Thought of the day⌠An onion can make people cry, but there has never been a vegetable invented to make them laugh. ~Will Rogers
Preface: I have a recipe I will be sharing in a few days and todayâs post as well as tomorrowâs is âprepâ for that recipe. đ
As youâve probably deduced by my In the Kitchen posts, Iâm not a professional cook. Nor have I had any classes. In 1983 I had my first apartment and I bought my first cookbook (Betty Crocker). Then in 1984, I bought The Joy of Cooking. Since then I have accumulated a lot of cookbooks over the years. I am addicted to cookbooks! As you may have noticed from the recipes Iâve posted, I also have recipe software (MacGourmet Deluxe).
Admittedly, I havenât looked at all my cookbooks in any great detail. Last year Hubby bought me an updated version of The Joy of Cooking. At Thanksgiving, Mum (Hubbyâs mom) and I sat and compared the two editions page-by-page. As I was flipping through the pages and I had an Ooops! moment⌠I realized something embarrassing and sat there and laughed at myself. Itâs that embarrassment I want to share with you⌠(brave arenât I?)âŚ
I used to hate cutting onions. I used to cry soooo much I couldnât see!
For the last year or so, I have cut onions with no tears. The Offspring and I used to watch The F Word on BBC America. Donât worry, âFâ is for âFoodâ! It is a Gordan Ramsay show â yeah, shocking that the âF wordâ is for âfoodâ, given he is usually bleeped on his shows for dropping the âF bombââŚ
But Iâm not hear to talk about Ramsayâs bad language⌠In each show Ramsay would have a section devoted to helping people get back into the kitchen instead of eating fast food. He had a segment where he helped a woman learn how to cut an onion. Intrigued, I went to the showâs web site and found a video.
OMGosh! I couldnât believe how simple it was⌠I felt soooo dumb!!! đ Especially since if I had only looked in any detail at my 1984 copy of The Joy of Cooking I would have known how to do it! UGH! I was dumbfounded! For almost 30 years I cried every time I cut an onion. And I hadnât yet seen Julie & Julia and seen that Julia Child had learned how to do it and itâs in her first book (which I didnât own until after the movie).
In the meantime, if you donât know how to cut an onion without tears⌠let me show you.
Before we begin, sharpen your knife. It is very important to always start with a sharp knife.
Take an onion and cut off the top â do not peel it.
Lay the onion on the flat part and cut it in half through the root.
For each half, peel the skin off. If you need, take off next layer, too. Also remove any excess root strings.
The lay one half on largest flat part and start cutting in strips â DO NOT cut too close to the root (see where my knife is in relation to the root). Itâs the root that causes the tears.
After slicing across the onion, turn it and then make a couple of slices horizontally â be careful not to cut yourself.
Then start to cut from the side. Again, DO NOT cut too close to the root.
When you close to the root, turn the onion onto the flat side and cut more.
When youâre done, all you will have is the root part â and NO tears! đ Toss the root in your compost pail and start the other half.
Have you ever used this method before? If so, whereâd you learn it? If not, do you have method that keeps you from crying? If not, go try and come back and share your experience.
Lesson: Donât be like me⌠if you buy a cookbook that has more than recipes (like The Joy of Cooking)⌠flip through the pages⌠you may be surprised what you find. đ
Have you ever had an Ooooops moment when looking through a cookbook?