The Parchment Paper Cookbook: 180 Healthy, Fast, Delicious Dishes!
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About this ebook
Well, it's as easy as parchment paper. You'll find that cooking in parchment paper is akin to cooking in foil--if foil were French, fast, and environmentally friendly. In this cookbook, award-winning author and food writer Brette Sember shows you how parchment paper cooking can revolutionize the way you cook--and save you time and money, not to mention the grief that often accompanies dinnertime.
With simple instructions on the art of parchment paper folding and preparation, you'll fold your way to your family's hearts with such nutritious, delicious offerings as:
- Swedish Meatballs
- Thai Chicken with Lemongrass and Coconut Rice
- Stuffed Flank Steak
- Scallops Coquilles
- Lamb and Yogurt Wraps
- Artichoke Pizza
- Portobellos with Goat Cheese and Spinach
- Quick Baclava
- Peach Pie Turnovers
You can forget dirty pots and pans. With this cookbook, dinner just got easier, faster, cleaner--and tastier!
Brette Sember
Brette McWhorter Sember, JD (Clarence, NY), is the author of the children’s book Quiz Book 3: Three Times the Fun. Sember has also taught an online course for Barnes and Noble University called Responsible Credit Card Spending. The mother of two children, Sember is a member of the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators (SCBWI). A former attorney, she also has had extensive experience working with children in her role as a law guardian in four counties in New York.
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The Parchment Paper Cookbook - Brette Sember
INTRODUCTION
Cooking with Parchment Paper
I want to let you in on a little secret: parchment paper cooking is the easiest kind of cooking you’ll ever do! Think about it … no pots, no pans, no dirty baking dishes. No elaborate sauces to stir. No dishpan hands. All of your ingredients go into nifty parchment paper packets, which cook quickly in your oven—or even your toaster oven if you want to save energy. Nothing sticks, nothing crusts, and you have no cleanup. Best of all, the end result of this simple cooking method is healthy, flavorful food. Whether you have a small kitchen, an interest in expanding your culinary repertoire, a busy life, or an aversion to washing dishes, the parchment paper method promises to transform how you think about cooking.
No-Pot Benefits
Inside, you won’t find one recipe that requires a pot or pan. For many dishes, the parchment paper cooking method allows a delicious sauce to form right inside the packet, so you get all of the flavor with none of the mess associated with traditional cooking. Wrapping your food in parchment paper seals in the moisture and creates a mini-pressure cooker effect, producing incredibly tender meats and fishes; in fact, meals rarely dry out when cooked this way.
Another major benefit: Parchment paper cooking limits the amount of fat you need to add to each dish, making it a healthy way to cook. If going green is important to you, no-pot cooking is environmentally friendly. Not only do you cut down on the amount of water you use to do dishes and the amount of energy needed (since everything cooks in one oven or toaster oven), but you can recycle or compost the parchment paper when you’re through with it instead of sending it to the landfill.
Above all, cooking this way allows you to streamline your time in the kitchen, and focus on what really matters—wonderful food, shared with wonderful people.
Parchment Paper 101
Obviously, this method of cooking relies on parchment paper, which you can find in the grocery store, near the rolls of wax paper or foil. (You can also buy it online in bulk; try Amazon or Patterson Paper.) Most grocery stores sell it in rolls, but you can also buy precut sheets in some stores—either will work. Reynolds and Wilton both make parchment paper, as do many other companies, so it should be easy to find. (I don’t recommend the precut parchment sheets because they aren’t big enough for most recipes in this book—although they are great for the flat parchment recipes.)
The use of parchment dates back to 2500 B.C., when it was made from calfskin and used exclusively for written documents and books. Today’s cooking parchment is made of heavy-duty, heat-resistant, nonstick paper. The silicone added to the paper to keep food from sticking also makes it safe to use in the oven, since it will not burn.
The French refer to parchment paper cooking as en papillote, which simply means in paper.
Recipes for cooking with paper-product parchment began to emerge around 1910, but most modern cooks have primarily used it as a liner for baking sheets to keep food from sticking—until now.
Preparing for Parchment Paper Cooking
No-pot food prep basically entails layering food in parchment paper packets. (Note that some recipes in the book are meant to be cooked on a flat piece of parchment paper—it doesn’t get much easier than that!) Full disclosure: While you won’t need baking dishes, pots, or pans, some recipes do require the use of a few dishes and utensils. And most recipes use measuring cups and spoons, a knife, cutting board, or a small bowl. Thankfully, these items easily fit into the dishwasher or merely need a wash in the sink, so cleanup’s still quick! Some recipes also use the microwave or rice cooker, but since neither of these requires dirtying pots and pans, you’re still ahead of the game.
Go for Healthy Options
Throughout this book, you’ll notice that many recipes include prepared ingredients readily available at your local market. For this to remain a healthy method of cooking, you need to be careful when selecting these items. Of course, you can always create these ingredients in your own kitchen (using the full range of implements available to you), but if you end up purchasing prepared items, try to opt for the most wholesome choices whenever time and budget permits—choose whole grains over white and buy organic as much as possible. (Steer clear of overly processed foods to boost the health quotient!) I make every effort to use organic food products whenever I can—organic fruits and vegetables have a freshness and sweetness to them that you just don’t find in their nonorganic counterparts. And I urge you to try organic, free-range and grass-fed meats; I think you’ll be pleasantly surprised. They cook differently and taste better than conventionally raised meat. Organic beef has a hint of grassiness about it, and organic chicken retains more moisture and has a more satisfying flavor.
Food Notes
All of the chicken recipes in this book call for boneless skinless chicken breasts. Another common ingredient is rice. Brown rice is preferred as it provides more nutritional value and fiber than white rice, but you can always substitute white rice in a pinch. You may want to cook a lot of rice at once and keep it in the fridge to use throughout the week—or freeze it for future use. This easy weekend task will invariably make your weeknight dinners come together that much quicker.
Most recipes call for salt and pepper to taste.
Properly seasoning your food helps make it flavorful, but maybe you follow a low-sodium diet or prefer not to use pepper, so I’ve left the amounts up to you. When it comes to herbs, most recipes provide measures for dried herbs (when I feel it makes a big difference, I specify fresh herbs), but you can always substitute fresh by using this calculation: 1 tablespoon of fresh herbs equals 1 teaspoon of dried herbs.
These recipes are somewhat loose in an effort to encourage you to modify them to meet your own sensibilities and tastes. For example, if you dislike cilantro, substitute something else (such as parsley); if you dislike goat cheese, swap it out for cream cheese. Experiment with the recipes and make them your own.
One last note, on serving size: Most meat dishes in this book offer amounts for a single serving, which is made in one packet. Make one packet for each person you are feeding. Most side dishes feed four people. You can easily tinker with the serving sizes in the recipes; if a recipe makes one serving, just make additional packets if you want to feed more. If a recipe serves four, cut it in half if you’re only cooking for two (but decrease your cooking time accordingly).
Parchment paper packets can also be wrapped in foil and cooked on the grill. If you set your gas grill to medium high heat, the cooking times should be very similar to the times for cooking in the oven, but be sure to check your food for doneness. It also is useful to turn your packets on the grill once to ensure even cooking.
Folding the Parchment
Despite what you may think, you don’t need to be an origami artist to cook this way—there are no elaborate swans involved! Simply follow these folding methods and you’re on your way.
(For most single-serving dishes in this book, use a 20 piece of parchment; when making family-size recipes, use a 30 piece.)
First, be sure to arrange your food so that you have at least 4 of paper on the sides (along the long edges) and at least 5 along the ends (the short edges).
You want the food centered on the paper and flattened so it is of even thickness throughout.
Lift up the ends of the paper (the short edges) and bring them together in the center of the food.
Fold them over at least twice (creasing the folds so they hold) so that you fold directly down tight to the food, making sure your fold goes all the way out to the short ends.
To fold the sides, you can either simply twist each end (nothing delicate required here, just twist it up) or you can fold it like you would a wrapped gift, bringing the long sides in to meet at a ‘v’ and then just folding in toward the food a few times.
It’s important to tightly fold the paper so that there isn’t a lot of extra space around the food and none of the juices leak out.
1. Place the food in the center of the parchment.
2. Take each of the short ends of the paper and hold them up so they meet in the middle, above the food.
3. Fold these edges together, creasing them.
4. Continue folding these edges over and over, creasing it each time.
5. Fold down until you reach the food.
6. Grasp one end of the packet and begin twisting it.
7. Continue twisting.
8. Finish twisting so the end of the twist is facing up. Repeat for the other side.
9. For an alternate method, take one end of the paper and fold one side of it in, like a triangle. Crease the paper.
10. Fold the other side in and crease the paper.
11. The edges should make a triangle.
12. Now fold the point up, folding several times and creasing, until the end of the packet is secure.
Techniques for Success
In general, it’s a good idea to place your parchment paper packets on a baking sheet lined with foil. While it’s extremely unlikely that the parchment paper will leak, I recommend using the foil because the paper can get damp on the bottom and could slightly dirty your baking sheet. Also, the foil gives you added insurance should the parchment paper ever rip (it never has for me). Don’t worry, you can reuse the same piece of foil over and over (since it’s not likely to get dirty), and foil is also recyclable. If you don’t have a baking sheet, you can place some of the sturdier packets (wrapped very securely in foil so they cannot possibly leak) directly on an oven or toaster oven rack—but be sure you can transport it without it tearing or breaking open and be careful it doesn’t leak.
While all of the cooking times have been tested, this isn’t an exact science—common sense comes into play. If you use a chicken breast or piece of fish that is quite thick, you will likely need to cook it a bit longer than the recipe says. And if you use one that is quite thin, it’ll probably take less time to cook. Layering your food in the packet in a consistent and even way will help the food cook evenly. If you want to check your food for doneness (particularly useful with meat), pull it out of the oven, wait about ten seconds so the paper cools enough to touch, and gently unfold the paper over the center of the food