HELPFUL HINTS
DEAR HELOISE: As a chef in a well-known restaurant, I learned a lot about how to work with pasta, and I’d like to pass on some of those hints.
■ Everyone asks when to salt the water for pasta. You can add the salt when the water comes to a rapid boiling point.
■ Never reuse the water you’ve already cooked your pasta in, because it releases starch as it cooks. That’s why the water looks so cloudy.
■ Always rinse your pasta after it cooks if you are using it for cold dishes. Rinsing pasta for hot dishes takes away much of the starch, which is what makes the sauce adhere to each piece of pasta.
— Sam the Chef,
Albany, N.Y. DEAR HELOISE: My mother-in-law insists that microwaving food depletes all the nutrients from food. She reads you column faithfully, so could you settle this debate?
— Allison D., Orange, Calif. DEAR READER: Actually, just about all cooking kills or removes some nutrients from food, but microwaving is believed to be one of the best ways to retain nutrients. The major reasons are because it’s fast, uses less heat and usually a smaller amount of liquid. So go ahead and microwave.
DEAR HELOISE: I could never use up all of my flour in only a couple of weeks, so before long, I had bugs in my flour. Now I either keep it in the refrigerator or freeze it. If I freeze my flour, I have to wait until it’s room temperature before I use it. But at least I don’t have bugs! — Diana W., Ashland, Wis. DEAR HELOISE: You have a recipe for potato soup that was, as I recall, simple, easy to make and economical. Would you please reprint that recipe? — Nina K., Kansas City, Mo. DEAR READER: Nina, here it is:
4 medium potatoes, cubed 1 small onion, chopped 1 tablespoon shortening
1 cup water
2 cups milk
¾ teaspoon salt
Dash of pepper
Cook potatoes, onions, shortening and water in a large pot until potatoes are soft. Add remaining ingredients and simmer for 20-30 minutes. Makes about 4 servings.
Here’s another Heloise Hint: Puree celery and onions in a blender and add to most soups to add richer flavors without a lot of calories.
Send a money- or time-saving hint to Heloise, P.O. Box 795001, San Antonio, Texas 78279-5000; fax to (210) 435-6473; or email