- Source: Outline of food preparation
The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to the preparation of food:
Food preparation is an art form and applied science that includes techniques like cooking to make ingredients fit for consumption and/or palatable.
Essence of food preparation
The process of food preparation includes selecting the ingredients needed and correctly handling ingredients to produce the components of a meal.
Art – an art, one of the arts, is a creative endeavor or discipline.
Culinary art – art of preparing and cooking foods.
Skill – learned capacity to carry out pre-determined results often with the minimum outlay of time, energy, or both.
Meal preparation – the process of planning meals.
General food preparation concepts
Chef – a person who cooks professionally for other people. Although over time the term has come to describe any person who cooks for a living, traditionally it refers to a highly skilled professional who is proficient in all aspects of food preparation.
Cookbook
Cooking – act of preparing food for eating. It encompasses a vast range of methods, tools and combinations of ingredients to improve the flavour or digestibility of food. It generally requires the selection, measurement and combining of ingredients in an ordered procedure in an effort to achieve the desired result.
Cooking oil
Cooking weights and measures – includes conversions and equivalences common in cooking.
Cuisine – specific set of cooking traditions and practices, often associated with a specific culture. It is often named after the region or place where its underlying culture is present. A cuisine is primarily influenced by the ingredients that are available locally or through trade.
Eating
Flavor
Food is anything solid or liquid which when swallowed, digested and assimilated in the body provides it with essential substances called nutrients and keeps it well. It is the basic necessity of life. Food supplies energy, enables growth and repair of tissues and organs.
Food and cooking hygiene
Foodborne illness
Food preservation
Ingredients
International food terms – useful when reading about food and recipes from different countries.
Recipe
Restaurant
Staple food – a food that is "eaten regularly and in such quantities as to constitute the dominant part of the diet and supply a major proportion of energy and nutrient needs".
Cooking techniques
= Cooking with dry heat
=Baking – the technique of prolonged cooking of food by dry heat acting by convection, normally in an oven, but can also be done in hot ashes or on hot stones. Appliances like Rotimatic also allow automatic baking.
Blind-baking – baking pastry before adding a filling.
Barbecuing – method of cooking meat, poultry and occasionally fish with the heat and hot smoke of a fire, smoking wood, or hot coals of charcoal.
Grilling – a form of cooking that involves dry heat applied to the surface of food, commonly from above or below. May involve a grill, a grill pan, or griddle.
Maillard reaction – a chemical reaction that occurs when amino acids and reducing sugars are exposed to heat which gives browned food its distinctive flavor
Roasting – cooking method that uses dry heat, whether an open flame, oven, or other heat source. Roasting usually causes caramelization or Maillard browning of the surface of the food, which is considered by some as a flavor enhancement.
Rotisserie – meat is skewered on a spit - a long solid rod used to hold food while it is being cooked over a fire in a fireplace or over a campfire, or while being roasted in an oven.
Smoking – the process of flavoring, cooking, or preserving food by exposing it to the smoke from burning or smoldering plant materials, most often wood. Hot smoking will cook and flavor the food, while cold smoking only flavors the food.
Searing – technique used in grilling, baking, braising, roasting, sautéing, etc., in which the surface of the food (usually meat, poultry or fish) is cooked at high temperature so a caramelized crust forms.
= Cooking with wet heat
=Water and other liquids
Basting – the continued application of a liquid marinade or sauce during dry-heat cooking, usually when roasting meat.
Boiling – the rapid vaporization of a liquid, which occurs when a liquid is heated to its boiling point, the temperature at which the vapor pressure of the liquid is equal to the pressure exerted on the liquid by the surrounding environmental pressure.
Blanching – cooking technique which food substance, usually a vegetable or fruit, is plunged into boiling water, removed after a brief, timed interval, and finally plunged into iced water or placed under cold running water (shocked) to halt the cooking process.
Braising – combination cooking method using both moist and dry heat; typically the food is first seared at a high temperature and then finished in a covered pot with a variable amount of liquid, resulting in a particular flavour.
Coddling – food is heated in water kept just below the boiling point.
Infusion – the process of soaking plant matter, such as fruits or tea leaves, in a liquid, such as water or alcohol, so as to impart flavor into the liquid.
Poaching – process of gently simmering food in liquid, generally milk, stock, or wine.
Pressure cooking – cooking in a sealed vessel that does not permit air or liquids to escape below a preset pressure, which allows the liquid in the pot to rise to a higher temperature before boiling.
Simmering – foods are cooked in hot liquids kept at or just below the boiling point of water, but higher than poaching temperature.
Steaming – boiling water continuously so it vaporizes into steam and carries heat to the food being steamed, thus cooking the food.
Double steaming – Chinese cooking technique in which food is covered with water and put in a covered ceramic jar and the jar is then steamed for several hours.
Steeping – saturation of a food (such as an herb) in a liquid solvent to extract a soluble ingredient into the solvent. E.g., a cup of tea is made by steeping tea leaves in a cup of hot water.
Stewing – food is cooked in liquid and served in the resultant gravy.
Vacuum flask cooking
Frying with oil
Frying – cooking food in oil or another fat, a technique that originated in ancient Egypt around 2500 BC.
Deep frying – food is submerged in hot oil or fat. This is normally performed with a deep fryer or chip pan.
Gentle frying
Hot salt frying
Pan frying – cooking food in a pan using a small amount of cooking oil or fat as a heat transfer agent and to keep the food from sticking.
Pressure frying
Sautéing
Shallow frying
Stir frying
Other food preparation techniques
= Chemical techniques
=Brining –Brining is a process similar to marination in which meat or poultry is soaked in brine before cooking
Ceviche
Drying
Fermentation
Marinating
Saikyoyaki
Pickling
Salting
Seasoning
Souring
Sprouting
Sugaring
= Mechanical techniques
=Cutting
Cutting board
Dicing – cutting an ingredient into cubes of a consistent size.
Grating – using a grater to shred an ingredient, for instance, vegetables or cheese.
Julienning – the process of cutting an ingredient into very thin, long pieces, such as the thin carrots in store bought salad mix.
Mincing – cutting an ingredient into very small pieces.
Peeling – removing the outer skin/covering off of an ingredient, commonly a fruit or a vegetable.
Shaving – the process of planing off thin strips of an ingredient.
Chiffonade – cutting an ingredient into ribbons.
Kneading
Milling
Mixing – incorporating several different ingredients to make something new; for instance, mixing water, sugar, and lemon juice makes lemonade.
Blending – using a specialized machine called a blender to grind or puree ingredients together.
Vacuum filling – a mechanized method of creating filled items, for instance, for filling pastries.
Cooking tools
= Appliances
=Microwave oven – type of oven that heats foods quickly and efficiently using microwaves. However, unlike conventional ovens, a microwave oven does not brown bread or bake food. This makes microwave ovens unsuitable for cooking certain foods and unable to achieve certain culinary effects. Additional kinds of heat sources can be added into microwave ovens or microwave packaging so as to add these additional effects.
Oven
Stove or cooker
= Utensils
=History of food preparation
History of Indian cuisine
International cuisine
A sample of some cuisines around the world:
African cuisine (see list)
Mediterranean cuisine
Ethiopian cuisine
Asian cuisine (see list)
Korean cuisine
Chinese cuisine
Japanese cuisine
Indian cuisine
Thai cuisine
Vietnamese cuisine
European cuisine (see list)
Mediterranean cuisine
Eastern European cuisine
Russian cuisine
English cuisine
French cuisine
Italian cuisine
Oceanian cuisine (see list)
Australian cuisine
New Zealand cuisine
Cuisine of the Americas (see list)
Canadian cuisine
American cuisine
Cajun cuisine
Latin American cuisine
Mexican cuisine
South American cuisine
Argentine cuisine
Peruvian cuisine
General ingredients
Cereals –
Maize –
Oats
Rice –
Wheat –
Bread –
Noodles –
Cooking fats and oils
Butter –
Rapeseed (Canola) oil –
Coconut oil –
Corn oil –
Rice bran oil –
Flaxseed oil –
Lard –
Margarine –
Olive oil –
Palm oil –
Peanut oil –
Sesame oil –
Soybean oil –
Sunflower oil –
Tallow –
Dairy –
Buttermilk –
Cheese –
Cream –
Milk –
Yogurt –
Eggs –
Fruits –
Apples –
Cherries –
Pears –
Legumes –
Beans –
Lentils –
Soy –
Miso –
Soy cheese –
Soy milk –
Soy sauce –
Soy yogurt –
Textured soy protein –
Tofu –
Meat –
Beef –
Fish –
Mutton –
Poultry –
Pork –
Mushrooms –
Champignon –
Seasonings
Herbs –
Parsley –
Spices –
Pepper –
Salt –
Sweeteners –
Agave nectar –
Fructose –
Glucose –
Honey –
Stevia –
Sugar –
Vegetables –
Cucumber –
Eggplants –
Garlic –
Onions –
Potatoes –
Squash –
Tomatoes –
See also
Cookbooks
Culinary profession
Food writing
Junk food
List of cocktails
List of food preparation utensils
List of soups
List of twice-baked foods
Natural food
Nutrition
Organic food
Whole food
References
External links
How to Cook at WikiHow
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- Outline of food preparation
- Lists of food and beverage topics
- Meal preparation
- Lists of foods
- Cuisine
- À la carte
- Tiffin
- Outline of cuisines
- List of sauces
- List of cooking techniques