James Harvey
TVWBB Pro
Such a simple term but, after quite a few half hearted attempts, one that I haven't achieved let alone mastered.
I've sweated, browned, sauteed (I think?) and burned many an onion but I've never reached that deep, sticky consistency that I see on TV.
Questions:
The Onion - I assume you can use any but I generally try to use a vidalia, yellow or texas onion (these are the labels I get from local Toronto grocers).
The Cut - Not too fussy but maybe a 1/2 to 1 centimetre wide half moons. I started out trying a small dice and this is where the burn came in.
The Fat - Oil and butter. I'm not too fussy about olive oil vs others. Rachael Ray has done more for Extra Virgin than Kleenex has for tissue but I generally use canola or another vegetable oil. I don't really measure the ratio of butter vs. oil but it just looks right.
The Cook - I toss the onions in the fat to start and cook on a medium low setting (I have an electric stove that I'm not a fan of). I don't add salt or sugar but I've read they help. I try to have patience but I believe this is my downfall. In reading, I see 10 minutes to an hour. I've never gone the distance of an hour but they seem to dry out before 30 minutes.
This would indicate to me the addition of more fat but then I worry about cold oil added to a hot pan (BTW, I generally use a teflon fry pan) being a negative.
The End - I get a soft yet slimy onion with a little browning around the edges. The longer I cook, the more browned the edges get but this doesn't carry over to the centre.
The Question - What am I doing wrong. The overly long post above is my experience over time. As noted, I don't think I've given the cook justice and I'm wondering if it's just a lack of patience.
Thanks.
I've sweated, browned, sauteed (I think?) and burned many an onion but I've never reached that deep, sticky consistency that I see on TV.
Questions:
The Onion - I assume you can use any but I generally try to use a vidalia, yellow or texas onion (these are the labels I get from local Toronto grocers).
The Cut - Not too fussy but maybe a 1/2 to 1 centimetre wide half moons. I started out trying a small dice and this is where the burn came in.
The Fat - Oil and butter. I'm not too fussy about olive oil vs others. Rachael Ray has done more for Extra Virgin than Kleenex has for tissue but I generally use canola or another vegetable oil. I don't really measure the ratio of butter vs. oil but it just looks right.
The Cook - I toss the onions in the fat to start and cook on a medium low setting (I have an electric stove that I'm not a fan of). I don't add salt or sugar but I've read they help. I try to have patience but I believe this is my downfall. In reading, I see 10 minutes to an hour. I've never gone the distance of an hour but they seem to dry out before 30 minutes.
This would indicate to me the addition of more fat but then I worry about cold oil added to a hot pan (BTW, I generally use a teflon fry pan) being a negative.
The End - I get a soft yet slimy onion with a little browning around the edges. The longer I cook, the more browned the edges get but this doesn't carry over to the centre.
The Question - What am I doing wrong. The overly long post above is my experience over time. As noted, I don't think I've given the cook justice and I'm wondering if it's just a lack of patience.
Thanks.