Cooking Techniques: Roasting, Roasting & Reheating Tips

Master professional cooking techniques like slow-cooking a ribeye roast or pressure-cooking dried chickpeas. From ingenious hacks like making onion rings with pancake mix to reheating Chinese food, improve your kitchen efficiency.

Fish, French Fries, Grilled

How to Cook Large Mahi Mahi Fillets in the Oven

Mahi mahi is a large, ocean fish that can be found in tropical and subtropical waters worldwide. The fillets have a mild, slightly sweet flavor that pairs well with fruity or citrus flavors. Mahi mahi is low fat, with only 1 gram of fat per 3-ounce serving.

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How to Cook Cube Steak on the Grill

Cube steaks aren't a specific cut of meat. Instead, they are typically a top round, top sirloin or bottom sirloin steak that has been processed by an electric meat tenderizer.

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baked meat

How to Bake Pork Loin in Foil

Wrapping a pork loin in foil before baking helps keep it from drying out as it cooks. Pork loin comes from the top of the leg to the shoulder of a pig and can be either boneless or bone-in, although the boneless variety, rolled or tied, is what you're likely to find at the grocery store.

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How to Cook Dried Chickpeas Without Soaking

Cooking dried beans instead of purchasing them canned gives you less sodium per serving, more flavor and better control over the texture of the finished beans, says "New York Times" food columnist Mark Bittman.

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Delicious beef fillet

How to Cook a Whole Beef Tenderloin in a Convection Oven

Beef tenderloin is a cut of meat from the tender loin of a cow. Cooking a beef tenderloin in a convection oven is similar to cooking in a conventional oven, except that the tenderloin will cook faster since a convection oven's fan circulates the heat evenly.

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Zucchine al forno gratinate

How to Make Grilled Vegetables in a Toaster Oven

Grilled vegetables are a delicious side for BBQ chicken, lean beef burgers, kabobs or other light summer dishes. However, if you're craving grilled food and the weather isn't cooperating, don't worry.

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How to Cook Drumsticks in a Convection Oven

A convection oven is a handy cooking tool to have because it cooks food more quickly than a conventional oven and yields more golden brown and juicy meat, according to the Fine Cooking website.

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Baked French Fries

How to Heat Up French Fries in a Toaster Oven

Heating up leftover French fries in a toaster oven will give you a crunchy, delicious snack or side dish. A toaster oven won't heat up the kitchen as much as a standard oven, and it uses less electricity, making it an efficient appliance for reheating a small number of fries.

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Red Potatoes in a Bucket

How to Cook Oven Roasted Red Skin Potatoes

Roasted red potatoes offer a tasty alternative to standard potato dishes. These small, round, red-skinned potatoes are a relatively low-fat source of dietary fiber. They are also excellent sources of potassium.

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How to Cook a Ham Shank in the Oven

A ham shank -- more accurately known as a pork shank -- is a bone-in cut from the front leg. Although it's often referred to as a ham hock, hocks are a different cut and are typically cured, whereas shanks are often available fresh.

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How to Cook Hamburgers in a Convection Oven

For most Americans, hamburgers are both dietary staples and guilty pleasures. Luckily, you can enjoy a guilt-free patty when you cook at home using your own oven and ignore the 99-cent, heart-attack-in-a-sack varieties.

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How to Cook Prepared Stuffed Salmon in the Oven

For health-conscious diners who avoid processed foods but don't have the time to work entirely from scratch, many retailers offer quality entrees that are already prepared and just need to be cooked. For example, stuffed salmon is readily available from supermarkets and seafood retailers.

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venison deer game filet and wild mushrooms

How to Cook a Back Strap in the Oven

The back strap cut of venison is analogous to the tenderloin of a cow, which is one of the more prized cuts of meat. The back strap is the long muscle running along the back of the deer that is naturally tender and juicy because it isn't used as much as some of the muscles in the haunches and chest.

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How to Cook a Center Cut Shank in a Skillet

Frugal homemakers and professional chefs are equally attached to the tough, chewy unloved cuts of beef. These are the muscles that are worked the hardest during an animal's life, and they're filled with tough, dense muscle tissues and a high percentage of stringy connective tissues.

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How to Cook Wingettes in the Oven

Chicken wingettes are the two larger pieces you get when you snip a chicken wing into three pieces and discard the tip. Chicken wingettes are often breaded and deep fried, but you can prepare chicken wingettes in the oven if you are watching fat and calories.

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Roast beef and serving fork

How to Cook a Medium Rare Roast Beef in a Crock-Pot

Crock-Pots are synonymous with long braises and slow stewing -- cooking methods that hold meat above 210 degrees Fahrenheit for several hours -- but if you monitor the internal temperature of a roast, you can remove it when it reaches medium rare, or 130 F.

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Woman barbecuing, close-up, mid section

How to Cook Frozen Fish on a Grill

Cooking frozen fish is safe, but the results don't always turn out quite as well as when you cook defrosted fillets. The exterior of frozen fish often overcooks before the inside fully thaws and cooks through, which is a particular concern with dry-heat methods like grilling or pan searing.

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Chinese bowl filled with uncooked w

How to Cook Steamed Rice in a Crock-Pot

Using a Crock-Pot to prepare a large batch of steamed rice is the next best thing if you don't have a rice cooker. While rice is traditionally steam-cooked on the stove, it's easy to burn the rice if you're not paying close attention.

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mackerel grill

How to Cook Mackerel on the Grill

Mackerel is one example of the fatty fish the American Heart Association recommends eating two or more times per week. It provides protein, unsaturated fats and other nutrients with fewer calories and less saturated fat and cholesterol than red meats.

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Cuban cuisine: traditional homemade tamales

How to Cook Tamales in a Rival Roaster Oven

Tamales are a traditional holiday favorite for many families, but they also make a satisfying meal anytime of the year. Commercial tamales are pre-cooked and only require reheating. A Rival electric roaster works well for this task, especially if you are hosting a large group.

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