CHOPS
I want to learn to cook meat. Is there any one stop shop marinade or seasoning? So I don't have to dabble with bits of this and that?
>>7591122
No.
>>7591129
Thanks for the bad news.
>>7591145
It's reality. No marinade or seasoning is going to make you a decent cook. Only time, and experimenting will do that. Start out small, and work your way up. It's not that hard, and it's a lot of fun.
>>7591151
This guy is right, marinades are like cleats for running - it depends on you to cross the finish line
>>7591191
There are only two you need to worry about. Salt and Pepper...trust me on this.
>>7591214
I'm watching a video that shows a girl added some salt and garlic powder to her chicken in a glass pan but she poked holes into the meat to I guess let it soak in. Is that right? I've seen people poke holes when you add a liquid like vinegar so the vinegar can drain into the pores if you poke holes in the meat then what purpose would that serve if you just added spices? would it still soak in? through the poked holes? Seems like you'd be messing up your meat for nothing.
>>7591226
I never poke holes in anything unless it's really thin. And, yes, S & P, and a little garlic POWDER go a long way towards a perfect seasoning.
Salt and pepper over anything else.
Just make sure you cook it properly and use the right fats to cook it in. Usually for me it's olive oil or butter.
>>7591351
Also another trick I should add is learn how to make pan sauces.
Super simple, fast, and delicious.
Usually just some wine or liquor to deglaze the pan, some chopped onions or chives, and a touch of cream.
>>7591266
Ain't nothing perfect about that sawdust called garlic powder. Get some fresh garlic in there.
>>7591122
Salt and pepper
>>7591122
Think about cooking oil, try some avocado seed oil. Instead of a marinade, at least for pork, try a brine, maybe 1/2 cup of Kosher Salt in a quart of water in a ziplock bag for 20 minutes. Makes a big difference since pork is bred really lean these days.
>>7591122
Don't listen to any of these faggots.
Salt and canola oil will get you what you want 99% of the time. Learn to get a good sear without either having the center too rare, or burning the outside.
>>7591226
Poking holes/making cuts in your meat seems to be a pretty common thing with certain dishes. I've seen making cuts for marinades in Indian cooking. I think it's supposed help the meat 'absorb' the marinade.
Not the same as cutting your meat to prevent it from curling up or scoring for seasonings though.
>>7591122
>>7591591
+1 for Salt and Pepper
If you go simple get quality salt and pepper.
Also pic related for beef products.