Posts Tagged ‘DIY’

How To Use Dairy Produce: Part 4 – Eggs (cont).

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

Preparation Of Foods: Dairy Produce.

Eggs: Part Two

Poaching: boil 1.5 inches (40mm) water in a frying pan; add a teaspoon of salt and 5ml of vinegar. Crack an egg into a cup, check and tip into boiling water. Reduce the heat. Fold the white around the unbroken yolk with a spoon and continue to simmer for another 3-4 mins. Lift out with a fish slice, drain and serve on hot buttered toast.

Scrambling: beat the eggs well; add salt, pepper to taste and a dash of milk. Melt enough butter to cover the bottom of a small pan. Heat the eggs slowly, stirring constantly. Cook in a basin floating on boiling water, if you’d rather. Dish up when nearly completely set, after about 5 minutes.

Fried Eggs: Melt enough fat to easily cover the base of the frying pan. Tip the egg(s) in gently and fold the whites around the yolks. When the white has set, baste the yolk to taste and remove whole with a fish slice.

Baking: lightly grease a fireproof dish and slide eggs into it. Sprinkle with salt, pepper and butter. Bake in a moderate oven and serve in the same pan after the whites have set.

Omelette: buy a pan and keep it only for omelettes! The base should be smooth and clean. Allow two eggs per person; beat lightly and add salt and pepper to taste. Heat enough butter to cover the base of the pan. When the fat is hot, pour in the eggs; as it sets, raise the handle up and draw set mixture up, allowing the liquid egg to run down onto the hot pan. When all is set, tilt the pan forward and roll the omelette over. Serve immediately on a hot plate. It can be filled with almost anything, before being rolled over.

Pouring Custard: beat 2-3 eggs per 1 pint of milk lightly. Heat the milk and pour gradually over the eggs; add sugar and flavouring; cook in a double pan or jug and hot water until the required thickness has been reached. If it is not to be served immediately, pour a thin layer of water onto the top to prevent a skin forming.

Baked Custard: proceed as above and then pour the custard into greased dish; sprinkle with nutmeg; and place dish in water to halfway up its sides. Bake at 350 F for 35-45 mins; test by inserting a knife – it should be clean on removal.

Steamed Custard: as above, but cook in a steamer or pan of boiling water. The cooking time is about the same too.

Custard Tarts: pour pouring custard into unbaked pastry cases and bake in the oven for 40-50 mins. A little jam can be placed in the bottom of the case first, if desired.

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How To Use Dairy Products Correctly: Part Two – Cheese

Friday, April 16th, 2010

Basic Preparation Of Foods: Dairy Produce.

CHEESES

Cheeses are manufactured from milk which has been naturally or artificially turned sour. The first method is achieved by standing the milk in a warm place and allowing natural, beneficial bacteria to convert the milk’s natural sugars into lactic acid. The second method is effected by adding an agent, usually rennet.

Colouring and salt are usually put in too. The whey is then allowed to drain off and the curds are pressed into moulds where they are kept until ripened or cured. Some cheeses are subjected to pressure; soft cheeses are not. Curds are ripened or cured by a variety of means. The method, the quality of the milk, the breed of cow, sheep or other animal and the quality of its pasture and the type of bacteria all govern the final product.

Some local environmental conditions are unique and those areas are capable of producing cheeses that are not successfully copied anywhere else: for instance Roquefort and Camembert, although factories do attempt it. Some even have a measure of success: remember that most of the world’s Cheddar cheese now derives from the United States and Canada.

The constituent parts of cheese are roughly: 33% fat, 33% protein and 33% water with salt, colouring, sugar etc making up the other 1%. These proportions do vary from area to area as some manufacturers use full cream milk, others skimmed milk and yet others add extra cream. Yet others add extra sugar, although most do not. All cheeses have a high calcium content and can be considered ‘concentrated milk’ and stored in the same way.

Many people say that cheese must not be kept in a fridge and although storing in water, as for milk, is not a viable option, a cool larder is certainly ideal. Try the traditional method of suspending it from a hook in muslin in a cool, breezy place. If it is hot, moisten the cheesecloth with water to which a little vinegar has been added.

in Europe, cheese is frequently served with a salad or/and bread and is often presented after or instead of the dessert course. Hard cheese can be nigh-on impossible for children to digest and grating it first will make it more edible for them. After being grated the cheese can be scattered on vegetables or fish soups or sauces; combined with egg, pasta, rice and oatmeal dishes; put on baked potatoes or pastry; toasted on bread or put in sandwiches or salads.

How To Cook Cheese: A not well known fact is that a lot of people find cooked cheese practically indigestible and the reason lies in its make-up. This is why: cooked starch can be digested by the saliva in the mouth, but other foods must pass to the stomach or intestines for this process to be completed. They are, however, broken up in the mouth. Digestion of protein begins in the stomach and is completed in the small intestine, while fat is not rendered soluble until it reaches the small intestine.

Cheese has a high fat and protein content, but when melted, the fat frequently covers the protein and stops the digestive juices reaching it in the stomach. This results in, its digestion is delayed until the fat has been absorbed by the intestines. Cheese can be made more digestible in the following way:

1] Adding to or combining with starchy foods. The starch will absorb the fat, not allowing it to cover the protein.

2] Using seasoning: Cayenne Pepper or mustard will irritate the intestinal lining, causing the release of extra digestive juices.

3] Cooking rapidly at high temperature. This stops the protein from becoming tough and stringy and so, harder to digest or you could add cheese to sauces late in the process.

4] Adding alkali. A large pinch of Bicarbonate of Soda per 75g will help neutralize the fatty acids and make the proteins more easily digestible.

For the best gourmet Traditional Welsh Recipes, go along to our website at http://welsh-recipes.the-real-way.com/ Unique version for reprint here: How To Use Dairy Products Correctly: Part Two – Cheese.

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Business Credit Cards

Saturday, November 21st, 2009

Among the vast number of credit cards on the market, one of the most underestimated is the business credit card. Many people decide not to apply for a business credit card because apart from having a definite target market – business owners or business executives – it seems to be complicated to use. Although a business credit card has more provisos, it has a lower interest rate compared with other kinds of credit cards and, contrary to popular misconception, it can be very useful if used properly.

What is a business credit card? Generally, a business credit card is for business people’s use, so compared with a regular credit card, a business credit card has a high credit limit and a low interest rates. Depending on the business credit card you choose, a business credit card usually also brings a lot of benefits.

Since it is targeted at businessmen or those people who are building a business, a business credit card is meant to benefit these small businesses. A business credit card helps the budding business by allowing the owner to finance bills or payroll, which improves cash flow. Apart from giving the image of a reliable credit card company, business credit cards supply detailed statements of expenditure and give quality customer service as its two major benefits.

Aside from enjoying higher spending limits and lower interest rates, a business credit card provides numerous alternative credit options for small businesses. A business credit card also caters to large corporations as well as those people who are just beginning their own business because it closely reflects the base rate of credit.

Simplifying business credit cards. It really pays to go to the bank when one applies for a credit card to get answers to all the immediate questions you may have. But since a business credit card is for business people who are always on the go, many business credit card issuers offer online applications for business credit cards. So, when one applies for a business credit card, there is no need to visit the bank any more, which means that there is also no need to wait in the queue just to talk to a bank manager.

When you apply for a business credit card online, all you have to do is to choose the business credit card that suits your small business or corporate credit requirements right from the comfort of your home or office. Aside from offering safe, secure, and simple processes that are designed to help you to take care of your fledgling business, most online business credit cards offer access features for the convenience of the business credit card holder such as online bill payment and reporting.

Customized company logos and access to instant cash are further advantages offered on line. Yet other online business credit cards offer even more detailed reporting features for easy monitoring of multiple accounts.

Most business credit cards require no fees for the first year and no pre-set spending limit or finance charges. Other business credit cards run membership rewards schemes that enable the member to earn points towards travel, merchandise and other advantages for the business.

Many business credit cards offer small businesses a credit line of up to $100,000 at a competitive APR as low as base + 1.99% for both cash and check purchases. Furthermore, 100% of the credit line is available as cash and usually no collateral is required.

The business credit card holder might receive fee-free checks as well as a card to access their account. Everyday savings or exclusive savings, express approvals, no annual fee, up to 5 percent rebates on all qualifying purchases, and 0% introductory annual percentage rate (APR) on purchases during the first half of the year of card membership are some of the great benefits of most business credit cards.

Although the majority of the business credit card issuers offer great deals, it is still important to research what your business requirements are first. Whether you want your business credit card for investing in inventory or only for payroll, it is important to look for a business credit card that can handle almost anything you may require.

Whether you opt to go directly to the bank or apply for a business credit card online, a number of premier business credit card suppliers are there to assist you to find the right credit card product as easily and conveniently as possible.

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