There's a statement you don't hear every day.Calculus, math so easy a child could do it...
There's a statement you don't hear every day.Calculus, math so easy a child could do it...
I have yet to find a chicken recipe I can prepare adequetely. Pork and beef are easy, chicken is hard.
Those are the most unspecific directions I've ever heard for baking a potato.
OK, how about this:
1. Select your potato and give it a good scrubbing, preferably with a brush, but with your hands is fine so long as you're thorough.
2. Poke it several times with a fork, all around the potato. This is to let the steam out so that the potato gets nice and fluffy inside.
3. Smear it with a little bit of cooking oil - olive, canola, corn, doesn't matter so long as it's edible. This will give you a slightly crispy skin, and it also conducts heat into the potato a little more quickly.
4. Put it in a pan or on a baking sheet. If desired, sprinkle it with some salt or garlic salt.
5. Put it in a 350-400 degree oven.
6. Bake for, oh...an hour or so. The bigger the potato, the longer it will take. Regular-size potatoes only take about 45 minutes in my oven, but I have a convection oven. A great big potato in a conventional oven might take 1:15 or so.
7. If you can squeeze it with your (dish towel or potholder protected) hand and it feels nice and soft inside, it's done.
Do not wrap it in foil - it'll turn out gummy.
Too specific?
As others have mentioned, I cannot whistle using the fingers in mouth technique. I also can't raise just one eyebrow at a time.
I can't bake a pretty cake.
Those are the most unspecific directions I've ever heard for baking a potato.
OK, how about this:
1. Select your potato and give it a good scrubbing, preferably with a brush, but with your hands is fine so long as you're thorough.
2. Poke it several times with a fork, all around the potato. This is to let the steam out so that the potato gets nice and fluffy inside.
3. Smear it with a little bit of cooking oil - olive, canola, corn, doesn't matter so long as it's edible. This will give you a slightly crispy skin, and it also conducts heat into the potato a little more quickly.
4. Put it in a pan or on a baking sheet. If desired, sprinkle it with some salt or garlic salt.
5. Put it in a 350-400 degree oven.
6. Bake for, oh...an hour or so. The bigger the potato, the longer it will take. Regular-size potatoes only take about 45 minutes in my oven, but I have a convection oven. A great big potato in a conventional oven might take 1:15 or so.
7. If you can squeeze it with your (dish towel or potholder protected) hand and it feels nice and soft inside, it's done.
Do not wrap it in foil - it'll turn out gummy.
Too specific?
^ Ooh, but I love the slightly crunchy skin - different strokes for different folks, I guess.
I do consider the texture of a potato that has been cooked in foil "gummy," but maybe we just have different definitions of "gummy," Rudolph. The problem with foil is that it keeps all the moisture trapped inside. What you want is to let some of it escape as steam (that's also why you poke the potato with a fork), making your potato fluffier.
If you don't like the slightly crunch skin (although the thought of this just breaks my heart), I'd still recommend baking it part of the time with the foil at least cracked open so that some of the moisture can escape. But maybe that's just me.
Edit: Sorry for the cooking diversion, everybody. Have I mentioned that cooking is one of my favorite things to do?
^ Ooh, but I love the slightly crunchy skin - different strokes for different folks, I guess.
I do consider the texture of a potato that has been cooked in foil "gummy," but maybe we just have different definitions of "gummy," Rudolph. The problem with foil is that it keeps all the moisture trapped inside. What you want is to let some of it escape as steam (that's also why you poke the potato with a fork), making your potato fluffier.
If you don't like the slightly crunch skin (although the thought of this just breaks my heart), I'd still recommend baking it part of the time with the foil at least cracked open so that some of the moisture can escape. But maybe that's just me.
Edit: Sorry for the cooking diversion, everybody. Have I mentioned that cooking is one of my favorite things to do?
As others have mentioned, I cannot whistle using the fingers in mouth technique. I also can't raise just one eyebrow at a time.
I bet that eyebrow trick is like rolling your tongue -- it's a specific gene that has to be inherited.
Don't completely seal the potato in the foil. Wrap it in such a manner as to vent the steam out of the top of the foil apparatus.
Perhaps we should post pictures of Before/After baking potatoes and compare results? I'm game!
It's alright, cooking can be good, especially if the people that eat it, end up liking it.
Writing...or rather, planning a story out and being able to write it out, I just...can't seem to do it.
Nuked potatoes are nasty. If I'm in a huge hurry, I will sometimes nuke them, but I always put them in a real oven for at least a few minutes at the very end of cooking.
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