• info@cherylsdelights.com

Enjoy Unlimited Cooking Couese

Have a look at some of our favorite courses.

Cooking Couese

Crumb-Coated Ham

When we want to dress up a ham, we usually turn to a sweet glaze. But sometimes we want to try something a bit different: a crumb coating, which is a popular way to prepare ham in Sweden. But we quickly discovered that this seemingly simple recipe wasn’t as easy as just pressing some bread crumbs into the exterior of the ham. Our first tries resulted in dry meat, soggy crumbs, and a coating that didn’t stay put once we started slicing. We had to figure out how to keep the ham moist, the crumbs dry, and the two components adhered to each other.

Cooking Couese

Sheet Pan Suppers

Rimmed baking sheets, or half-sheet pans, are true workhorses in the test kitchen. We use them for everything from baking cookies or roasting root vegetables to toasting nuts and seeds. And slipping a wire rack inside makes the sheet pan even more versatile—it’s our go-to setup for roasting and broiling meats. But the true super power of the sheet pan is accommodating multiple ingredients to create a complete, flavor-packed, one-pan meal. In this course, you'll learn four recipes with different sheet pan setups to make sure everything cooks at the correct rate and comes out of the oven perfectly—and deliciously—cooked.

Cooking Couese

All About Fresh Herbs

Fresh herbs are the ace in the home cook's arsenal. They’re inexpensive—especially if you grow your own in the summer—and add a ton of flavor to everything from sauces to stews. In this cooking course, we’ll cover everything you need to know about these important kitchen staples, including how to identify common fresh herbs and how to substitute dried herbs for fresh. The online cooking course also includes instructional videos that demonstrate how to clean and store herbs, how to prepare thyme, and how to chiffonade basil, and more.

Cooking Couese

Streamlined Eggplant Parmesan

Eggplant Parmesan is one of those dishes that is almost guaranteed to disappoint when ordered in a restaurant. But making it at home is a such a major undertaking, involving salting, breading, frying, simmering, and finally baking, that ordering it out sounds like a pretty good idea. Our recipe not only renders the dish doable in just a couple of hours, it delivers spectacularly good results. Gone are the soggy, slick eggplant slices and heavy, lifeless flavors—we bake our breaded eggplant slices, make a quick-cooked tomato sauce, and assemble with care to make the easiest and best-tasting Eggplant Parmesan. This recipe requires salting eggplant slices, and although it takes some time, it’s a simple step that has a big impact on the finished dish. Eggplant Parmesan would be served as a contorno—or side dish—on a traditional Italian table, but it’s hearty enough that it makes a satisfying main dish. Serve bread alongside, and offer a simple leafy salad before or after, whichever you prefer.

Our Newest Recipes

Eat Healthy Be Happy