Category Archives: Tips

Flower cutting tips

When cutting flowers from your garden, be sure and cut them only in the late evening or early morning. Have a bucket of water with you and use very sharp shears. After you cut the flowers, place the stem under water and cut the stem again on the diagonal, the stem will then take in water and not air.

I am available to teach cooking or food related subjects in your home or give presentations or classes for your organizations or groups. Contact me at the following e-mail address:
creativecook@creativecookingbylydia.com.

Cooking classes currently scheduled can be viewed by clicking on the “Calendar” icon.

Interactive questions, comments, suggestions, etc. can also be posted on this website.

Creative Cooking
By
Lydia Critchley

Bacon tips

Coat bacon strips with flour before frying. I shake the bacon strips in a plastic bag with flour before frying in a pan or baking in a microwave. The flour creates a nice coating that tastes great and gives the bacon a new texture, while reducing shrinkage.

After purchasing bacon, cut it into half strips (to make the stips shorter) and layer with plastic wrap type product or roll into rolls (rolling from the long ends) before freezing. The bacon frys better and more evenly if it is in shorter pieces in your frying pan, so the half slices produce a better finished product. When bacon is frozen in rolls, it is easy to remove a roll at a time for use and if cut while frozen it is easy to use in recipes and omlets, etc. Cut the rolls in quarters or size desired. If done while frozen, the bacon is easy to handle as it will hold it's firmness for cutting.

Save money and buy bacon ends and pieces if available from your butcher. These are usually very lean and cost effective. If bacon will be cut into pieces for baked beans, casseroles, soup and toppings, this is ideal. You only need to cut it as needed and offers a good quality flavor while saving time and money. I freeze my ends in layers with plastic wrap product inbetween or roll it and cut it into pieces while still frozen so it is still firm for cutting ease.

When a recipe calls for bacon, split it so that you save some for the topping. Fry some of it and crumble for garnish on the top of the dish at serving time.

I am available to teach cooking or food related subjects in your home or give presentations or classes for your organizations or groups. Contact me at the following e-mail address:
creativecook@creativecookingbylydia.com.

Cooking classes currently scheduled can be viewed by clicking on the “Calendar” icon.

Interactive questions, comments, suggestions, etc. can also be posted on this website.

Creative Cooking
By
Lydia Critchley

Wine subtitutions

When a recipe calls for only a little bit of wine and you do not want to buy a whole bottle, you can substitute with beef broth or cranberry juice for red wine and chicken broth, white grape juice, or apple juice for white wine.

I am available to teach cooking or food related subjects in your home or give presentations or classes for your organizations or groups. Contact me at the following e-mail address:
creativecook@creativecookingbylydia.com.

Cooking classes currently scheduled can be viewed by clicking on the “Calendar” icon.

Interactive questions, comments, suggestions, etc. can also be posted on this website.

Creative Cooking
By
Lydia Critchley

Freezing fish – other fish tips

When freezing fresh fish, freeze cleaned fish in water and they are like fresh when thawed and will not become freezer burned since they can't get dried out.

When fish are caught in warm weather, they sometimes have a strong flavor. To firm the fillets and draw out some of the strong flavor, soak them in salt water. Be generous with the salt. They will not taste salty when served, but it will draw out distasteful flavors, especially in bass in warm weather. Soaking in milk will also draw out some of the muddy flavor found in fish in the warm weather.

I am available to teach cooking or food related subjects in your home or give presentations or classes for your organizations or groups. Contact me at the following e-mail address:
creativecook@creativecookingbylydia.com.

Interactive questions, comments, suggestions, etc. can also be posted on this website.

Creative Cooking
By
Lydia Critchley

Flower tips

Feed geraniums rinsed coffee grounds.

To add length to short stemmed flowers, slip stems into drinking straws before placing in the vase.

Put a layer of gravel on the top of window boxes to prevent rain from spattering dirt on windows.

Drop a penny into the vase, so tulips will stand erect and not open too wide.

Hold long-stemmed flowers erect in a tall wide mouthed vase by crisscrossing transparent tape across the top.

Hair rollers tied together and placed at the bottom of a vase make an ideal holder for your arrangement.

If you have ever smelled a marigold which has been in a vase of water for a few days, you will appreciate this tid bit. Add a teaspoon of sugar to the water to eliminate the odor.

Carnations will last longer if placed in water containing a little boric acid.

Place a crushed paper napkin or towel in the bottom of your flower vase it it's too deep for displaying flowers.

For classes click on the “Calendar” icon and contact me for details or questions. I am available to teach in your home or presentations or classes for your organizations or groups. Contact me at the following e-mail address:
creativecook@creativecookingbylydia.com. Interactive questions, comments, suggestions, etc. can also be posted on this website.

Creative Cooking
By
Lydia Critchley

Frozen bananas for baking

To avoid discarding overripe bananas, mash and add lemon juice (mix well) and put into the freezer to use for making cakes or breads at a later date. The lemon juice will help them from turning dark. If you do not have lemon juice, any citric juice like orange juice will work to keep the color light. The bananas can then be thawed and baked the same manner that you would have used them prior to baking. It is handy if you feeze them in the quantity that your favorite recipe requires. Often banana breads and cakes call for buttermilk or lemon juice to activate the baking soda, and now you will already have it in the bananas and can skip adding it at the time of baking. If the recipe calls for buttermilk or sourmilk, you can use sweet milk (regular milk that you are using for drinking that has not been soured).

Creative Cooking
By
Lydia Critchley
For class information, click on the “Calendar” icon and contact me at creativecook@creativecookingbylydia.com for details.

Frying pan trick

If you sprinkle a frying pan with salt before adding meat, the fat will not splatter and food will be less likely to stick.

For class information, click on the “Calandar” icon and contact me for additonal details at creativecook@creativecooking bylydia.com

Thanks. Hope these tips help you.

Lydia Critchley