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26 foods you should learn to cook

 
26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che
26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese
Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled cheese. The key tip is that you should toast one side of each slice, sandwich the cheese between those toasted sides, then toast the other sides.
www.seriouseats.com/2013/04/how-to-make-the-best-grilled-cheese-sandwich-slideshow.html#show-319701


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

2. A Truly Perfect Roast Chicken
Thomas Keller’s recipe calls for super-high heat, three ingredients — chicken, salt, and pepper — and teaches you essential techniques that will last a lifetime.
www.buzzfeed.com/christinebyrne/roast-chicken-rules


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

3. Basic Roasted Veggies
Set the oven to 450°F, toss veggies with oil and kosher salt, spread out on a baking sheet so they aren’t too crowded, and roast until they look/taste good. The only trick is that you sort of have to understand which veggies take a little longer to cook — harder veggies like carrots, potatoes, broccoli, etc., take longer than soft mushrooms and tomatoes — so you’d cut those into smaller pieces so everything cooks at the same rate. Basic recipe below.
www.tablefortwoblog.com/roasted-vegetables/


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

4. Fudgy Homemade Brownies
First recipe is from One Sweet Appetite, although a lot of people also love Smitten Kitchen's recipe.
onesweetappetite.com/brownies/
smittenkitchen.com/blog/2010/01/best-cocoa-brownies/


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

5. Macaroni and Cheese From Scratch
You don't even need a recipe.
www.buzzfeed.com/emofly/how-to-make-better-mac-n-cheese


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

6. Perfectly Seared Steak
Pat it very dry, season it, cook it over very high heat in the right kind of fat, let it rest. As for "doneness" — buy a thermometer, poke it with your finger constantly, and practice makes perfect.
www.buzzfeed.com/christinebyrne/how-to-sear-the-perfect-steak-for-your-valentine


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

7. Killer Guacamole
Authentic guacamole doesn’t have garlic or tons of lime juice in it. (Personally, I think tons of both makes it heavenly, so I add it anyway.) The most important thing is to choose avocados that are super ripe and salt aggressively.
www.bonappetit.com/test-kitchen/cooking-tips/article/want-to-make-better-guacamole-step-1


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

8. Easy Homemade Tomato Sauce
Tomato sauce is just canned tomatoes with some kind of seasoning that you add cooked together for a while to let the flavor develop. Marcella Hazan’s famous tomato sauce recipe just has you simmer canned tomatoes with a butter and an onion cut in half. That works. So does sautéing a chopped onion, maybe some garlic, then adding the tomatoes and simmering for a while, like the second recipe from Bon Appetit. You can also get more complex by sautéing even more veggies (carrots, celery) and adding red wine and meat by clicking on the last link.
food52.com/recipes/13722-marcella-hazan-s-tomato-sauce-with-onion-and-butter, www.bonappetit.com/recipe/pasta-al-pomodoro, www.buzzfeed.com/christinebyrne/how-to-make-tomato-sauce


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

9. The Best Chocolate Chip Cookeis
The New York Times did a great story in 2008 where they tested and retested different chocolate chip cookie methods to “assemble a new archetypal cookie recipe.” The results indicated that letting your dough rest overnight before baking is essential.
www.averiecooks.com/2012/11/new-york-times-chocolate-chips-cookies-from-jacques-torres.html
And here's another one from IMaedThisForYou (sorry not really sure how to tag people, it's only my second post. ^.^)
www.food.com/recipe/extraordinary-chocolate-chip-cookies-258922


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

10. Slow-Cooked Pulled Pork
This is very easy with a slow cooker (aka Crock-Pot) — via the first link. If you don’t have a slow cooker, use the second one to do it in your oven and leave yourself lots of time.
www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/food-network-kitchens/slow-cooker-pulled-pork-sandwiches-recipe.html, www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2013/10/easy-oven-baked-pulled-pork-sandwiches.html


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

11. Easy Frittata
This really comes in handy when you have big group of people to serve breakfast to, or when you have a lot of vegetables and you’re not sure how to use them quickly. Just sauté veggies, pour in whisked eggs, cook it on the stovetop for a while, then stick it in the oven for a few minutes.
allthegoodblognamesaretaken.com/2012/savory-bacon-kale-frittata/


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

12. Pan-Roasted Chicken Thighs
This recipe is hands down the cheapest and quickest way to make chicken that’s delicious — way better than anything you do to chicken breasts, trust me. Follow this basic recipe. You will use it a million times.
www.bonappetit.com/recipe/perfect-pan-roasted-chicken-thighs


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

13. Simple Sautéed Greens
Vegetable oil in pan, get it nice and hot, push chopped greens around in there for a while, season with salt until you like the way they taste. Works for spinach, kale, collards, mustard greens, anything. You can sauté shallot, garlic, or onion in the pan before you add the greens if you want, but you don’t have to. You can add lemon or vinegar and some red pepper, but you don’t have to.
food52.com/blog/9579-how-to-make-sauteed-greens-without-a-recipe


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

14. Fluffy Pancakes
Knowing how to do this will make you a Sunday morning hero so many times in your life.
www.buzzfeed.com/emofly/best-buttermilk-pancake-recipe


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

15. Mussels in White Wine Sauce
You’re going to be shocked by how easy it is to cook mussels — and clams work exactly the same way. Add crusty bread and you’re in heaven.
www.melangery.com/2012/02/mussels-in-white-wine-sauce-with-onions.html


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

16. Whipped Cream
A very simple thing that is insanely delicious: Put heavy cream in a bowl, whip it (with a whisk — you can do it, don’t give up, it doesn’t take THAT long; or with an electric mixer) until it thickens, then add a little sugar. Pair with strawberries for the best simple dessert of all time.
www.foodnetwork.com/how-to/articles/how-to-make-whipped-cream-a-step-by-step-guide.html


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

17. A Good Burger
A big part of this will be learning how to clean and fire up a grill, when the grill is hot enough, how to control the heat, which just takes research (i.e., watch a bunch of videos online) and practice. But start now with this very basic recipe for burgers.
www.foodnetwork.com/how-to/photos/how-to-make-a-perfect-burger.html


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

18. Creamy Mashed Potatoes
To make mashed potatoes, you cut raw potatoes into equal-size pieces (you can peel the potatoes or not), cover them with an inch of cold water, bring it to a boil and cook them until they can be easily pierced with a knife, then drain. Meanwhile heat some butter and cream (or milk, or half-and-half) together in another pot, combine that with the cooked potatoes and lots of salt and mash it all together. You can add more milk, butter, and salt until it tastes good if you need to. Lots of people add things like garlic, spices, sour cream, even cheese to the butter/cream mixture for extra deliciousness (like the restaurant-style garlic mashed potatoes recipe). But if you want to just start with the very basics, use the second recipe link.
www.deliciousasitlooks.com/2012/05/restaurant-style-garlic-mashed-potatoes.html, www.cookingclassy.com/2012/11/moms-mashed-potatoes/


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

19. Basic Blanched Vegetables
Step 1: Bring a big pot of water to a boil.
Step 2: Salt the water.
Step 3: Once the water’s really boiling, put a couple handfuls of one kind of vegetable in the water for about 1–3 minutes (depends on the veggie how much time you’ll need). Be careful not to crowd them/add too many vegetables at once. If you’re cooking a lot of vegetables, work in batches; you want the water to stay at consistent boil the whole time.


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

Step 4: Taste one of the vegetables after a minute. For bigger veggies like broccoli, if you don’t want to taste it you can insert a small knife into the thickest part of the stem — if the knife slides in and out easily, it’s done.
Step 5: Remove the veggies once they are cooked using tongs or a slotted basket or spoon. (You probably don’t want to just dump the veggies into a colander and lose all your boiling water, because you can cook several batches of different different kinds of vegetables — green beans, then asparagus, then peas — in the same pot of boiling water and make one hell of a delicious vegetable salad. So cook the smallest thing that you wouldn’t want to fish out with a spoon last — like peas — then you can dump the water.)


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

Step 6: Immediately “shock” your cooked veggies: Put them straight from the boiling water into a bowl of ice water — use lots of ice — right away to stop the cooking and so they stay green and bright. Try this recipe for practice, although if you can’t find fava beans (and they are annoying to peel anyways), just use snap peas, snow peas, or green beans.


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

20. Rice on Your Stovetop
Use this recipe (www.thehungrymouse.com/2013/06/27/how-to-cook-perfect-white-rice-on-the-stove/). The Kitchn also has great step-by-step instructions for a basic pot of rice (www.thekitchn.com/how-to-cook-rice-on-the-stove-44333).


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

21. Healthy Baked Fish
If you’re really scared of cooking fish, it’s best to do it in a little pouch made of foil or parchment because that’s the most forgiving method. But making a marinade/sauce and baking it straight up like the recipe in the photo above is great too.
www.buzzfeed.com/christinebyrne/fish-in-parchment-paper, natashaskitchen.com/2012/06/08/baked-salmon-with-garlic-and-dijon/


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

22. Hearty Beef Stew
This is a good recipe to learn early because it teaches you the basics of braising: Sear meat on all its sides in a hot pot, take it out, sauté some onions in that pot, add a little liquid (broth, wine, whatever) and scrape up brown stuff, put the meat back in with lots of stock and some wine and maybe herbs, and simmer on low for a while. Add vegetables like potatoes, carrots, and peas (that you want to retain a certain bite) toward the end so they cook until just tender and don’t get mushy. Follow this classic recipe from CHOW or the very similar and amazing one from Gourmet.
www.chow.com/recipes/30301-easy-beef-stew, www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/Beef-Stew-with-Potatoes-and-Carrots-350935


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

23. A Simple Cake for Special Occasions
To make a cake, you need an electric mixer and some kind of baking pan. The easiest cake in the world is a loaf cake because it’s just, like, a loaf, but it absolutely still counts as a thoughtful gesture if it’s someone’s birthday or something. And they are delicious. The first recipe a great vanilla loaf cake from Dorie Greenspan, queen of baking recipes, but don't forget Nigella Lawson’s dense chocolate loaf cake.
parade.condenast.com/125956/doriegreenspan/123-bake-simple-loaf-cake/, food52.com/recipes/20091-nigella-lawson-s-dense-chocolate-loaf-cake


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

24. Basic Frosting
Buttercream frosting is your basic cupcake/cake frosting that spreads around like magic and tastes creamy and delicious. Most frosting recipes call for a stand mixer (because it takes a while to beat the butter so it’s nice to be able to walk away), but you don’t really need one if you have an electric hand mixer. The basic thing is that you’re going to beat butter for a long time in the bowl and then add powdered sugar. Here’s a vanilla buttercream frosting recipe, a classic chocolate buttercream frosting, a slightly creamier, super-fudgy frosting, and a cream cheese frosting.
www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/quick-vanilla-buttercream-frosting-recipe.html, www.browneyedbaker.com/2010/10/22/best-chocolate-buttercream-cupcakes/, smittenkitchen.com/blog/2009/08/espresso-chiffon-cake-with-fudge-frosting/, www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/cream-cheese-frosting-recipe.html.


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

25. Easy Salad Dressing
You know when you’re at an Italian restaurant and there’s a bowl of olive oil with a little floating pool of balsamic vinegar in it for you to dip your bread in? That’s basically salad dressing that hasn’t been whisked. Once you know the basics, you can truly make any salad dressing recipe, and the basics are:

• The ratio is more or less 1 part acid to 3 parts oil. Acid means vinegar or lemon juice, usually.
• You start with acid then whisk in oil.

Follow this simple recipe. www.marthastewart.com/336993/basic-vinaigrette


26 foods you should learn to cook. 1. A Deliciously Melty Grilled Cheese Serious Eats has a great step-by-step slideshow of how to make the ultimate grilled che

26. A Good, Unfussy Cheese Plate
This isn’t exactly “cooking” per se, but obviously it’s very important because cheese. You don’t have to serve a prepacked cubed cheese situation at a party ever again. There is another way, and it doesn’t require a fancy cheese shop.
www.buzzfeed.com/rachelysanders/great-cheese-plate-at-a-regular-supermarket

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Submitted: 05/31/2015
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#32 - hoeschy (05/31/2015) [-]
> add to fav   
> pretend I will lern to cook
> add to fav
> pretend I will lern to cook
User avatar #36 to #32 - therealfishyxander (05/31/2015) [-]
every god damn time
#45 to #32 - anon (05/31/2015) [-]
I just thought the same!
#152 to #32 - midothegreat (05/31/2015) [-]
I literally just did that before going to the comments   
now you made me aware of my delusion
I literally just did that before going to the comments
now you made me aware of my delusion
#7 - onipure (05/31/2015) [-]
thanks for this, im actually moving out from my parants place to my new apartment tomorrow so thank you for giving me nice food to cook in my new apartment
thanks for this, im actually moving out from my parants place to my new apartment tomorrow so thank you for giving me nice food to cook in my new apartment
User avatar #158 to #7 - phantomseeker (05/31/2015) [-]
Good luck with moving out, man, here's a little piece of advice, if it helps; you'd probably be tempted to buy cheaper cooking stuff, like pots, pans etc. to save money, but don't - spend the money on decent equipment, they'll be easier to clean and cook with, and you'll make better food with them
#71 to #7 - jasir (05/31/2015) [-]
After your first failed attempt you will print the pictures and stare at them while eating microwaved beans.
#102 to #7 - cleu (05/31/2015) [-]
If you know how to make scrambled eggs, add a dash of soy sauce and a bit of sugar/honey to them before you beat the eggs and then you can have some amazing eggs. be careful about cooking them too long though cos soy sauce can burn easy so only use a little bit.
User avatar #103 to #102 - onipure (05/31/2015) [-]
another good coking advice, thank you my fellow funnyjunker <3
User avatar #129 to #103 - advice (05/31/2015) [-]
even more cooking advice: soy sauce is perfect, use it on everything
#39 to #7 - Haruhi (05/31/2015) [-]
Here's a recipe to make rice pilaf for you that can go with just about any meat dish:
Things you'll need:
Rice (I prefer jasmine) 1 cup
Chicken stock (2 cups) (low sodium)
bay leafs
salt and pepper
unsalted butter
Onion

Pre-heat oven to 325
1. Dice half an onion
2.Put pan on stove on medium heat, and melt around a tbsp of butter in the pan
3. sweat the diced onion until the color is gone. Dont forget to season with salt and pepper
4. Add your cup of rice, and stir to coat the rice with the butter and sweated onion.
5. Add 2 cups of chicken stock and one bay leaf
6. salt and pepper to taste
7. Bring to boil, cover, then remove from heat and place in the oven for 18-20 minutes, or until the rice is fully cooked.
Serve that **** with ur main course.

Here's a pic of my rice pilaf with my chicken schnitzel. PM me for any cooking tips or recipes
User avatar #98 to #39 - onipure (05/31/2015) [-]
oh nice thank you totally gonna try that
User avatar #40 to #39 - Haruhi (05/31/2015) [-]
I meant to say saucepot, not pan, but you know what i mean I hope
#20 to #7 - nionnen (05/31/2015) [-]
Are you me? I'm moving out from my parents apartment tomorrow as well
#29 to #20 - onipure (05/31/2015) [-]
nice, high five for finally getting our own life
nice, high five for finally getting our own life
#30 to #29 - nionnen (05/31/2015) [-]
Go us!
Go us!
User avatar #49 to #30 - hardjunk (05/31/2015) [-]
you will regret it in 6 hours
User avatar #126 to #6 - cabbagemayhem (05/31/2015) [-]
1. Cook stew in big pot at beginning of week. Pour into containers. Refrigerate. Reheat in microwave for 2 minutes when hungry.

2. Hard boil batch of eggs at beginning of week. Spend two minutes admiring egg, then peel and eat.
#56 - creepingorion (05/31/2015) [-]
>Thumb and favorite so I can come back to this in my time of need
>I will never look at this again
#58 to #56 - theycallmesatan (05/31/2015) [-]
**theycallmesatan used "*roll picture*"**
**theycallmesatan rolled image**
#196 to #179 - theycallmesatan (06/01/2015) [-]
**theycallmesatan used "*roll picture*"**
**theycallmesatan rolled image**
#200 to #179 - theycallmesatan (06/02/2015) [-]
**theycallmesatan used "*roll picture*"**
**theycallmesatan rolled image**
#16 - swearinginchurch (05/31/2015) [-]
I'm moving out next month and this is really awesome to have
#22 - europe (05/31/2015) [-]
>more favorites than thumbs up
These ******
#181 to #22 - anon (06/01/2015) [-]
It's possible to downvote, which lowers the netto amount of thumbs up,
while you can't 'downfavorite' to reduce the amount of favorites though
#24 - vladi (05/31/2015) [-]
&gt;implying I don't have mom lol
>implying I don't have mom lol
#70 - countcrowley (05/31/2015) [-]
what's wrong with you?! where is pizza?
#74 to #70 - zamka ONLINE (05/31/2015) [-]
Make a ******* round dough, put some ******* cheese on the ******* dough, add whatever ******* vegetables that you want on the ******* cheese that's on the ******* dough, add beef and meat on the ******* vegetables that's on the ******* cheese that's on the ******* dough, and then add the some more ******* cheese on the ******* meat that's on the ******* vegetables that's on the ******* dough, preheat the ******* oven 450F for 30 ******* minutes and then put the ******* pizza in the ******* oven for 8-15 ******* minutes.

And there you have your ******* pizza, enjoy it you little **** .
User avatar #112 to #74 - animehunter (05/31/2015) [-]
>no sauce
#118 to #112 - zamka ONLINE (05/31/2015) [-]
I am not worthy of living.
I am not worthy of living.
#44 - anon (05/31/2015) [-]
Link #21 is kaputt
User avatar #113 to #44 - animehunter (05/31/2015) [-]
worked for me the first time then didn't second or third... here it is anyways
natashaskitchen.com/2012/06/08/baked-salmon-with-garlic-and-dijon/
#35 - envinite (05/31/2015) [-]
Should? Nah, thanks... I'm already good with my broken fried egg and burnt nuggets.
User avatar #134 - xsnowbanex (05/31/2015) [-]
Moving off of the college dining plan this August, this is a HUGE help man. Thanks. Now if only I knew how to budget well. Anyone wanna do a budget comp for poor college folk?
User avatar #180 to #134 - shyyguy (06/01/2015) [-]
You could become an extreme couponer.
#161 to #134 - badhatharry (05/31/2015) [-]
Cheapest things I normally find are frozen meat (bulk packets especially) and pastas. About £20 usually gets me about 7kg of frozen meat and can last me at least 2 weeks, more than likely a month. It's not a huge tip but hope it helps.
#106 - verycoolcat ONLINE (05/31/2015) [-]
On the chicken, I got a better recipe.

Garlic Salt, Lemon Pepper, Basil, Butter, Olive oil

Mix those things together and get your hands dirty and rub chicken. Throw it in a small pan covered, depending on the size of the chicken... after its cooked for 30 minutes, uncover the chicken ... pour the remaining mix on top of the chicken then let it continue to cook uncovered until the top is brown.

Eat the white meat of the chicken with the pan juice as a 'dipping' sauce for a better unhealthy but tasty thing.

I can polish off an entire cornish game hen cooked like this myself... tastes too damn good.
#107 to #106 - verycoolcat ONLINE (05/31/2015) [-]
Also works with chicken thighs and a frying pan with oil. Margarine works better in this case so it doesn't pop in the oil.
User avatar #76 - formidablebunny (05/31/2015) [-]
I'm 19, am I still allowed to learn these?
#96 to #76 - thebeatlesfan (05/31/2015) [-]
I have to wait another month to cook
User avatar #182 to #96 - shyyguy (06/01/2015) [-]
Well, happy birthday a month early then.
#194 to #182 - thebeatlesfan (06/01/2015) [-]
Well thanks!
User avatar #23 - electronicbacon (05/31/2015) [-]
That seems like a lot of food that will taste amazing right after cooking it, but if you decide to save it for a later date, it'll just lose all of its flavour.
Not really good for a 20-something guy, especially economy-wise.
Better to make something filling and long-lasting that doesn't taste too good, but isn't bad.
If you make something that tastes like heaven, you're obviously going to finish it off entirely within the day, no matter how much you made or what your level of restraint is.. If it's alright-tier and you're hungry, you'll just eat it to satisfy your hunger and probably leave some more for another day - meaning you've got some decent food in the fridge and you don't need to spend extra money on making more food for yourself the next day.
User avatar #62 to #23 - satansferret ONLINE (05/31/2015) [-]
Do the stew sir. You can make a larger batch, have it for that meal, leftovers or a snack later and then freeze what's left for later use.
User avatar #63 to #62 - electronicbacon (05/31/2015) [-]
Yeah, stew is one of the many perfect foods.
Not too tasty, able to be made in large quantities easily, very filling and easy to heat up.
#128 - tostito (05/31/2015) [-]
this is great, I will try something from this later in my life
for now, instant soup
User avatar #151 to #128 - destismad (05/31/2015) [-]
Why would you want to cook when you already have such delicious food?
User avatar #84 - prycebear (05/31/2015) [-]
My parents never really taught me to cook I just sorta watched, never saw myself as any good, I went to see some mates at uni and realized that in comparison I am a god of cooking
User avatar #114 to #84 - redblackstar (05/31/2015) [-]
You and me both, pal. I'm actually quite into it now that I have to cook everyday, and it's a great exam stress relief/procrastination method.
User avatar #133 to #114 - prycebear (05/31/2015) [-]
I dont actually go to uni I was visiting but things like the stuff listed arent hard If you know what youre doing yet my friends were amazed when I cooked chicken breasts...
User avatar #148 to #133 - redblackstar (05/31/2015) [-]
Some of the stuff is easy, but some of the tips are quite helpful, like I'm pretty bad with steaks because it's not really traditional to eat them where my family's from.
User avatar #195 to #148 - prycebear (06/01/2015) [-]
Thats understahdable, like you wouldnt expect an inuit to be able to cook anything but whake tbh I hope you didnt find that offensive bb wasnt my intention Where you from then?
#197 to #195 - redblackstar (06/01/2015) [-]
Poland, originally, though I live in the UK.
User avatar #198 to #197 - prycebear (06/01/2015) [-]
Seriously thts great, I need my shower fixed you up for it?
#82 - ashampoo (05/31/2015) [-]
looks good
User avatar #83 to #82 - darealmcfanyt (05/31/2015) [-]
Groudon approves.
#38 - crazymannequin (05/31/2015) [-]
I hope I don't get thumbed down for this but I found a very good method for making a bomb homemade lobster roll.

>First you're gonna need 3 lobster tails (I found Albertsons sells them pretty cheap 5 bucks a tail ).
>boil the tails for about 10 to 12 minutes
>after tails are done let them cool and pull the meat out of their shells and cut it up into small bit sized chunks. Try to get size as close to 1/2 an inch as possible.
>get a mixing bowl and add the following ingredients 1 tablespoon of mayo, followed by 1 and 1/2 tablespoons of lemon juice, diced chives as close to a tablespoon as you can get maybe even a little less, then finally salt and pepper.
>let this sit while you toast the buns
>for the buns I found Francisco sandwich rolls are the best.
>cut open rwo rolls if they aren't already cut and butter the insides then put into a pan butter side down then toast to preference
>put seasoned lobster meat between rolls and enjoy

Pic is relevant it is my lobster roll recipe results
#123 to #38 - irishgoat (05/31/2015) [-]
Lobster?! Do you think I'm made of money??
Lobster?! Do you think I'm made of money??
#164 to #123 - crazymannequin (06/01/2015) [-]
I'm not either I just found a good deal at my local Albertsons which was 5 bucks a tail which is not bad   
   
Gif not relevant but Chapelle is.
I'm not either I just found a good deal at my local Albertsons which was 5 bucks a tail which is not bad

Gif not relevant but Chapelle is.
#141 to #38 - shuyuy (05/31/2015) [-]
cheap 5$ lobster tail OH BOY let me go get-   
&gt;lives in Kansas   
&gt;fml
cheap 5$ lobster tail OH BOY let me go get-
>lives in Kansas
>fml
#162 to #141 - crazymannequin (06/01/2015) [-]
Dude that sucks
#163 to #162 - shuyuy (06/01/2015) [-]
cant get any farther from the ocean in North America
#165 to #163 - crazymannequin (06/01/2015) [-]
Yeah being landlocked sucks if you crave seafood. 			******		 thing is lobster used to be considered poor man's food. That changed when some rich guys had some and then made it expensive.    
   
Citation: knowledgenuts.com/2013/11/05/lobster-was-once-a-poor-mans-food/
Yeah being landlocked sucks if you crave seafood. ****** thing is lobster used to be considered poor man's food. That changed when some rich guys had some and then made it expensive.

Citation: knowledgenuts.com/2013/11/05/lobster-was-once-a-poor-mans-food/
#166 to #165 - shuyuy (06/01/2015) [-]
any seafood we do get is pretty poor (I assume as I never have had fresh-caught fish)and it's rather expensive. At least our bread is cheap
#168 to #166 - crazymannequin (06/01/2015) [-]
I would hope bread would be cheap in Kansas what with all the fields and 			****
I would hope bread would be cheap in Kansas what with all the fields and ****
User avatar #4 - thechosentroll (05/31/2015) [-]
I can do 24. Not bad. I can't do the clams and fish, since I hate sea food and I've never even tried.
#189 - drgoob (06/01/2015) [-]
Gee thanks buzzfeed.
#201 to #189 - anon (09/20/2015) [-]
beautiful pictures, my favorite food, I only wish we access to fresh ones year round. Thanks for sharing!
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