms with Shallot and Thyme: bit.ly/3uLqHx8
Get our Chicken Gravy recipe: bit.ly/3Wd9etm
Buy our winning stainless skillet: bit.ly/44wG3XA
Buy our winning non-stick skillet: bit.ly/4dvsJ9M
Buy our winning large saucepan: bit.ly/4dKbstV
Buy our winning small cutting board: bit.ly/3wC8Mxo
Buy our winning liquid measuring cup: bit.ly/4dwl62P
Click here for more Techniquely content: cooks.io/3faeGNe
Follow Lan on Instagram: / lan_cooks
ABOUT US: Located in Boston’s Seaport District in the historic Innovation and Design Building, America's Test Kitchen features 15,000 square feet of kitchen space including multiple photography and video studios. It is the home of Cook’s Illustrated magazine and Cook’s Country magazine and is the workday destination for more than 60 test cooks, editors, and cookware specialists. Our mission is to test recipes over and over again until we understand how and why they work and until we arrive at the best version.
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Пікірлер: 2 100
"Water is the enemy of browning" has been drilled into my head so much that this feels like an earth shattering revelation
@chickadeetle
Жыл бұрын
It is IF you put in too much so it doesn't evaporate...it must evaporate in order for the browning to happen
@gispaAPRN
Жыл бұрын
Same, except--I always wonder why my chicken is so much crispier/browner when I do add a little water. 😅
@IceThatJaw
Жыл бұрын
Another missing point is the surface area of the pan. You can brown onions in 10min of they are spread jn a thin layer.
@donaldgoodnight7853
Жыл бұрын
Do not add waterr. That is catastrophic, mixed with grease with grease. Uaually a fire.
@donaldgoodnight7853
Жыл бұрын
Not really. I have cooked for decades, longer than her. All I use, is salted buttet. Perfect results. Every time. I don't add water, for example, to brown steaks. If that's the way she likes it? Good for her. I am not convinced. When I roast vegetables for salsa, I do not use water. Another good example. All these already have moisture. Would you add water to fried potatoes? No way. My wife has a problem turning them to soon. It really takes good timing skill. Would you add water, to make french fries? Not at all. Baked or fried. I surely wouldn't add water to bacon, cooking in an iron skillet. As a once professional cook, I don't advise her adding water. Just takes longer, to cook off. Oh, browning any meat? Never add water.
I could watch an entire channel with just Lan. She's so informational and easy to listen to
@styleisaweapon
Жыл бұрын
I can detect astroturfing a mile away
@LostandFoundTravel
Жыл бұрын
100%. "On-camera" isn't a skill that chefs usually cultivate.
@alessandrameows
Жыл бұрын
Omg yes!
@joshuacarrico9180
Жыл бұрын
Absolutely agree and this is the first video of hers I've seen.
@21centdregs
Жыл бұрын
@@styleisaweapon where are you seeing evidence of astroturfing on a cooking channel? a cooking channel with a scientific approach nonetheless
For anyone wondering, add a splash of water to your pan when you start cooking your bacon, it’ll help the fat render more evenly which means flatter and therefore more evenly-crisped bacon! Cheers 🥓
@MS-oy4vo
Жыл бұрын
can you do this with bacon in the oven?
@DiabetoDan
Жыл бұрын
@@MS-oy4vo I'd imagine so, but I'd use less since the radiative/convective heat of the oven won't evaporate the water as quickly as the direct conduction of a skillet. It also probably isn't as necessary for the oven, since roasting bacon is all about more even and gentle cooking. If you start it in a cold oven, the fat will have plenty of time to render out and get you super-crispy bacon. The water trick probably wouldn't hurt though!
@maryhodge2625
Жыл бұрын
Yes, I was definitely wondering about bacon. So thank you for your informative comment,
@Cypeq
Жыл бұрын
@@MS-oy4vo I never done this but for oven, you could try spray bottle to cover bacon in droplets. Seems like only sensible way to try this.
@uioxk
Жыл бұрын
How do you avoid the water popping in the pan? Every time I’ve had water in the pan with oil or fat, it begins to shoot out and spray/pop all over the place!
My dear mum would use water with onions to caramelise onions as a base for her curries. 20 years later, you’ve explained why. Thank you so much for this great video! It will improve my cooking no end!
@ericcartmann
Жыл бұрын
SIR! BOBS N VAGINE DESI
@ididntknowtheyhadwifiinhell
9 ай бұрын
@@ericcartmann your mom regrets having you
@hand__banana
7 ай бұрын
@@ericcartmann unbelievable levels of cringe
@AnjelLee-nt1oz
5 ай бұрын
Every Indian I know browns food with water. I think everyone in the Caribbean browns food with water.
@AnjelLee-nt1oz
5 ай бұрын
That onion thing she did is something every old lady does.
This is the reason I love ATK. The recipes are great, but it's information like this that changes the way I approach cooking. I have been watching it for years, so it's also amazing watching Lan grow. She is now so comfortable in front of the camera.
@jesuispain
Жыл бұрын
Big agree, Lan is the best.
@IMCanadian977
Жыл бұрын
Everything that you said is so true for me tooooo...
@HBSuccess
Жыл бұрын
100%
@gastropod557
Жыл бұрын
@@masterchief7301 Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms.
@iconoclast137
Жыл бұрын
@@gastropod557 dammit! you beat me to it lol
What an awesome alternative to most cooking shows. Lan Lam offers a calm, informative, presentation that doesn’t insult my intelligence. For the first time since PBS on black-and-white TV, I have a favorite cooking program, on KZread. Thank you Lan Lam!
An excellent explainer! Chinese potstickers and Japanese gyoza kinda work on this principle too, though their aims are a little different: if they just pan-fried on a dry wok, the skins would be charcoal by the time the filling's done. But when you add water, the steam will cook the fillings evenly, and the dry heat after the steam is gone will brown the bottoms to perfection.
@songjunejohnlee2113
Жыл бұрын
thank you !
@slc1161
9 ай бұрын
I’ve done this with pierogies also. I like the brown crunchy bits along with the soft steamed filling. Not traditional but tastes really good.
@FreakAzoiyd
9 ай бұрын
That is also how I reheat anything that is supposed to be without notable water at the end. Heat up pan with a small amount of oil, throw everything in, when the pan is hot put in an adequate amount of water (only about maybe 10 ml per serving) on the sides of the pan, turn down heat to half, put on the lid. The water is there only for heat transfer, it carries the heat to the parts not touching the pan. Since the pan is hot it eveporates when you put it in and your food can't absorb it, so nothing gets soaked.
@toodie535
6 ай бұрын
I carry this over by including some soy, sesame oil and vinegar to the water lid and set over low heat. By the time the water is gone and the 'stickers are cooked, they've let go of a bit of wheat starch which thickens the remaining liquid into a nice light glaze. No making of dipping sauce needed!
@Intranetusa
6 ай бұрын
Gyoza is the Japanese pronunciation of the Chinese word for jaozi. Both just refer to Chinese dumplings. For some reason, gyoza and potstickers are the english language words for them as if they are different even though theyre the same thing.
Lan Lam is clearly a food scientist. Very educational and shatters common cooking techniques. Thank you!
Once I learned the technique of water browning for my mushrooms, it changed my life. I didn't know it would work for other foods. I can't wait to try it.
@TheShows247
Жыл бұрын
I learned it with onions. Had no idea it would be the same for meat.
@skyjam99
Жыл бұрын
Same! I've been using the mushroom technique for a bit and love it, but I had no idea it would work for meat... I wonder if water could push sugar out of fruit (like pineapple) to brown that in the pan
@clarafierro6921
Жыл бұрын
How you brown the mushrooms?
@karenjohannessen8987
Жыл бұрын
@@clarafierro6921 Watch the video again!
Here in Australia it's quite common to add beer to onions when on the BBQ. It not just adds the water to transfer heat but also adds more sugars to be caramelized.
@sjt275
11 ай бұрын
YOU WASTE good beer ? how bloody dare you ? to the VB dungeon you go !!😊
@joannaedwards6325
11 ай бұрын
Bareego Great idea. Good on ya mate!
@WillKew
9 ай бұрын
And more amino acids - lots of proteins in beer.
@shannonbutler-williams7261
8 ай бұрын
Common German to American style of beer brats. I actually made them with a mess of onions tonight, so now I know the science.
@Redcouriercat
6 ай бұрын
That's because Aussies are alcoholics😂
She’s right. I’ve been using this technique on almost everything I need to brown. You use much less oil as the steam renders the oil. Once the water has evaporated, you’re able to use the meat fats for the browning. It’s much faster, less messy and way easier to control! Great tip!
@toodie535
6 ай бұрын
no cleaning the stubborn splatter screen either. Not to mention the stove top.
I've started doing this for eggplant too. Makes for good caramelisation without having to drench them in cooking fat.
@mirandazannos336
5 ай бұрын
Oh thank you, I'm going to try that 🤗 (I love eggplant, and it always seems to need too much fat or oil !)
@janegao5747
3 ай бұрын
I tried steaming/boiling eggplant then saute /stir fry, not very good. The eggplant is filled with water and doesn't taste as flavorful . I haven't found a good recipe for eggplant without frying (steamed eggplant for a side dish is delicious but that's a totally different dish from what are talking about here). But there is a way to make it less greasy. 1. after washing and cutting up the eggplant, sprinkle some salt on the pieces evenly. 2. After about 15 minutes, add a couple of table spoons of flour. toss it to make sure every piece of eggplant is covered by flour. Now fry the eggplant. The flour would prevent the eggplant from soak up the oil while making the skin a little crispy. Now saute with other ingredients.
@RabidHobbit
3 күн бұрын
@@janegao5747 I would have thought that you can keep cooking to get all the water out, but then the eggplant would turn into leather. But I'm going to give it a try anyway to see how it goes for me. Experimenting in the kitchen is just fun, and I love eggplant.
The way Lan Lam talks is so consistently comforting. ATK and Cook's Illustrated have a great cast, so I'm not putting anyone else down.
@Pat315
Жыл бұрын
You're secretly putting them all down.
@tom_something
Жыл бұрын
@@Pat315 Not really. There are plenty of other positive qualities a person can posses besides being comforting.
@ARIZJOE
Жыл бұрын
I agree with that. She's an insightful, pleasant, mature adult. A rare personality these days.
This is great stuff, and accessible for anyone who cooks. It just goes to reinforce the point that simple techniques and ingredients, applied at the right time, can make all the difference.
@TheBogstaverne
Жыл бұрын
Cooking don't have to be science, but it can every well be explained by it ^^
@dennisbishop3842
Жыл бұрын
I agree with your assessment 👍
@karenryder6317
Жыл бұрын
The science of cooking--Alton Brown would love this. How does the water work for cooking bacon?
Lan is so good at explaining without overcomplicating things.
@PatHaskell
Жыл бұрын
..and she looks good when she’s explaining things.
omg, these are exactly the cooking lessons I need! I am not an intuitive cook -- I can't cook by feel -- I need to understand WHY different techniques produce different results. Only then can I start to understand cooking. I will be binging on ALL these videos! Thank you!
12:21 “When we started talking about this concept, I didn’t quite realize I’d get a meal out of it. This is great.” The video comes together at the end in a totally unexpected way, with three different “plot lines”-onions, mushrooms, and gravy-all wrapped up satisfyingly, as in a good novel.
@VeganSemihCyprus33
Жыл бұрын
👉👉 Dominion (2018)
@jeffw8218
Жыл бұрын
First time I’ve seen another Jeff W on KZread 👍😄
@jeff__w
Жыл бұрын
@@jeffw8218 Haha, me, too! Who's the impostor? 🤔😉
@StrangerToEarth
Жыл бұрын
Jesus, chill out, it's a cooking video
@Vendzor
Жыл бұрын
@@StrangerToEarth Nah man, I like this guy and his impostor. Every Jeff W I meet makes my life that much better. And you can never take cooking too seriously.
I learned more from this fantastic video than I have from most other cooking videos. Her explanations are clear and concise and easily remembered because of her delivery. Awesome!
My grandpa used to add water to the frying pan when making Italian sausage! I never asked him why but just started doing this on my own years ago. Now I see all the reasoning behind it and am impressed with not only grandpa from the past but with this whole compilation! Thank you
@donaldwarriner1640
Жыл бұрын
Adding water to pork is one way of ensuring the heat penetrates the dense ground meat. It can also aid in even cooking usually after the browning. But now knowing this I would try it before the browning. Love it!
@ARMMinistries
Жыл бұрын
Believe it or not, those are the instructions on sausage packaging.
@Soskouy
Жыл бұрын
That is a different reason, not for browning but for cooking the sausage. It’ll brown quickly regardless on outside
@Kayenne54
Жыл бұрын
An old timer did sausages over the campfire like this; put water in the pan, added some mixed herbs, and threw in the sausages. Very tasty and the sausages were always browned by the end of it all...(also once sausages were done and removed, the remainder could be made into a gravy)...
I don't know how long Lan Lam has been part of the ATK team but she is delightful to learn from, just like everyone else at ATK. She fits right in like she's been there forever. I like her.
It is worth noting that adding salt initially helps extracting the liquid from onions faster (and possiblly breaking down cell structure for better interior browning), which is why adding water works well here. That's a basic thing to keep in mind when you are stir frying in a home cook setting using non-stick pans where adding salt too early can lead to watery results, which is not desirable in such case.
@ghrayo
Жыл бұрын
So I add salt and water? Or you replace salt with water?
@devondorr8212
Жыл бұрын
@@ghrayo I'm just explaining what she did in the video. Of course you still need water otherwise your onion would burn.
@mayhewfisher62
Жыл бұрын
Really useful to know!
I've been using water, a LITTLE bit of oil and butter (flavor), and a lid for cooking veggies for years, but I didn't know why. Thank you, Lan! Brilliant!
@donnalawrence8593
Жыл бұрын
You know why. Because it works. Lol. Just had to. I knew what you meant. Makes sense.
@tom2207
Жыл бұрын
@@donnalawrence8593 Indeed it does, Donna! Isn't Lan just GREAT?
Your deep understanding and practice of science and chemistry has "combed out" this old wives tale I had followed without questioning. Thank you. I take my hat off to you ...
I cant thank you enough for this video. I have had to cut down the added fats in my diet for health reasons and ive been struggling to know how to saute and give flavour to my dishes like I have in the past. What a blessing these techniques are thank you so much!!
@Redcouriercat
6 ай бұрын
You've been lied to if you have been told fat is bad for you.
It's so great that there are long form explainers of techniques now. I find that learning how cooking works is better for me than learning recipes religiously. I think i can credit good eats and alton brown for starting this genre. And im glad other people i know that cook are also fans.
@michaelkettering7554
Жыл бұрын
Great call. Alton Brown was probably the first explainer of the science of food and how that related to the best techniques to cook a specific ingredient or dish...
@TheSilverRaven13
Жыл бұрын
@Michael Kettering That's how I really learned to cook too. Some of my techniques that I learned from Good Eats I still use to this day.
@JennySimon206
Жыл бұрын
Fun fact, Alton Brown didn't even know how to cook when he started Good Eats. Movie magic folks. Everything you know is a lie.
This is such a fascinating series. A great addition. I just love Lan!!
@MultiGemgirl
Жыл бұрын
me to
@serenae9316
Жыл бұрын
Me too
@jamesglossner8257
Жыл бұрын
Me too
@VeganSemihCyprus33
Жыл бұрын
👉👉 Dominion (2018)
@joecamel6835
Жыл бұрын
A hour n 15 minutes to carmalize onions ?
That technique is often used to make fresh or frozen pan fried dumplings. The water provides greater surface contact with the pan and helps to speed up the cooking, plus the trapped steam in the covered pan helps to cook the non contact part of the dumplings. Also method for breakfast sausage. Great idea to apply to cooking mushrooms!
I live in France and have been cooking most of the day for years for my own pleasure and I am very surprised to discover Lan Lam just today. She is fantastic! Although I did not learn anything new, it took me YEARS to understand and develop myself what she explains here in a few minutes. This is GOLD!
Lan does a great job on all her videos and I really enjoy watching and listening to her as she cooks. Very professional, yet still maintains some humor to keep you interested! I need to try this technique!
Lan is excellent at explaining the processes, as well as demonstrating the techniques.
This KZread video is pure genius and science. Thank you!
Thank you, for this episode that finally recognizes the power of steam in convection (cooking). I learned caramelizing onions from Stephane from French cooking academy who puts shallow water in the pan and a piece parchment on top to mimic the steaming process. This method clicked with me hard by connecting basic thermal dynamics with the prevalence of its application in Asian cooking was I able to begin appreciating and applying it into my day to day cooking. It’s not just a method/mechanism that helps make caramelized onions or crisp bacon but also for all other veggies, pot stickers, shallow steamed eggs (instead of boiling & wasting a whole pot of water) and even the browning of baguette, pide and other oven/pastry applications! It was once mentioned by Kenji that a lot of people don’t really understand how inefficient air (dry heat) is at thermal transfer such as in oven or grill and it was actually the vaporized water/steam that does the most cooking.
In school our chef always told us to start with water for browning. Love that this is being talked about more. It's makes so much more sense. Especially with mushrooms. The water helps get their water going. I always notice a huge difference when I eat mushrooms that were started with oil vs water
@king_ltc_
Жыл бұрын
That makes no sense at all. Adding more water to get rid of the water? Yeah, will stick to drying those suckers up in the pan any day of the week.
@8cupsCoffee
Жыл бұрын
So weird I was always told to keep water away from mushrooms! I didn't go to school. Looks like everything needs to be reevaluated.
@king_ltc_
Жыл бұрын
@@8cupsCoffee Don’t listen to bogus like this. Just dry them off really well and put them in a scorching hot pan. It will release water and will evaporate. Keep on cooking them until they get golden brown. Don’t know what culinary school he went too.
@BooBaddyBig
Жыл бұрын
@@king_ltc_ It's because the mushrooms (and onions) initially don't touch the bottom of the pan much at all, they don't lie flat, so there's so much air blocking the heat flow into them from the pan, and air is a very good insulator. Adding water enables you to transfer the heat into the mushrooms or onions which enables them to rapidly reach boiling so they start to sweat down and produce their own water until they fully soften.
@sessionfiddler
Жыл бұрын
I started splashing my onions with water when I noticed fonde getting too dark with onions looking a little too firm and bright. The water deglazed and caused all the onions to spread out evenly on the bottom of the pan along with nicely distributing the brown back on to the onions. I repeated this over and over and found that I could have onion jam in under an hour.
My Mother cooked this way too. I’m 72, and my Mother has passed at 80 in 2003. She was a fabulous cook and baker. We are Italian and she cooked Italian sausage this way, pork chops, and more. It kept the food tender and flavorful. Miss you Ma, thanks for teaching me to cook. We are a cooking family for sure. Grateful and blessed ♥️♥️🙏🙏🇺🇸🇺🇸
I really love the way she describes everything. It's like I'm getting knowledge and a hug 😊
Dear Lan, you are a great representative for ATK! Love your chemistry background and how it makes you define cooking terms with so much logic!
@toodie535
6 ай бұрын
Natural born teacher!
i LOVE this series, my new favourite food series on youtube. lan is a star and im obsessed with how clearly and engagingly she explains things! i cooked the best steak of my life using the technique from her earlier vid :) thank you for these!
I must admit that I don't use this method enough. But what I do use it for is potstickers. Some people like their potstickers just steamed. I like mine Brown and steamed, so what I do is I put them in the skillet and start them Browning and then pour in a little bit of water and put a lid on the skillet which Browns them further and steams them inside. Delish!
@MissAdventurzzz
Жыл бұрын
that's how I do it, too... and now you've made me hungry for potstickers!
@homehelpheart7440
Жыл бұрын
@@MissAdventurzzz that's okay, I made myself hungry for them too! Haha
Omg the dish at the end looked deeelish. I like how she says "water". 😊 She is awesome, a true professional.
Love it! The explanation makes me realize where I made mistakes while cooking and why. It is presented clearly, and in a charming manner.
ATK at its absolute best. Counter-intuitive yet extremely useful ideas explained in an accessible way. Lan has been killing it lately!
Also if you're cooking a roast, cooking it covered is a good way to get it rendered/cooked, and uncover to brown toward the end. Once it is done you can remove the roast to rest, but leave the sauce/drippings in the pan uncovered for some good concentrated browniness of the veggies and such in it. Once you pull it out you can add a few more things and it's like a gravy/pan sauce thing that is heavenly. Bonus: when done, cut the roast up small and put it in with the gravy in a container. Reheat the next day and serve over rice or roast potatoes!
@dianeveilleux6452
Жыл бұрын
Or cut meat up, warm in barbeque sauce and make barbequed beef sandwiches
@redfullmoon
Жыл бұрын
What kind of roast are we talking about here, like an English Sunday roast?
@Kayenne54
Жыл бұрын
I've been adding water into the pan with my roasts (in the oven) for decades. The meat is way more tender. Someone selling sliced roast meats in a take away shop gave me that hint, when I asked how come their roasts were so tender. At home, once the roast is removed to relax, I used whatever is in the pan to make the gravy.
Really glad I found this cooking science channel. Lan Lam has a good presentation style, authoritive, informative and confident.
I love Lan Lam! The way she explains recipes & techniques…..I don’t know what it is, but I think if she had been my teacher in high school, I would have actually understood Algebra!!!! 😂❤❤
Yes, yes, yes! Although being a simple housewife, I was always annoyed by these receipts, who declared that fried potatoes, sautéed or caramelized onions or browning meat can be done in five to ten minutes. My mother taught me cooking and she always said, that she cooks with love. And love here means time and attention. And even having a lot of routine, it still happens, that meals cooked in a hurry will taste inferior.
@fishbong
Жыл бұрын
Martha Steward recipe: Fry onions 5 minutes until caramelized Me: Caramelized means black, right?
@donaldwarriner1640
Жыл бұрын
As a retired professional cook I learned another very useful method for carmelized onions: lightly coating them with oil toss them in a microwavable bowl and cook for 10 M then toss and repeat for a total of 3 times. As I have always struggled for space on a stove top I can them add these straight to the soup pot and finish off French Onion Soup in a fraction of the time with excellent results. Maybe you can use this.
@DelightningVFX
Жыл бұрын
@@donaldwarriner1640 Interesting...
@ejimbru
Жыл бұрын
There is nothing 'simple' about being a housewife! That is a full time job.
@jetaddict420
Жыл бұрын
@@ejimbru being a housewife is simple youre just exaggerating
I love this slightly advanced basic technice, you can transfer to so much other stuff and teaches real cooking, not just a specific recipe
I want Lan to present every single recipe to me from now on! She is such a pleasure to listen to!
@joannaedwards6325
11 ай бұрын
My favorite teacher (after Jacques Pepin of course) !
Lan is really hitting these videos out of the park! Keep ‘em coming ATK!
I've been doing this intuitively for a long time, no one ever taught it to me, but glad to see my techniques validated here lol
@patriciacrosby5053
Жыл бұрын
My Mother did too, she passed in 2003, was a great cook and baker too, all self taught. She was taught by her Mother too . This technique isn’t new, but nice to be taught, with the technique being scientifically explained. My Grandmother and Mother, just cooked that way. My family had a restaurant too, still running today. ♥️♥️🙏🙏🇺🇸🇺🇸
@neilpickup237
Жыл бұрын
Same here. Even when I don't want to particularly brown, but just add a bit of colour, I find that little water gets them softened, still with a bit of bite ( I have difficulty digesting raw) and once the water evaporates, the oil in there will allow the level of brown the recipe demands.
@wullaballoo2642
Жыл бұрын
Same with frying onions for curry or any sauce, if they start to stick I put a bit of water in and scrub the stuck bit off with the spoon, the onions get nice and soft and golden without too much oil plus any stuck onion on the pan gets spices stuck to it and it burns
Lan ! I love this. I have done this but just because its a short cut. I thought I was cheating! It works with anything you need to collapse. I do it with eggplant. It keeps it from sucking up so much oil. They brown great. Thank you!!
@12Trappor
Жыл бұрын
And I have always been pressing down on the eggplants with a spatula to release juices, because I noticed that it helps the browning. I never understood why until now.
@vtheb1299
Жыл бұрын
I love the idea to do it with eggplant! I'm gonna try it. I recommend potatoes
At last.......validation! Growing up, our mother was a chef so we were all instilled with a love for cooking. I, being a retired Dr have always thought of the kitchen a little differently than most people. To me, the kitchen is my laboratory and the ingredients therein are my reagents. I have always viewed cooking as a science, but have not found many people who approached it in the same way. That is, until today. Creating great food is not a matter of luck, it is a discipline that requires a deep understanding of science. Trained chefs know this. This is what they teach in places like the CIA. This knowledge is what separates them from everyday "good cooks." I have never seen anyone on the internet open a window to this knowledge like Lan Lam. Maybe Alton Brown? Knowledge is not knowing how to do something, it is knowing why you do it! This is the most refreshing series of videos I have ever seen. Thank You Lan.
Wow! I’d done this for onions & mushrooms when I wanted to use less oil because I needed to lose weight but wanted to continue to eat food that had flavor. Worked like a charm. Lost 70 lbs. Also works for a quick sauté of veggies. Water steams veggies faster and oil adds flavor. Glad to see this. It’s a good one.
Love it, I have been adding water for years to brown and to use less fat. I didn't know why it worked like Lan lam explains so well. Thank you.
Yes I LOVE Lan! Her voice is amazing! Reassuringly friendly with that distinctly confident cadence! Hypnotic! That’s it! 😊
This woman's a kitchen genius!
In the Western Cape in South Africa one of the defining cooking styles of the region is called Cape Malay (very interesting historical reading behind that for those who are interested). They use a lot of caramelized onions in their food and they taught me to use water to get it soft before finishing. Initially I was surprised but after following their advice I realized they were right. Glad to see you making a video about something so simple yet quite important and totally overlooked.
I like this technique. Quite interesting. I must say, I do 5 pounds of onions in a heavily buttered Lodge Dutch oven, lid on and I always said to myself they are steaming first, then carmelizing once the lid is removed. Very similar end result... jammy.
@anmnou
Жыл бұрын
Butter for the win! Forget oil!
I watched the entire video waiting for bacon. I'd heard to use water before, but never why. Very informative ... though I wanted to see th e bacon! ;D
@paulthompson5405
Жыл бұрын
I also wanted to see the bacon. Please don't tease us!
@colddash5598
Жыл бұрын
ATK did that video about 10y ago. Here, it’s only 1min long. kzread.info/dash/bejne/ZJuppZZ7kcfXYtY.html
@7752
Жыл бұрын
Search “How to Cook Bacon So It's Crispy, Tender, and the Most Perfect Ever”. Short but sweet, I’ve followed this recipe myself with great results 👍
@gflo2260
Жыл бұрын
I also waited to see the bacon portion... she did the old bait and switch... we were fooled!
@WarOfTed
Жыл бұрын
I tried it using instruction from a video I seen else where. Pretty much the method is you blanch the bacon in boiling water for a minute or so and take them out. Then cook them as usual. Don't black too long or the salt will get leaked out in water.
Lam Lan is one of my favorites on cooking instruction. She cuts to the chase and explains the underlying principles which is a gift I can take with me and use.
Such a great series. Clearly the host is a great chef by creating the recipes, and teaching the “why” of how it works.
I started adding water to onions some time ago, after I noticed that after an, ehm, emergency deglazing, the almost-burnt brown bits dissolved in the water and coated the onions almost uniformly. I'm going to try adding water from the start, this sounds like a great tip!
@omniasomniportance3899
Жыл бұрын
I noticed the same when adding white wine mid way through caramelizing it seemed to speed it up
Jacques Pepin demonstrated that wilt/steam/brown technique in one of his series years ago.
Makes a lot of sense. It's a heat transfer thing. Water helps even out the heating so you can really crank the burner. Otherwise you worry about localized burning. Then, unlike adding extra oil, you can remove the lid and let the water evaporate. Great explanations. You add a lot to this channel.
I'm 71 and have done a lot of cooking (past tense).... this use of water in browning is a fantastic idea.
I love getting this kind of information in order to make me a better cook! Well done Lan! I always love watching you share your tips.
What a great technique. I've been frustrated countless times while browning mushrooms, and burning meat juices and at the same time not searing the meat well. This is going to be a game changer! I caramelize onions by Kenji's The Food Lab recipe, which says to dump a bunch of them into a heavy cast iron pot with a lid and crank the heat to high to let them wilt and release juices quickly. It's been working great, but maybe adding some water to make the wilting even easier will work better still.
I like that the science is included in the recipes to makes sense of this technique for us who have been taught other methods.
OMG. This lady knows absolutely everything. Like, I just watched her microwave video, and now I'm stuck in a rabbit hole that is changing everything I've ever been taught about cooking.
I recently started adding water to the pan with diced guanciale for carbonara. It draws out the fat which can be used for the sauce without any burning, you can then brown the pieces evenly making them really crispy but tender on the inside.
I love this. This is presented so articulately. Usually when I watch cooking videos, they're all over the place and it's hard to grasp concepts. But the way Lan gave context to types of browning, presented the problem, then showed us the solution in action with multiple examples. Very logical and well presented. Subbed to the channel!
Lan is amazing- I don't even cook that much, but I watch all her videos 😅
I've been doing it this way for years! Glad you're teaching others an easier way to cook.
This was fascinating and even better having the beautiful Lan presenting it in her special way. Thank you Lan. I think I am cooking chicken with onions and mushrooms tonight. This series is very instructive.
Great video! Lan does a great job explaining and demonstrating the technique.
I have to admit, lan's grown on me! Her and dan are the best
I absolutely love everyone on Test Kitchen, but Lan is one of my hands-down favorites.
Very interesting! I especially like the discussion of mushrooms, as I've been confused how to get them to brown well without turning oily, due to their absorbent, spongy nature. I love when something that seems counterintuitive really works and gives you a whole new angle for how to think about something. Awesome video!!
@massages_for_world_peace8909
Жыл бұрын
I cook mushrooms dry. If she’s comparing cooking tons of oil with mushrooms vs water, I can see water being better, but we prefer dry heat (can press mushrooms into pan with spatula or other pan if want) until they sweat then can add aromatic fat for flavor…. But seems like many methods will work 🤷🏽♀️
Lam is the GOAT - no pun intended. She is the best!
Lan has some of the best no-nonsense delivery on cooking knowledge and skills.
She’s a great teacher! I’ll be checking out the other videos 👏🏼
This was amazing! I thoroughly enjoy having my 'set in stone' thinking shaken up with a novel approach to cooking. I cannot wait to try both variations. Thank you Lan Lam, for having and using your innovative mind to create not just time saving recipes but flavorful ones, as well!
I have to say! YOU are one of the best chef out there …!!
I love the science behind all of this!
Wonderful video! Lan explains so clearly and I feel I’ve had a first-rate cooking class.
Love it when science meets practicality
Love you and your innovative techniques. You’re an intense chicken gravy yourself. Thank you 🙏🏽
Thank you for this fantastic presentation! I have cooked for over 60 years, but I can still learn something new.
i've been a gravy snob for decades and always make my own homemade broth and gravy starting with browning but you have taught me something new that will make it even better! thank you!
@Ariana-rl9jr
Жыл бұрын
Do you use water or chicken broth for browning the chicken?
Love watching a real expert at work. It's clear that she really knows her stuff because every explanation is simple. More stuff like this please!
I'm so in love with the chef. I can't get enough of her videos! Such a beautiful and smart woman
I like how you did the experimentation and then explained what was going on scientifically. Very helpful!
I've been doing something similar to this with onions for years. I start the same way - add some water, bring to boil, cover and wait until tender. Then I remove the cover and up the heat a little to start evaporating the water, while stirring the onions. When the water is mostly gone, I add a quarter to half a cup of either dry sherry or Drambuie (adding sugars basically). I raise the heat some more and quickly continue to sauté until the alcohol is gone and the onions are a glazed, golden brown.
@TheMariaFerraz
Жыл бұрын
No oil ou butter in the final stages?
@rpastore5429
Жыл бұрын
Nope. You can if you want to (maybe a couple of pats of butter). I do something similar with pears and Chambord. Peel and chop the pears. Cook in a little water until lightly tender, add a couple of shots of Chambord, raise the heat a bit and stir until the Chambord becomes a syrup coating the chunks of pears
@m.taylor
Жыл бұрын
Sounds delicious. I like the no oil approach.
I usually am impatient when preparing my gravy. This is solid information I can use to speed up the process. Thanks, Lan.
@noracharles80
Жыл бұрын
I can never get my gravy thick enough. Please someone, tell me the secret. Flour or cornstarch?
Amazing! If Lam had a KZread channel I would immediately subscribe.
Fascinating stuff. Thank you Lan. I’m gonna have to try this. I love this series. It’s educational and entertaining.
My husband gets SO annoyed when he sees me sneak a little water in, but now I have science to back what my intuition and practice already told me! ❤😂
Clear presentation. Great calm on-screen presence - well done !
Love Lan's style and personality, not to mention the great techniques she teaches!
@dudleydeplorable5307
Жыл бұрын
I'd like to see Lan and Dan work together.
It works great for chopped or shredded cabbage too. I found out quite by accident and WOW, I am loving my pan-fried-sauteed cabbage. Buckets of information here! Thank you!
Lan is a great cook and teacher. I always enjoy watching her.