Onions in cooking are used in raw, boiled, fried, pickled and salted types. Although to preserve all the useful properties, minimal thermal exposure is recommended. Onions can be both a flavor seasoning for the main dish (and it is combined with meat, fish, rice, potatoes, flour products, cottage cheese, and other vegetables), and the basis of the recipe. Many national cuisines have their own “branded” culinary products, in which onions can be called a key ingredient: French onion soup, British onion pie, etc. There are some culinary tricks that will allow you to cook this product (or a dish based on it) as tasty as possible: If you add a little granulated sugar to the oil during frying, the onions will brown better. So that the chopped onion does not burn during sauteing, before sending it to the frying pan, you should roll the “straw” in flour. Then it will simply acquire a reddish hue. Onions can be added to minced meat not only to improve the taste, but also to extend the shelf life of the meat part. To get rid of onion bitterness in the manufacture of salads, raw onions are slightly scalded with boiling water, and hands and knife are smeared with wet salt.
When choosing onions, preference should be given to dense clean heads, without damage, holes and stains. The sweetness-bitterness of a vegetable depends not only on the variety, but also on the length of daylight in the place of cultivation (southern onions are considered sweeter), the mineral content of the soil, the softness of the climate, the abundance of precipitation, etc. For example, with a large amount of annual precipitation, sulfur is actively washed out of the soil, which creates prerequisites for growing a sweeter vegetable. However, in general, it is believed that white varieties have a stronger flavor and are better suited for filling pies, red and purple ones have a sweet taste and are well combined in salads and marinades, and the Spanish variety is softer and sweeter, as well as onions with yellow–brown husks are better suited for frying.
Excellent soup with sauerkraut and bulgur from Mistral. Delicious, rich. Bulgur-steamed and crushed wheat grain (as wheat grain,but larger and steamed).
I love cabbage soup and puree soups with sauerkraut, but this soup exceeded all expectations! So delicious that there are no words to describe it. Of course, you will have to tinker a little, but the taste will pay off all your efforts.
Cabbage soup is my favorite soup in the world. There are many recipes for this wonderful soup, but I offer you my signature one, in which cabbage has been cooked for many years. According to this recipe, the soup is obtained with a pleasant light sourness and a whole bouquet of flavors.
This very tasty recipe for cooking cabbage helps not only in fasting, but also on ordinary days. The recipe is quite budget-friendly, easy to prepare, and most importantly, it is delicious and satisfying.
A simple, delicious, satisfying first course. It takes a little time to cook, cooking is not troublesome. And very budget-friendly, which is very important.
Delicious, thick, hearty soup. Traditional Slovak, Polish and Ukrainian sauerkraut soup is a traditional dish on the Christmas table. I really liked it, especially after a walk in the cold, it warms up perfectly!
A very simple and very tasty recipe. We will not open America, but perhaps it will be useful to someone. The dish turns out to be very light and rich. Without meat additives, it turns out an excellent side dish. And the addition of any leftover meat is the main dish.
In fact, it’s something like pate. The name terrine comes from the form in which it is baked. Oblong shape with a lid. So I baked it in the usual oblong shape and covered it with foil. The guests liked the dish!