Expert Talk  Free Expert Tips and Advices

Home » Cooking » What Food Is In The Cupboard? Part 1 Of 5

What Food Is In The Cupboard? Part 1 Of 5

We all have our own favorite foods we keep in the cupboard and what I keep may be different to you. But there is a basic range of foods that most of us should keep. Discover them here.

Todays modern cuisine means there are heaps of differ
ent ingredients, which is wonderful from a taste perspective but sometimes it leaves us confused as to what we need in our cupboard.

Join me as we explore flours and sugars.

FLOURS
Flour is one of those things, that is always handy to have in the cupboard. The basis of many recipes like cakes, breads, biscuits, muffins etc it is also handy for thickening sauces and stews.

It is best to store your flour in a dark, cool place in an airtight container. If you do a lot of baking then buy a large bulk bag but if you only occassionaly use it then it?s best to buy a small pack. White flour will keep for about 6 months but because whole-grain flours contain more oil, they should be used within a shorter period or they may turn rancid.

Plain flour (All-purpose flour)
Plain flour is a blended wheat flour. It has an intermediate gluten level and is a good all purpose flour for home cooking. It is useful for making sauces, thickening
casseroles, coating meat before cooking and rolling out bought pastry.

Cornflour (Corn starch)
Cornflour is made from the starch of the maize grain. Use this flour for thickening sauces. It is best to dissolve it in a little cold water first and then mix into the hot liquid you wish to thicken. If you try to mix cornflour in hot liquid it will form thick lumps that you will be unable to break up.

Wholemeal flour
Is made from the entire grain. Wholemeal flour is ideal for making bread and pastry.

Self-raising flour
Self-raising flour is "white" wheat flour that is sold premixed with chemical leavening agents. It is used for baking cakes, biscuits and desserts.

Strong bread flour
This flour is used for breadmaking It has a higher percentage of gluten, which gives the dough its elasticity. Bread flour can be white, wholemeal and brown.

SUGARS
Sugar at times gets a bad rap, but it is one of those vital ingredients. The most common sugars are extracted from the ?sugar cane? plant. Other sources of sugar are the ?sugar beet?, ?sugar maple? and ?date palm?.

Sugar is best stored in an airtight container in a cool, dry.

White (Granulated) sugar
This is your everyday sugar. Use it to sweeten tea or coffee, on your cereal and with fruit. Often used in general cooking especially in desserts and crumbles.

Super-fine (Caster) sugar
This sugar is much finer and therefore dissolves more quickly. It is asked for in recipes of cakes, biscuits, meringues, syrups, custards and sauces.

Confectionery (Icing) sugar
This is the fine powdery sugar. Used for dusting cakes and desserts as well as making frostings. It will often turn lumpy, so will normally need sifting prior to use.

Brown sugar
This is a moist sugar which is available in varying shades depending on how much molasses is present. The light brown sugar is great in baking. While the dark brown sugars like muscovado are used when a rich flavor or stickiness is required. This is why Christmas cake, gingerbreads, dark puddings, flapjacks and brownies call for a dark brown sugar.

Demerara sugar
This is brown in colour but more granular than the ?brown? sugars. It is partly refined, thus still with some molasses. It is often used for its large, crunchy texture and produces a fantastic crumble topping.

Preserving Sugar
This sugar is specifically created for jam-making and preserves. Its large crystals dissolve quickly, forming a clear jam with a minimum of scum.

Sugar cubes
Not something I use much ? but they always bring back memmories of feeding the horses. Sugar cubes come in white and brown. They are very decorative and are generally used for sweetening beverages.

Happy Cooking
Francis Chang
Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com

Find Francis with Chinese Fortune Cookie Recipes or Cookie Baskets at www.chinese-fortune-cookie.com.

Permalink: http://expert-talk.com/tips/554/what-food-is-in-the-cupboard-part-1-of-5-51554.htm

Comments

SEND A COMMENT

PLEASE READ: All comments must be approved before appearing in the thread; time and space constraints prevent all comments from appearing. We will only approve comments that are directly related to the article, use appropriate language and are not attacking the comments of others.

Message (please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):

Related Tips and Advices

Related Tags

DIGG This story   Save To Google   Save To Windows Live   Save To Del.icio.us   diigo it   Save To blinklist
Save To Furl   Save To Yahoo! My Web 2.0   Save To Blogmarks   Save To Shadows   Save To stumbleupon   Save To Reddit