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Celebrity
Chef Jamie Oliver Shares a Favorite Cooking
Technique
(ARA) - Jamie Oliver, Food Network star and
best-selling cookbook author, is on a mission --
to make cooking at home easy and fun for
everyone. He bills his new book, “Jamie’s
Kitchen,” as a “cooking course for everyone.”
Armed with this cookbook and his new line of
pots and pans from T-FAL, The Jamie Oliver
Professional Series, there is no technique a new
cook can’t master.
Jamie Oliver offers the following tips for one
of his favorite and most healthy cooking
techniques, sautéing, or what he calls
“pan-frying”:
1. Get Yourself a Pan and Make It Hot
“The single biggest mistake that new cooks make
is cooking in a cold pan,” Oliver explains. “You
must heat the pan before you start cooking. If
you start to cook before the pan is hot enough,
the food steams instead of caramelizing and
frying. You want the heat of the pan to sear in
the juices, making the food taste better.”
Oliver has just worked with T-FAL to design his
own line of stainless steel cookware, the Jamie
Oliver Professional Series, which comes with
either pure stainless or nonstick coated sauté
pans. Oliver says he often uses nonstick at
home, because some dishes are simply easier to
cook on a non-stick surface. The new Jamie
Oliver Professional Series nonstick sauté pans
feature T-FAL’s Thermo-Spot heat indicator that
helps home cooks tell when the pan is ready. It
turns bright red when the pan is ready to go.
“My wife loves my new nonstick pans because
they’re easy to clean and the cool little red
Thermo-Spot lets her know when it’s ready to go.
Her cooking has already improved,” he says.
2. Size Matters
“When it comes to frying pans, size matters! If
your pan is too small, the ingredients will
crowd each other, and they’ll end up steaming
instead of sautéing. But if the pan’s too big,
all those great pan juices will end up
evaporating too fast and you may burn what
you’re cooking,” Oliver points out. “So be sure
to use the right size pan for the amount of
ingredients you have. Also, look for some key
features in the pan such as a good heavy bottom
that distributes the heat evenly, shallow with
rounded sides to make food easy to toss, and an
easy-to-hold handle -- long enough to be
comfortable to grasp, not slippery, and cool to
the touch even when the pan is hot.”
The Jamie Oliver Professional Series by T-FAL
was created with input from Oliver for optimal
cooking and includes all of these features.
They’re heavy-bottomed stainless steel pans with
handles that stay cool and have a soft insert
for a comfortable grip. They’re oven-safe so you
can sauté on the top of the stove and then
finish the recipe by baking or broiling it in
the oven, up to 500 degrees F.
3. Want Less Fat? Use Nonstick Pans
“Using nonstick pans lets you use less oil or
butter, which means healthy cooking. To get
great flavor, what you really need is a good
sear. And a good sear doesn’t necessarily
require lots of fat in the pan,” notes Oliver.
“When you do this properly, not only do you end
up with glorious, flavorful food, but you also
seal the juices and the nutrients right in with
the flavor and you’re cooking healthy food as
well.”
The Jamie Oliver Professional Series nonstick
pans are extremely durable and feature T-Fal’s
Metal Safe Nonstick coating. Oliver tested these
pans in his London restaurant and they stood up
to the hard knocks of a professional kitchen.
4. Your Mum was Right! The Gear’s the Thing
“You don’t have to go crazy buying equipment,
all you need to cook well is a good set of pots
and pans (I’m partial to my own!), a couple of
good knives, including an eight-inch chopper, a
heavy mortar and pestle, a set of tongs and a
speed peeler,” says Oliver.
5. So What’s for Dinner?
“This is the fun part -- planning what goes into
the pan. Think seasonally and try to shop for
organic products if you can when you’re at the
market,” Oliver urges. “Be intuitive; pan-frying
is a fast cooking method, so you want things
that are thinly sliced and cook quickly (unless
you are finishing in the oven.) You can also
score thicker cuts of meat and fish to speed up
the cooking time and add more surface area to
the food. But what gets me going? Chicken
marinated in some fresh herbs and garlic that
you’ve pounded in a mortar and pestle. Steaks
that have been liberally seasoned with salt and
freshly cracked pepper. Or this fantastic salmon
dish that I am including a recipe for below. “Go
ahead guys. Get stuck in!”
Jamie Oliver’s Pan Roast Salmon with Green
and White Asparagus, Rosemary, Wrapped in
Bundles with Pancetta and Red and Yellow Cherry
Tomatoes
“The lovely thing about this recipe is that
everything in the pan takes the same time to
cook,” Oliver comments. “Try to get the salmon
cut no more than an inch thick or it might need
a little longer.”
Serves 2
16 spears of asparagus - green or white or a
mixture of both
2 sprigs of fresh rosemary
6 slices of pancetta
2 thin salmon fillets, weighing around 7 ounces
each
sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
olive oil
a handful of red and yellow cherry tomatoes
a small handful of Kalamata olives
1/2 a lemon
Preheat your nonstick T-FAL frying pan until the
Thermo-Spot turns solid red.
Snap the woody bottoms off the asparagus spears
and divide the tops into 2 bunches. Add a sprig
of rosemary and wrap each bunch up in 3 slices
of pancetta to form a neat bundle.
Season the salmon steaks with sea salt and
freshly ground black pepper and drizzle with a
splash of olive oil. Place the salmon in the hot
pan with the cherry tomatoes, the olives and the
two bundles of asparagus and fry on each side,
turning the asparagus over in the pan from time
to time so that the pancetta and salmon brown
evenly.
By the time the salmon's cooked, the pancetta
should be lovely and crisp, the asparagus just
cooked and the cherry tomatoes softened and
bursting with sweet sticky juices. Squeeze the
1/2 lemon over the whole dish to finish off, and
tuck in!
Courtesy of ARA Content
EDITOR’S NOTE: Recipe is printed with
permission, Jamie Oliver, copyright 2003. For
more information on the Jamie Oliver
Professional Series by T-FAL, call Julie Kronish,
(212) 279-6932, or visit the T-FAL Web site at
www.t-falusa.com.
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