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Cooking Couese

Crab Cakes

Our goal was to come up with the best possible crab cakes—sweet, plump meat delicately seasoned and seamlessly held together with a binder that didn’t detract from the seafood flavor—regardless of whether we were starting with fresh crabmeat. Because it’s a given that the best crab cakes are made with meat that’s just been picked from the shell, but fresh crabmeat can be hard to find. Learn all of the details and discoveries for our Crab Cakes recipe in this online cooking class.

Cooking Couese

Salade Niçoise

Along the French Riviera, salade Niçoise, the famous composed salad from the city of Nice, is commonplace. To many Americans, though, it seems just a bit fancy and exotic, and worse, most versions available to them are little more than a bed of lettuce on which lazily strewn piles of overcooked, underseasoned green beans and potatoes, off-ripe tomatoes, rubbery eggs, and soggy tuna drown in a sea of dull dressing. The ideal salade Niçoise should have well-dressed, well-seasoned components that complement rather than crowd one another. This lesson will teach you how to make a well-seasoned and delicious Salade Nicoise.

Cooking Couese

Ultimate Chocolate Desserts

There is much to know about working with chocolate, like how to buy it, how to work with it, the science behind it, and what is the best chocolate available. In this America’s Test Kitchen online cooking class, we will walk you through all there is to know about chocolate in order to make the ultimate chocolate desserts. Our core technique videos outline in clear terms how to properly whip egg whites, and melt chocolate two ways (on the stovetop and in the microwave) to avoid seizing. Learn what common pitfalls to avoid when working with chocolate, and what equipment and ingredients make creating these impressive desserts easier. Finally, try our recipes for Triple-Chocolate Mousse Cake, Rich Chocolate Tart, and our Chocolate-Espresso Dacquoise.

Cooking Couese

Strata with Spinach and Gruyère

Strata–basically a savory bread pudding–is too often soggy and laden with excessive custard and ingredients, rendering a simple casserole an overindulgence in both preparation and consumption. We felt that the perfect strata for breakfast or brunch should contain complementary fillings and flavorings, and just enough richness to satisfy. The solution was to start with the right bread–a thin-crusted supermarket loaf of French or Italian bread beat out sturdier artisan loaves. These softer breads (sold in the bakery department at most supermarkets) soaked up the custard evenly, and were more pleasant to eat when served. With the added step of staling or toasting the bread, we drove off more moisture, and ensured the bread stayed intact. (Note that if your bread is already stale, you can skip this toasting step.) For the savory spinach and shallot filling, we started by squeezing thawed, frozen spinach to remove much of its liquid, then sautéed the vegetables to continue driving off moisture and building deeper flavor. The addition of white wine, reduced down in a skillet to concentrate its jammy flavor and rid it of any boozy bite, added a welcome brightness to an otherwise heavy dish. After layering in the components and weighing the dish down to compact the disparate ingredients into a more cohesive dish, the strata needed to be refrigerated for at least 8 hours and up to overnight. The next day, after a short 20-minute stint on the counter, all the work left to do was bake the strata until the top was lightly golden brown.

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