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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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"aem" > wrote in message
oups.com... > > wff_ng_7 wrote: >> I made a batch of chicken stock yesterday and cooled it by the method I >> described in a prior thread. I place the stock pot on a 1 inch tall wire >> grid trivet in the laundry tub, then fill the tub up with cold water to >> about the level of liquid inside the stock pot. [snip] >> > What's missing from this thread and from the prior one on this subject > is the notion that there is any problem in search of all these > solutions. Who has ever had a problem? I make stock, I strain it into > other containers and let them cool on the counter. When they have > cooled a little a put them in the refrigerator. Big deal. If I'm > going to have a large volume I turn the fridge's temp control down a > few degrees to minimize heating up the other stuff in the fridge. > (Someone suggested that is ineffective. Maybe, depending on how much > you turn it down, but it certainly can't hurt.) Actually, the pot *will* heat the fridge up more than you want, and turning the thing colder probably won't help much. > This ain't rocket science, nor does it need to > be. -aem > But, I agree with this. Sticking the pot in a sink of cold water isn't such a bad idea, and analyzing the process is slightly interesting, but enough already. ![]() |
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