Guide to stir-frying and deep-frying, Guide to using the secondary cooking rac – Kenmore 141.1664 User Manual

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Guide to Stir-Frying and Deep-Frying

STIR-FRYING TECHNIQUES

This method of cooking is popular around the world and

can be easily accomplished outdoors on your Kenmore
Elite gas grill. It's a quick and healthful way of prepar­
ing a complete meal using meat, poultry or seafood in
infinite combinations with other interesting ingredients
like vegetables, rice or noodles.

Preparing to Stir-fry

Although it is possible to stir fry in other dishes, the
wok is your best tool. Its high sides enable the cook to
stir food without spillage. Its construction allows you to

cook quickly at high temperatures, with instant control

of heat which is essential for successful stir frying.

Food preparation

Slice meat and poultry into long thin strips and cube

fish fillets. Remove ail fat from meat and poultry and

cut large vegetables into even slices or cubes.

Marinate foodsfor extra flavor and tenderness. Marinat­
ing times will vary for red meat, fish and or various
cuts. Less tender cuts of meat should be marinated
longer. Remember to always chill marinating food in

the refrigerator prior to cooking.

Stir-fry meats, poultry or fish first. Next, add hard

vegetables like carrots. Then continue with softer
vegetables like snowpeas and peppers. To ensure even

cooking, continually stir and toss the food in the wok
using a wooden spoon or spatula.

Tips for Stir-frying

Place the wokdirectly over a high heat on your grill or side
burner. Add only a small amount of food at a time to

ensure fast cooking and also to allow the wok to reheat

between ingredients.

DEEP-FRYING TECHNIQUES

A wide variety of foods can be deep-fried outdoors on
your grill, from potatoes, to seafood and chicken.

Deep-frying uses a large portion of oil, preferably

saturated. The outdoor location is ideal for deep-frying
as smoke, grease and smells reach for the sky—not
the ceiling of your kitchen.

Preparing to Deep-fry

Deep-fry on your grill using a cooking pan or wok, over

direct heat with the grill lid raised.

Fill the cooking pan no more than half full of vegetable

or corn oil. start with low heat, then raise the heat
gradually. Check the temperature of the oil carefully
with a frying thermometer or test with a cube of bread.
The cube of bread should brown in about 30 seconds
for most cooking needs. A temperature between 350
and 400 degrees is optimal for preparing the majority
of deep-fried foods.

Food Preparation

Foods being deep-fried taste better when coated with

either batter or breadcrumbs to add flavor and prevent
moisture from escaping.

Tips for Deep-frying

Wear an insulated cooking glove and slowly lower
foods into the hot oil using a wire scoop or stainless
steel tongs. Add only a small quantity of food to the
oil, allow it to cook, then repeat with another small
quantity. This ensures the oil doesn't drop in
temperature.Once the food is cooked, remove it
carefully and drain onto a paper towel. Turn the heat
off as soon as you have finished deep-frying and allow
the pan to cool. When the oil is cool, remove all
remnants of fried foods by straining it through a fine
metal sieve. Once the oil is quite cool, store it in a
dean bottle for future use.

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Guide to Using the Secondary Cooking Rac

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Vegetables are generally easy to cook on the grill. The

cooking rack makes it convenient because you can

still use the main cooking area while the vegetables

are suspended above the grids.

Pre-cook hard vegetables by briefly boiling or
microwaving them before cooking on the grill .Wrap

vegetables in a double thickness of foil to protect them
while cooking on the grill. Then, remove the foil if
desired, 10-15 minutes before the end of cooking,

brush vegetables with butter or oil and finish cooking.

The cooking rack can be used for purposes other than

just the obvious. Consider using it for warming French

bread, garlic bread, croissants or even bagels.

A small whole fish wrapped in foil also cooks well in
the cooking rack. Parcels of seafood such as scal­

lops, prawns and sliced fish fillets prepared in a sauce
and portioned into small foil wraps cooks well this

way, too.

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