Welcome to Cooking Guide
German Cooking Recipe Article
. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.
Cooking With A Dutch Oven
from:Dutch ovens are used to make long, slow cooked dishes such as roasts, stews, and casseroles. There are two basic types one for use over a campfire, and one that can be used over a traditional stove or oven.
The camping version of a Dutch oven has three legs, a wire handle, and a slightly convex lid so that coals can rest on top and bottom for uniform heating like an oven. These kinds of ovens are made out of cast iron or aluminum. Stove top ovens are flat on bottom and have two handles. These ovens are made of bare or enameled cast iron, aluminum or ceramic.
Dutch ovens are best used for long, slow cooking like for roasts, stews and casseroles. However, over a campfire Dutch ovens can properly bake biscuits, breads, cakes, pies and pizzas. These containers can be stacked for five or six high.
Dutch ovens can be challenging to regulate the temperature especially over a campfire. A general rule to use is that individuals want the oven to be at about three hundred fifty degrees. One way to estimate that temperature is to take the size of the oven in inches then double that to get the number of briquettes to use. Briquettes should be placed in a circle no less than a half inch from the bottom of the oven. For on top of the oven briquettes should be placed in a checkerboard fashion. For soups and stews place one third of the briquettes on top and two thirds on bottom. For breads, biscuits, and cakes place two thirds on top and one third on bottom. For meats and casseroles split evenly briquettes on top and bottom. Be careful with heating individuals can always add more, but once food is burned it is burned.
There are several tools that individuals need for using Dutch ovens. The first is wooden spoons. Metal utensils can scratch the protective coating and plastic ones will melt from the heat. Having camp or welders gloves will be beneficial to have. Charcoal starters make starting a fire easier because they do not require lighter fluid just newspapers and a match. Long handled tongs make moving the briquettes easier and safer. Lifters or hooks make lifting and handling the lid easier. A lid stand is handy to place lids on while individuals are stirring food. A whisk broom keeps ashes away from the food. Cooking table allows an individual’s Dutch oven to be off the ground. A dust cover protects the Dutch oven when it is not in use.
German Cooking Recipe Specific links
German Cooking Recipe News
Kiwi writers' time to shine
The Kiwi publishing industry is gearing up for its equivalent of the Rugby World Cup, backed by a host of other professions keen to make the most of an unprecedented opportunity to showcase New Zealand writers.
Read more...Dondero: Lentils and meatballs are enhanced by seasonal kale
This dish is, frankly, a composite. In more erudite phrasing, it's a chimera, more artistically a pastiche. Bear with me. I'm trying to make lentils and ground meat sound interesting.
Read more...Staying In: Tips for TV, cooking and more
Staying in? Here are some suggestions to help you make the most of your evening at home. Our staff has come up with all sorts of options, including the best of what's on television, a DVD to watch, a book you might want...
Read more...Recipe cards keep memories warm over generations
Long before we searched online, recipes were scribbled on cards, tucked in boxes and kept on a shelf in Mom's kitchen.
Read more...Top of the pots
"I have only ever got one fan letter and that was from a 74-year-old nun", says Donal Skehan. "She was looking for my recipe for chocolate peanut butter squares. But I do get a lot of emails from people looking for me to come and do demos."
Read more...







