Roy Primm has written dozens of articles and soul food recipes online. For more food for the soul cooking tips, recipes and thousands of Brand Name Coupons go to Soul Food Recipes
Posts Tagged ‘Food’
3 Ways to Confidently Cook Soul Food
Soul food recipes have enjoyed a tradition of down-home cooking and what we affectionately call comfort food. People in the south, especially African Americans see it as the holy grail of eating and good times.
It’s used to celebrate, comfort and even heal, that’s how important it is. But because of the tight economy more people choose to cook more meals at home and save money (25% -75%) rather than eating out.
The problem is most of us like soul food , but in this fast-food age less of us know how to cook those magical meals our grand mothers and great-grandmothers cooked with ease. If you’re a new mother, wife, single man or house-husband you may have this desire or need to cook. But you may lack the mental tools and skills to pull it off.
Fortunately the internet has dozens of soul food recipe sites with those favorite dishes you enjoyed since you were a child. You know, the one’s your great-grandma used to prepare for holidays, birthdays and special occasions. That’s good news, but you may be one of the millions of “recipe challenged”. Meaning you can read a recipe, but the results always turn out between weird looking and out-right disaster.
Don’t panic, here’s 3 ways to cook soul food recipes more confidently.
1. Know Your Cooking Terms.
This seems like a simple issue, but it may surprise you how much this will add to your cooking confidence. Plus, it may surprise you how many people don’t know the correct cooking terms in a recipe, but think they know. For example, do you know the difference between mix and fold? Many cooks don’t.
As a result, not knowing the difference between those two cooking terms is the difference between a scrumptious dish fit for a king or queen or garbage a starving dog wouldn’t eat. I recommend getting a cooking dictionary or at least a book of cooking terms. When you come across a recipe term you’re not sure of you can immediately look it up. By doing this simple action, you’ll be a recipe expert in no time when it comes to cooking terms.
2. Know Your Seasonings.
If one skill defines soul food , meaning how to enjoy it and how to cook it, it’s the seasoning. Knowing how to season and what to season with what food is one of the hallmarks of a good cook, especially when it comes to southern food.
Here’s another tool that can give you a quick start and give you quick confidence. Get a soul food seasonings dictionary, available online. This will show you what seasoning go with what dishes at-a-glance. This information will help to make your cooking mistake free.
3. Know Your Measurements.
This is one of the quiet but important keys to cooking with confidence. Traditionally our grandmothers and great-grandmothers used guesstimates based on their experience. For example, a dash of this, a pinch of that. To give you quick confidence when preparing any recipe, get these 3 important – but inexpensive tools. A measuring cup, measuring spoons and a small scale. By using these simple tools you’ll have the confidence your measurements are accurate and your portions are right. They will save you the cost of the recipe failures you have to throw in the garbage can. That cost savings alone is worth the small investment, Don’t you agree?
By following these simple tips your cooking confidence will increase each time you apply them. The soul food recipes you choose will turn out more like the ones you see in the book or on the website for a change. In addition, they’ll taste more like you imagined them to be.
Kitchen Tools for Making Homemade Baby Food
Use a blender or food processor to make baby food, and ice cube trays with lids, Tupperware containers, or muffin pans to store and freeze homemade baby food. Learn more about tools for making food for your baby in this free educational parenting video.Expert: Shanis Windland Bio: Shanis Windland has a Bachelors of Science degree in accounting from Central Washington University. She is a certified public accountant licensed in the state of Washington. Filmmaker: Jay Windland
Traditional Jamaican Food And Recipes
The flavors of Jamaica are the product of the island’s history combined with a verdant, lush climate. The Spanish, British, African and East Indian have all had an influence over what is today a unique island cuisine made colorful by the many tropical fruits that thrive here.
The waters off Jamaica have always teemed with fish and seafood is the primary protein source for islanders. Snapper, grouper, sea bass and other reef a deep sea fish are caught daily by the many fishermen whose boats line the beaches. Spiny lobster, shrimp and freshwater crustaceans are readily available and cooked usually in a thick sauce. Chicken and goats are well suited to the small mountainous island and are kept by many families but cattle are rare and beef is not the predominant meat.
Many of Jamaica’s fruits, including pineapple, mango, banana and avocado were brought to the region by slave traders and plantation owners experimenting with crops. What were once sugar cane fields are now being used to grow fruits and ackee for export and domestic use.
Few other cuisines mix such a range of spices and tastes – sweet, hot and savory – as Jamaican cooking. Jamaican food wouldn’t be the same without the spices, seasonings and colors from: Allspice, the pimento berry.
Among many of the spices grown in Jamaica are nutmeg, ginger, thyme, scotch bonnet peppers, which are integral distinct flavors of Jamaican cooking. The pungent thyme grows rampantly on the island and is found in the majority of Jamaican foods.
Favourite Jamaican foods are those for coconut cake, rum punch & beef jerky recipies.
Real Jamaican food, when cooked with feeling, is a soul-satisfying experience.
For further tips and ideas for cooking great and traditional food from around the world, visit Jamaican Recipes
This article was submitted by Jen Carter, owner of the World Recipes website.
Jen has travelled around the world and enjoys collecting and sharing recipes from other countries.
Italian Traditional Food
Italian traditional food is known for its wonderful recipes and wines, but often an important side of it is hidden or even unseen.
This side is what eating means for Italians. It’s not just eating, it means much more.
If you happen in a major Italian city you may find some shops with continued opening time. But the most close from 1 to 4.30pm. Italians do stop for lunch.
Life has changed in Italy too, not allowing everyone to go home for lunch and maybe take even a rest. But most public offices close at 2.00pm and the ones that work from 9 to 5 have lunch time, where people go to restaurants and have a real meal.
I went to meet a friend who works in a bank office in Rome and we had lunch together. She suggested a small familiar restaurant (trattoria) where I ate wonderful potato gnocchi and unforgettable artichokes with potatoes. A real lunch, that is maybe served in luxury Italian restaurants abroad, eaten during a lunch break from job.
This idea lead to another interesting fact about restaurants in Italy and Italian restaurants abroad.
Usually, the Italian restaurants abroad are good and sometimes luxury restaurants. Very well decorated and often a very pleasant environment, many times tied to society fashions.
In Italy, the luxury and the “environment” are secondary. Often an Italian friend takes you to a very good restaurant, and it looks too poorly decorated. Don’t worry, he cares about you, because…you eat wonderful food, and that’s the important thing for your friend.
He does not think about taking you to a fashionable place where food is not good. He would fail towards you, and for an Italian, it hurts.
There are so many restaurants in Italy that are square spoiled rooms that are really not inviting…but their food is wonderful. They just don’t consider the decoration, but what you’re going to eat.
In Italy go out to have dinner is also a social program, as all around the world. But what you eat has a stronger role in the whole evening.
Among other cultures, the food may be medium, and people talk about other things and have a good evening.
In Italy, may be the most enjoyable people, but if the food is not good, they will feel like the evening was a little bit wasted for that. They will talk about it, comment it, showing that the food isn’t merely part of the evening, but quite the main attraction.
Another side of tradition concerning Italian food regards eating at certain times, following a established order in eating (never eat a meat dish before the pasta one, for example), and some other small but present rules.
Concerning time, Italians have lunch from 1.00pm to 2.00pm. Most restaurants close at 2.30 pm. It’s frustrating for a tourist visiting Rome, for example, to find the restaurant closed at 3pm.
Now some restaurants are offering different scheduled times, but these are the tourist restaurants, not the good ones. These keep pasta cooked and re-warm it. It’s better not to trust them if you desire a good Italian homemade dish.
A traditional Italian meal begins with the antipasto (which means before the meal). Usually it’s “from land”(di terra) or “from sea” (di mare). Those from land are usually Italian cold cuts, olives, cheese and so on. Those from sea are seafood salad and similar.
After the antipasto comes the first dish, that can be pasta, soup or rice (risotto). After then there’s the second, when you can choose between meat and fish. It’s necessary to add a side, because in Italy they are not included. If you ask for a steak, it will come by itself, with no French fries or salad.
After that, you can eat fruit and a dessert. Then a good coffee and a liquor called “ammazza caffè” (kill the coffee). It can vary between many choices, being the more used nowadays the lemon liquor (limoncello) and grappa.
At this point, your Italian friend looks satisfied. He will probably rest his shoulders on the back of the chair and take a long breath. After a perfect meal, these few minutes just enjoying it all are surely needed.
Let’s Cook Japanese Food!: Everyday Recipes for Home Cooking
- ISBN13: 9780811848329
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Product Description
‘Yum!’ thought Amy Kaneko when she tasted the Japanese home cooking she’d married into. Even better, turned out it uses easy-to-find ingredients, and she couldn’t believe how simple the techniques are for food this delicious. This terrific cookbook showcases 70 of Amy’s favorite recipes, including Tonkatsu (crispy pork cutlets in a tangy sauce) and Onigiri (cute little rice balls stuffed with salmon). A glossary describes the more unusual ingredients and a source li… More >>
Let’s Cook Japanese Food!: Everyday Recipes for Home Cooking


