Mise en place containers
#1
Posted 01 April 2002 - 05:04 PM
I have a set of Japanese-made blue ceramic bowls (the kind you see at a lot of Asian groceries, with designs on them) that hold about 24 oz each. Each one can hold a large diced onion, or a couple of bell peppers, a few mushrooms, some diced chicken for stir-fry, or whatever. For smaller things (minced garlic, spices) I used the little Pyrex bowls. For larger, I have some glass bowls. Since most of my cooking is for two people, the blue bowls are perfect for a whole lot of different MEP.
I thought about getting some Lexan bins, but then I realized that the blue bowls have a distinct advantage: they have no corners, so they're easy to wash by hand.
Author, Hungry Monkey, coming in May
#2
Posted 01 April 2002 - 05:15 PM
For ingredients that will be used right away, I use small Pyrex bowls that I have in sets of four in four different sizes as well as whatever bowls happen to be lying around that are appropriately sized for the task at hand. I've got lots and lots and lots of bowls in various materials and sizes, so I rarely get caught short.
Also when I get into cooking mode I always fill a small Pyrex bowl with coarse salt and keep it next to the stove with the pepper mill and olive oil cruet nearby so I can access it easily and efficiently with my bare hands. If I'm going to be working with butter I put a bunch on a small plate and leave it out to get soft enough to work with easily.
Co-founder, Society for Culinary Arts & Letters, sshaw@egstaff.org
Proud signatory to the eG Ethics code
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#3
Posted 01 April 2002 - 05:25 PM
#4
Posted 01 April 2002 - 05:57 PM
Co-founder, Society for Culinary Arts & Letters, sshaw@egstaff.org
Proud signatory to the eG Ethics code
Director, New Media Studies, International Culinary Center (take my food-blogging course)
#5
Posted 01 April 2002 - 05:59 PM
#6
Posted 01 April 2002 - 06:25 PM
"Behold, I teach you the ubermunch. The ubermunch is the meaning of the earth. Let your will say: the ubermunch shall be the meaning of the earth!" -Fritzy N.
"It's okay to like celery more than yogurt, but it's not okay to think that batter is yogurt."
Serving fine and fresh gratuitous comments since Oct 5 2001, 09:53 PM
#7
Posted 01 April 2002 - 06:58 PM
If I'm storing, I keep those ultracheep GladWare type containers around since I'm hell on the things and can't justify spending even Rubbermaid-type amounts on such items. I also store in Ziploc bags if the items aren't too stinky in nature. I package leftovers in the aforementioned GladWare for toting to work and so on. I am about to invest in some nicer plasticware for the purpose of freezing since I have this gorgeous chest freezer full of empty space to fill. Any product recommendations?
Diary of a Cooking School Student
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Lots of Everything
#8
Posted 01 April 2002 - 07:46 PM
Oh, and Malawry, Gladware containers rock. We have a large drawer full of many sizes, and use them a lot.
Author, Hungry Monkey, coming in May
#9
Posted 01 April 2002 - 09:01 PM
A 2 oz size plastic drinking cup ("bathroom size") is useful for pre-measured spices, chopped herbs, wine, etc. $1 for 100 of them.
I have a dozen Plochmann's glass mustard jars (at least 16 years old) which stack nicely for leftovers. Each holds about a pint of liquid or leftovers. They're nicely supplemented by Ortega Prima Salsa jars with measuring marks on the sides.
rancho gordo
#10
Posted 02 April 2002 - 07:17 AM
You have to watch it with the butter, and consider what your intentions are. It's good to have it out and soft enough to handle for some purposes, but if you're going to use a beurre manie technique for thickening a sauce - which I do use, very sparingly - you want to work with butter only recently out of a fridge. Try to make buerre manie pellets with soft butter, and you end up wearing butter and flour gloves!
#11
Posted 02 April 2002 - 08:41 AM
For my fridge freezer I just bought a set of plastic organizer drawers at Target -- a stack of three, each drawer about 9 x 12 by 3" tall. (They had all kinds of organizers for closets and things, including stacking bins that might work well for a chest....) It's working great to organize a formerly chaotic place (why the heck are freezers one big hole?), I've got nuts and seeds in one drawer, dried fruit in another, grains in another. I'm thinking about getting a second. I only did it yesterday, tho, and I wonder whether the food needs air circulation -- but I've also heard that a freezer packed full of food is more energy effecient than one that's not, so perhaps it's not an issue.I am about to invest in some nicer plasticware for the purpose of freezing since I have this gorgeous chest freezer full of empty space to fill. Any product recommendations?









