Here is a collection of cooking terms to refer to. Knowing and understanding basic cooking terminology will help you be more efficient in the kitchen.
Adjust - To change the seasonings in a dish by adding a spice, herb, and so on, after you have tasted the dish to see if it needs more flavoring.
Baste- To moisten foods during cooking with pan drippings or a special sauce to add flavor and to prevent drying.
Beat- To make a mixture smooth by adding air with a brisk whipping or stirring motion, using a spoon or an electric mixer.
Blanch- To precook in boiling water or steam to prepare foods for canning or freezing, or to loosen their skins.
Blend - To process food in an electric blender, or, to thoroughly combine two or more ingredients by hand with a stirring motion to make smooth and uniform mixture.
Bone - To remove the bones, sinew, and gristle from meat, poultry, game, and fish.
Boil- To cook in liquid at boiling temperature (212 degrees F. or 100 degrees C. at sea level) where bubbles rise to the surface and break. For a full rolling boil, bubbles form rapidly throughout the mixture.
Bouillon- A clear soup made by cooking meat, usually beef, together with vegetables and seasonings, and then straining the resulting stock. It can also be prepared from bouillon granules or bouillon cubes.
Bouquet garni- A combination of several herbs, such as parsley, thyme, and bay leaf, either tied in a bunch or put in a small cheesecloth bag and added to stews, soups, and sauces. It can easily be removed at any stage in the cooking.
Braise- To cook slowly with a small amount of liquid in a tightly covered pan on top of the range or in the oven.
Bread- To coat with bread crumbs before cooking.
Broil- To cook by direct heat under a broiler in an electric or gas range.
Broth- Any clear soup usually made with meat or fish stock.
Brown- To cook foods quickly over moderately high heat so that they turn a rich golden brown color.
Butterfly- To split foods such as shrimp and steak through the middle without completely separating sections and then spreading the sections to resemble a butterfly.
Can - To preserve food by sealing it in airtight containers. The food is processed either in a water bath or pressure canner.
Candy-To cook in sugar or syrup, when applied to sweet potatoes and carrots. For fruit or fruit peel, cook in heavy syrup until translucent and well coated.
Caramelize- To melt sugar slowly over low heat until it becomes brown in color.
Carve- To slice meat or poultry into serving-size pieces.
Chill- To refrigerate foods or put them in a bowl filled with ice until they are cold.
Chop- To cut into pieces about the size of peas with a knife, chopper, blender, or food processor.
Clarify- To make liquids clear by filtering, such as stock or broth, or butter.
Coat- To evenly cover food with crumbs, flour, or a batter.
Coddle- To cook food in water just below the boiling point, as in coddled eggs.
Cool- To remove from heat and let stand at room temperature. When a recipe says, "cool quickly," the food should be chilled or set in a bowl of ice water to quickly reduce its temperature.
Cream- To beat a mixture with a spoon or electric mixer until it becomes soft and smooth. When applied to combining shortening and sugar, the mixture is beaten until light and fluffy, depending on the proportion of sugar to shortening.
Crimp- To decorate the edges of a pie crust by pinching the top and bottom crusts together with your fingers.
Crisp-tender- To cook food to the stage where it is tender but still crisp.
Cube- To cut into pieces that are the same size on each side - at least 1/2 inch.
Cut in- To mix shortening with dry ingredients using a pastry blender or two knives.
Degrease- To remove the fat from food. Fat rises to the top of food, making it easier to scoop the fat out.
Deseed- To remove the inedible or fibrous seeds of fruits and vegetables.
Dice- To cut food into small cubes of uniform size and shape - between 1/8 and 1/4 inch.
Dilute- To make a food weaker by adding water or other liquid.
Dollop- To add a small amount, such as a scoop or spoonful, of a semiliquid food to garnish another food.
Dot - To distribute small bits of food over another food, such as dotting an apple pie with butter before baking.
Dredge- To coat food lightly with a dry ingredient such as flour, bread crumbs, or sugar.
Drizzle- To sprinkle drops of liquid lightly over food.
Dust- To sprinkle foods lightly with sugar, flour, etc.
Fillet- To cut lean meat or fish into pieces without bones.
Finely shred- To rub food across a fine shredding surface to form very narrow strips.
Flake- To break food lightly into small pieces.
Flute- To make small decorative impressions in food. Pie crusts are fluted by pressing the pastry edge into various shapes.
Fold- To add ingredients gently to a mixture. Using a spatula, cut down through the mixture; cut across the bottom of the bowl, and then up and over, close to the surface. Turn the bowl frequently for even distribution.
Freeze- To reduce the temperature of foods so that the liquid content becomes solidified.
Fry - To cook in hot fat. To pan fry, cook food in a small amount of fat. To deep-fat fry, cook the food immersed in a large amount of fat.
Garnish- To decorate the served dish with small pieces of food that have distinctive texture or color, such as parsley.
Glaze- To brush a mixture on a food to give it a glossy appearance or a hard finish.
Grate- To rub food across a grating surface that separates the food into very fine particles.
Grease- To coat a pan with fat to keep foods from sticking.
Grill- To cook food over hot coals
Grind- To use a food grinder to cut a food into very fine pieces.
Hull- To remove the stem of strawberries by hand or with a special implement called a huller.
Husk- To remove the outside leaves from ears of corn.
Julienne- To cut vegetables, fruits, or meats into match like strips.
Knead- To work dough with the heel of your hand in a pressing and folding motion.
Line- To cover a pan or cookie sheet with paper to prevent foods from sticking.
Marinate- To allow a food to stand in a liquid to add flavor.
Mince- To chop food into very small, irregularly shaped pieces.
Mix - To blend ingredients with a stirring motion using a spoon or fork.
Mull- To heat beverages such as red wine and cider with spices and sugar.
Panbroil- To cook uncovered, removing fat as it accumulates.
Panfry- To cook food in a small amount of hot fat.
Parboil- To partially cook food in boiling water before completely cooking it by some other process.
Pare- To remove the skin from fruits and vegetables (the same as peeling.) Use a paring knife or vegetable peeler.
Partially set- To chill gelatin mixtures to the point in setting when the consistency resembles raw egg whites.
Peel- To remove the outer layer or skin from a fruit or vegetable.
Pickle- To preserve or flavor meat, fish, vegetables, etc. in a brine, or a solution made of vinegar, spices, and other seasonings.
Pit - To remove the seed from a piece of fruit.
Plump- To soak food (such as raisins or dried fruit) to make it soft and tender.
Pound- To flatten food, especially meat, to make it thinner and more tender.
Poach- To cook food in hot liquid, being careful that the food holds its shape while cooking.
Precook- To cook food partially or completely before the final cooking or reheating.
Preheat- To set the oven to a desired temperature so it is hot enough to receive food.
Preserve- To prepare meat, fruit, vegetables, etc. for future use by salting, boiling in syrup, soaking in a brine, dehydrating, curing, smoking, canning, or freezing.
Prick- To pierce food so it won't explode, rise expand, or shrink unnecessarily as it cooks.
Puree- To use a blender, food processor, or food mill to convert a food into a liquid or heavy paste.
Reconstitute- To rehydrate dried food (such as dried mushrooms or sun-dried tomatoes) by soaking it in water or other liquid.
Reduce- To rapidly boil a mixture to evaporate liquid so that the mixture becomes thicker.
Render- To separate solid fat such as suet or lard from meat tissue by melting.
Roast- To cook a meat, uncovered, in the oven. Pot-roasting refers to braising a meat roast.
Saute- To brown or cook food in a small amount of hot fat.
Scald- To bring food to a temperature just below boiling so that tiny bubbles form at the edges of the pan.
Scallop- To bake food, usually in a casserole, with a sauce or other liquid.
Score- To cut narrow grooves or slits partway through the outer surface of a food.
Sear- To brown foods over high heat to seal in juices and create a rich color.
Season- To add flavor to food by adding salt, pepper, herbs, or spices.
Shred- To rub food on a shredder to form long, narrow pieces.
Sift- To put one or more dry ingredients through a sieve or sifter to incorporate air and break up lumps.
Simmer- To cook food in liquid over low heat at a temperature of 185 degrees F. (85 degrees C.) to 210 degrees F. (99 degrees C.) where bubbles form at a slow rate and burst before reaching the surface.
Slice- To cut food into evenly shaped pieces.
Steam- To cook food in steam. A small amount of boiling water is used and more water is added during steaming if necessary.
Steep- To extract color, flavor, or other qualities from a substance by leaving it in liquid just below the boiling point.
Sterilize- To destroy microorganisms by boiling, dry heating, or steaming.
Stew- To simmer food slowly in a small amount of liquid.
Stiff peaks- To beat egg whites until peaks stand up straight when the beaters are lifted from the mixer bowl, but are still moist and glossy.
Stir- To mix ingredients with a spoon in a circular or figure-eight motion until well combined.
Stir-fry- To cook food quickly in a small amount of hot fat, stirring constantly.
Strain- To separate solid from liquids through a strainer or fine sieve.
Toss- To mix ingredients lightly by lifting and dropping them with a spoon or a spoon and fork.
Whip- To beat food lightly and rapidly, incorporating air into the mixture to make it light and to increase its volume.

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