Layers of lies
July 27, 2014 by DarcieTom Scocca of Slate magazine is taking recipe writers to task. After reading countless recipes that assure you that you will get caramelized onions in as little as 10 minutes, Scocca finally snapped and tweeted an all-caps rant about it.
He notes that even veteran cookbook authors make this claim:
“Here’s Madhur Jaffrey, from her otherwise reliable Indian Cooking, explaining how to do
the onions for rogan josh: ‘Stir and fry for about 5 minutes or
until the onions turn a medium-brown colour.'” One author who gets
the timing right, according to Scocca, is Julia Child. In her
instructions on preparing onions for French Onion Soup, Child
instructs us to cook the onions “slowly until tender and
translucent, about 10 minutes. Blend in the salt and sugar, raise
heat to moderately high, and let the onions brown, stirring
frequently until they are a dark walnut color, 25 to 30 minutes.”
This 40 to 45 minute mark is much closer to reality than the 10 to
20 minutes in many recipes.
Scocca tried several “short cut” methods, including one advocated
by Melissa Clark of the New York Times. While he found
that this using this technique did shave a few minutes off the
time, he noted that Clark’s claim was “off by 180 percent on the
cooking time. You can save 12 minutes off caramelizing onions,
provided you pin yourself to the stove.” And that is one of the
problems with any of the shortcut methods, according to Scocca. He
posits that any time you save by using one of these so-called
shortcuts is wiped out by the slavish devotion to the stove that
they require.
So why do authors continue to perpetuate the myth of 20-minute caramelized onions? Probably because they are under pressure to keep cooking times to 30 minutes or less. “Telling the truth about caramelized onions would turn a lot of dinner-in-half-an-hour recipes into dinner-in-a-little-over-an-hour recipes.” Scocca goes on to note that other recipes also play fast and loose with the times noted for tasks. He takes on The Times’ scone recipe as another example.
In which recipes have you found the authors fudging on the time it takes to caramelize onions (or perform other tasks)?
Photo of maple caramelized onions from Closet Cooking
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