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Monday, May 19, 2008 - Page updated at 10:53 AM

The Seattle Times Cooking School

Our cooking series takes you back to school. Gather your ingredients, bring your appetite for learning, and let's cook together.

This Month

KEN LAMBERT / THE SEATTLE TIMES

Preparing Dutch Baby pancakes

What is it that turns four ordinary ingredients -- butter, eggs, milk and flour -- into such a regal creation as the Dutch Baby pancake? Is it magic? A culinary sleight of hand that only the gifted cook can pull off? The Dutch Baby, its golden bowl shape ripe for filling with the freshest seasonal fruit, is indeed a showstopper dish. But it's one that brings even the most unlucky cook success.

General Cooking Information

Cooking A-Z

A quick reference guide.

Kitchen glossary

Just how much is a pinch?

Seafood

A flair for picking fish

Tips for selecting the freshest sea fare -- from fillets to steaks.

Sea treats: Clams

Learn the basics to making a Northwest favorite. Find out how to dig your own clams, shuck them and turn them into tasty meals.

Cooking School "how-to": Shucking a clam

How to prepare flawless fish

Seafood is as versatile as chicken, with a sumptuous range of flavors and melt-in-the-mouth textures.

Meat, Pork & Poultry

Chicken to crow about

Put away those same tired recipes and expand the vocabulary with a few new preparation and cooking techniques. Let's take a look at the possibilities.

Cooking School "how-to": Gorgonzola-Stuffed Chicken

Cooking School "how-to": Chicken Saltimbocca

Roast chicken made golden

The perfect roast chicken will have a crispy skin and moist, flavorful meat. Here's how to get such results in the home kitchen without breaking the budget.

How to cook a pot roast

The humble pot roast can be a nearly effortless meal for family and friends.

A primer on pork

A meat thermometer is a cook's best friend when cooking pork.

Sauces & Marinades

Perfect pan sauces

The foundation of pan sauces are the crusty juices that form on the bottom of the pan when food is browned, sautéed or roasted.

The magic of marinades

Think of a marinade as an aromatic spa for food, bathing it in a blanket of moisture that enhances both taste and texture.

Salads & Dressings

Chef's Salad

Here's a fresh look at a timeless classic. Learn the basics to preparing a chef's salad, how to make the proper cuts, the freshest dressings, and the best produce to use.

Cooking School "how-to": Julienne cut

Cooking School "how-to": Chiffonade

A perfect vinaigrette

It's been said that if you know how to prepare a well-balanced vinaigrette, you know how to cook.

Spices & Seasonings

The secrets of intriguing Indian spices

The culinary traditions of India bring to mind seductive aromas and mysterious flavors. What, for instance, is that elusive taste in the chicken masala you order at your favorite Indian restaurant? It's not anything like the bottled curry powder that's been sitting on the kitchen shelf for years.

Cooking School "how-to": Preparing Indian spices for cooking

Vegetables

Versatile veggies

Take your choice — moist or dry — when cooking the wide array of fresh vegetables that will be out there for the picking in coming months.

Cooking School "how-to": CeCe Sullivan on preparing artichokes for sautéing

How to cook spring vegetables

The arrival of tender spring vegetables opens fresh possibilities. How to get the best from each stalk and leaf is at the heart of this lesson.

Pasta

Pasta 101

It may be passé in low-carb dieters' circles, but pasta makes a great, quick dinner for many. Plus, it's economical. Here's a quick tutorial.

Fruit

Getting it ripe

Learn the science behind what makes fruit ripe and read our tips for picking produce at its peak.

Picking the best berries

Knowing how to bring out the juicy, complex flavors that are the essence of berries is a lesson in simplicity.

Baking

Crisps, cobblers and crumbles

Easier to make than pie, these fragrant desserts offer intense fruit flavor. What separates the three desserts are their toppings, which offer contrasting textures and flavors to the velvety fruit fillings.

Fantastic focaccia

The bread is made with few ingredients and simple preparations, and it can be finished with a variety of creative toppings both savory and sweet.

Traditional Easter breads

Elaborate breads were historically formed and baked as a tribute to the end of sparse winter meals and religious fasting.

Quick breads

Quick breads are leavened with baking powder or soda instead of yeast, so they don't require a rising time, and they're a snap to put together. Sounds simple enough, right?

Traditional Easter breads

Elaborate breads were historically formed and baked as a tribute to the end of sparse winter meals and religious fasting.

Canning

Canning preserves

For someone without a lot of canning experience, strawberry jams are a good starting point.

Canning stone fruits

Northwest stone fruits — peaches, nectarines, cherries, apricots and plums — are perfect partners for the canning process.

Canning tomatoes

When it comes to canning this particular fruit-of-the-vine, there is a catch. The pH level changes rapidly in tomatoes as they mature.

Desserts

Decorating techniques

Dressing up cakes and pastries is easy with these handy tips from our resident home economist.

Cooking School "how-to": Pastry bags

Tools

Nifty tools are the gravy

There's a profusion of products to assist in preparing the Thanksgiving feast. Some are kitchen staples, others worth a splurge. Here's a guide to help you decide.

Pots and pans

A primer

A guide to knives

Choosing the most important tool in the kitchen — the knife — requires care and attention. Here's a look at our tips for buying, sharpening, cleaning and properly storing knives.

Techniques

Cooking with steam

For centuries diverse cultures have prepared flavorful and healthful dishes using this method. Learn how to successfully infuse this style into contemporary cooking.

Braising basics

Here's how the braising technique works.

Oven frying

What we love most about foods such as fried chicken and fish is the savory, crusty skin. Of course we know that all that fat from cooking in oil isn't good for us, so the concept of oven-frying is an attractive one.

Not all pounds are created equal

What's in a pound? That depends on what you're measuring.

Real-world cooking

For this month, our test kitchen duplicates a busy workweek at home.

Video how-tos

CeCe Sullivan demonstrates recipes and techniques:

More Cooking School how-tos

CeCe Sullivan talks you through these basic skills:

Artichokes

Prepare artichoke bottoms for sautéing.

Dumplings

Form dumplings for steaming using wanton wrappers.

Pastry bags

Decorate cakes and cookies, or pipe out whipped cream for pies or cream puffs.

Kneading dough

Here's how to knead yeast doughs such as focaccia.

Clam shucking

Prepare these sea treats for half-shell, pan-frying or deep-frying.

Chiffonade

One of the prettiest cuts in cooking — great for salads.

Julienne

A classic cut for sturdy vegetables, cheeses and meats.

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