SOP For Basic Cooking Methods Dry Heat and Moist Heat
SOP Number: Kitchen /
F&B Production SOP
Department: Kitchen /
Food Production - Basic Cooking Methods
Purpose of this SOP:
Cooking methods can be classified into 'Moist
Heat' and 'Dry Heat', The Moist heat methods are those in
which the heat is conducted to the food products through boiling water (Eg:
water, stock, sauce, etc) or by steam. Dry heat methods
are those in which the heat is conducted without moisture i.e. by hot air, hot
metal, radiation, hot fat etc.
The Executive Chef and the Sous Chef should be
responsible to ensure that appropriate food cooking methods are followed by the
kitchen staff. The hotel training and
HRD department should develop and implement proper written Kitchen SOP's to ensure the
same is implemented correctly throughout all the food preparation outlets.
Cooking Methods
Standard Procedures:
1) Moist heat
cooking method
- A
method in which the heat is conducted to the food product though water by
boiling or steam eg: Boiling, blanching,
steaming, parboiling, stewing, braising etc.
- To boil means
to cook in a liquid that is bubbling rapidly, the water temperature is
about 212º F (100º C).
- To simmer means
to cook in a liquid that is bubbling very gently. the temperature is about
185º to 205º F (85-96º C).
- To poach means
to cook in a liquid, usually a small amount, that is hot but not actually
bubbling.
- Temperature
is about 160-180º F [71 to 82º C]
- To blanch mean
to cook an item partially and very briefly, usually in water.
- To
steam means to cook by direct contact with steam.
- Stew means
simmering a food in a small amount of liquid and is usually served with
the food.
- Parboil
means to cook foods partially in a boiling or simmering liquid.
- Braise
means to cook foods that are covered in a small amount of liquid and
usually done after preliminary browning (although occasionally without
browning as well.)
- Sweet
means to cook slowly in fat browning occasionally under a cover.
- Reduce means
to cook by simmering or boiling until the liquid quantity is decreased.
- Deglaze is
to swirl a liquid in a sauté pan, roast pan,
or another pan.
2) Dry heat cooking
method
- Dry
heat methods are those in which the heat is conducted without moisture
eg: baking,
barbeque, broil, deep fry, glaze etc.
- Baking
means cooking foods by simmering and then exposing them to hot dry air. It
is similar to roast but it usually applies to bread, pastries, vegetables,
and fish.
- Barbeque
means cooking in a grill or
over host coal, or in an enclosed container. It is often done with a
seasoned marinade or basting sauce.
- Broil
means cooking with radiation from above.
- Deep fry means
the foods are submerged in hot fat.
- Fry
means the foods are cooked in a hot fat.
- Glaze
means giving additional layer on the surface of a food by applying a
sauce, aspic, sugar, or icing, or
by browning or melting under a broiler or Salamander or in an oven.
- Griddle means
to cook in a flat, solid cooking surface called a griddle.
- Grill
means to cook in an oven grid over a heat source.
- Pan-broil
means to cook uncovered foods on a skillet or sauté pan without fat.
- Pan frying means
to cook in a moderate amount of fat in the uncovered pan.
- En Papillote means
the foods are wrapped in paper or foil for cooking so that foods can
be baked or steamed in
their own moisture.
- Sauté
means to cook quickly in a small amount of fat.
- Sear means
to brown cook the surface of a food quickly at a high temperature.
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