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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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I've read of a technique whereby you sear meat/chicken on the stove,
then place the pan in the oven to complete cooking. I think everything I've done (that started off as a saute) stayed on the stove. Is this a common technique? Any reason it can't be done all the time? How do I know what temp for the oven? any timing guidelines? - Mike |
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On Nov 19, 6:44*am, Mike > wrote:
> I've read of a technique whereby you sear meat/chicken on the stove, > then place the pan in the oven to complete cooking. I think everything > I've done (that started off as a saute) stayed on the stove. > Is this a common technique? Any reason it can't be done all the time? > How do I know what temp for the oven? any timing guidelines? - Mike It works well for food that is a little on the thick side, or suffers when overcooked. The heat of the oven is gentler and comes from every direction rather than just from the bottom. I did that with some "boneless country-style pork ribs" that were strips about 6" long and 1 - 1.5" in cross section, and I often do it with bone-in pork chops. It's a popular technique for fish filets, although I usuall grill those outdoors. Works well for a beef tenderloin roast, as well as pork tenderloin. For skinless, boneless chicken breast I usually just dust them with flour and do the whole thing on the stovetop. However, if I flour/egg/crumb them, the oven works well. I usually pick an arbitrary 350 F for the oven temp, but I'm sure there are more scientific ways to do it. Cindy Hamilton |
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"> I've read of a technique whereby you sear meat/chicken on the stove,
> then place the pan in the oven to complete cooking. I think everything > I've done (that started off as a saute) stayed on the stove. > Is this a common technique? Any reason it can't be done all the time? > How do I know what temp for the oven? any timing guidelines? - Mike Mike, I do this all the time for whole chickens, rack of lamb, pork tenderloin, fish fillets if they are thick and I'm searing a crust on them and even scallops. There is a different method and maybe temperature I'm setting the oven at but the best part is I'm only dirtying one pan. For a lot of these dishes the reason is to get a good sear at high heat on the outside and pop it in the oven for a few minutes finish to medium-rare in the center. If you seared the meat long enough to get to a MR center the outside would burn. With the whole chicken it allows me to brown the skin on one side on the range and finish roasting at high heat in the oven and not have the whole skin be crisp. If I just roasted it at high heat in the oven half of the skin would be soggy. I got this technique from the Judy Rodgers Zuni Café cookbook and it works great for me. Just keep in mind that the handle of the pan is freaking hot for a while after you take it out of the oven. I burned myself a few times when I first started using this cause I just went into autopilot when I went to make a pan sauce. Jon |
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On Nov 19, 3:44 am, Mike > wrote:
> I've read of a technique whereby you sear meat/chicken on the stove, > then place the pan in the oven to complete cooking. I think everything > I've done (that started off as a saute) stayed on the stove. > Is this a common technique? Starting on the stovetop and finishing in the oven is pretty common. > Any reason it can't be done all the time? I suppose not, but often it would serve no purpose. Either you just want to sauté and then finish over a lower flame, or you just want to roast with no needed stovetop browning. > How do I know what temp for the oven? any timing guidelines? - Mike Oven temp depends on why you're doing it in the first place. If you want a surface browning or a sear but then slow cooking to keep something tender you'd use a low oven. If you're roasting a small chicken, the normal temp for that. Here's an example I posted last year: "Jacques Pepin has an alternate method that works well for smaller chickens, too. Put a little oil in a large cast iron frying pan and brown the chicken over medium-high heat on four sides. Then put it, skillet and all, in the preheated 350 - 375 oven. After 15 minutes, rotate it a quarter turn, after 15 minutes more, rotate again, then again a third time after 15 minutes more. I do it starting with the bird on its side so that the last position is breast up. This not only results in a beautiful skin but also enables the easy making of great pan gravy. -aem |
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![]() Mike wrote: > I've read of a technique whereby you sear meat/chicken on the stove, > then place the pan in the oven to complete cooking. I think everything > I've done (that started off as a saute) stayed on the stove. > Is this a common technique? Any reason it can't be done all the time? > How do I know what temp for the oven? any timing guidelines? - Mike Fairly common, that's what makes chicken Maryland chicken Maryland, fried up in a breading on the stove to set the breading and then finish cooking in the oven. I used to work for an Italian chef who would do the same sort of thing with steaks, sans breading, cook to get some color on top of the stove then finish in the oven. -- Mr. Joseph Littleshoes Esq. Domine, dirige nos. Let the games begin! http://fredeeky.typepad.com/fredeeky.../sf_anthem.mp3 |
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