Top 10 Evil Ingredients

9. Â Black Pepper, Not Freshly Ground. Â The flavor compounds in pepper are highly volatile. Â Pre-ground pepper loses much of its flavor and aroma. Â Your first choice is always freshly ground. Â If you need a lot of freshly ground, break out the blender.
8. Â Your Spice Rack. Â If the spices in your spice rack are more than 1 year old for whole spices and 6 months for ground, throw them out!
7. Â Margarine. Â There’s just no reason to use this stuff to cook with at home. Â It’s loaded with trans-fats and it can’t compare to butter for flavor. Â In commercial bakeries it may be used due to its lower cost.
6. Â Miracle Whip. Â It’s not mayonnaise. Â Ingredients:Â Water, Vinegar, Soybean Oil, Modified Food Starch, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Sugar, Salt, Contains Less Than 2% Of Egg Yolks, Cellulose Gel, Mustard Flour, Artificial Color, Potassium Sorbate As A Preservative, Xanthan Gum, Cellulose Gum, Spice, Paprika, Sucralose And Acesulfame Potassium (Sweeteners), Natural Flavor, Dried Garlic.
5. Â Instant Mashed Potatoes in place of the real thing. Â You can use instant mashed potatoes (Potato Buds) as a great crust for chicken tenders, aka chicken fingers that kids will go mental over. Â I’d also recommend it to practice your piping skills with.
4.  Parmesan Cheese in Can.  First of all, any grated cheese in a bag or green can is mixed with cellulose to keep it from sticking together.  And, cellulose doesn’t improve the taste of cheese.  Secondly, cheese is very much like wine, a product of its environment and aging.  Just because you can grow grapes somewhere and ferment them doesn’t necessarily make a great wine.  Think MD 20/20 vs. Château Lafite Rothschild.  There is no substitute for Parmigiano-Reggiano from Italy…yet.
3. Â Bottled Garlic. Â Chemically treat garlic in rancid oil, yum.
2. Â Bottled Lemon Juice. Â There is no substitute for the real thing.
1. Â Cooking Wine or Cooking Sherry. Â In the US, cooking wine is very cheaply made, low in alcohol and loaded with salt to denature it and make it a non-drinkable cooking wine. Â This is pure evil. Â Either use the real stuff or nothing. Â Some Chinese and Japanese cooking wines are the exception. Â Quality in Asian cooking wines is highly variable but some can lend great flavors to cooking.
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