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Cooking Couese

Strata with Spinach and Gruyère

Strata–basically a savory bread pudding–is too often soggy and laden with excessive custard and ingredients, rendering a simple casserole an overindulgence in both preparation and consumption. We felt that the perfect strata for breakfast or brunch should contain complementary fillings and flavorings, and just enough richness to satisfy. The solution was to start with the right bread–a thin-crusted supermarket loaf of French or Italian bread beat out sturdier artisan loaves. These softer breads (sold in the bakery department at most supermarkets) soaked up the custard evenly, and were more pleasant to eat when served. With the added step of staling or toasting the bread, we drove off more moisture, and ensured the bread stayed intact. (Note that if your bread is already stale, you can skip this toasting step.) For the savory spinach and shallot filling, we started by squeezing thawed, frozen spinach to remove much of its liquid, then sautéed the vegetables to continue driving off moisture and building deeper flavor. The addition of white wine, reduced down in a skillet to concentrate its jammy flavor and rid it of any boozy bite, added a welcome brightness to an otherwise heavy dish. After layering in the components and weighing the dish down to compact the disparate ingredients into a more cohesive dish, the strata needed to be refrigerated for at least 8 hours and up to overnight. The next day, after a short 20-minute stint on the counter, all the work left to do was bake the strata until the top was lightly golden brown.

Cooking Couese

Vegetarian Dinners

Building a satisfying dinner that doesn’t contain meat can be a challenge for many cooks. Recipes can rely on unfamiliar ingredients—things like brown rice and tofu or mirin and coconut milk. In addition, many vegetarian dishes require new modes of building flavor. In this lesson, you will learn how to build a successful vegetarian dinner. We focus on key vegetarian ingredients; pantry staples, as well as easy techniques for building flavor in meatless dishes. You will learn to prepare a hearty vegetarian chili, a classic Indian curry made with vegetables, and a Japanese-style brown rice bowl with crispy tofu and crunchy vegetables. This lesson is suitable for all kinds of cooks, including those who want to eat healthy vegetarian meals on occasion.

Cooking Couese

Bread Stuffing with Fresh Herbs

Few side dishes are more classic at Thanksgiving than bread stuffing. And few holidays put more use to your oven! Since Thanksgiving can be hectic enough, our stuffing recipe allows you to prepare the stuffing up to two days in advance and only have to bake it in the oven on the day it is to be served. Since it can be difficult to safely cook stuffing inside of a turkey, we cook it outside of the bird, in a baking dish. Covering the stuffing with foil during cooking steams it, mimicking the moist cooking conditions inside a turkey. For a crisp crust and toasty flavor, we remove the foil for the last 20 minutes of baking. Learn all the tricks to our classic stuffing in this online cooking class.

Cooking Couese

Oven-Fried Chicken

The first thing that comes to mind when we think of fried chicken is the shatteringly crisp, ultra-crunchy coating. But one serving of this American classic can with in at over 700 calories and 40 grams of fat. To lighten this dish, we ditched the deep-fryer and turned to the oven instead. In order to get that crunchy, craggy golden exterior, we tried everything from Melba toast crumbs to crushed potato and pita chips. To preserve the chicken’s crunchy coating, we baked it in a moderately hot oven, which also allowed the chicken to cook through perfectly in 40 minutes and remain moist and tender.

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