Everything you need to cook with confidence — how appliances work, why techniques work, and exact cooking times.
Cooking times, temperatures, and substitution guides
Complete guides for every appliance
Everything you need to know about air fryers: how they work, what to cook, and the science behind crispy results.
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Everything you need to know about your oven: convection vs conventional, rack position, roasting temperatures, and why your oven lies to you.
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Everything you need to know about pressure cookers: the physics of sealed steam, what to cook, timing charts, and why tough cuts come out better than expensive ones.
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Everything you need to know about slow cookers: how low heat transforms tough cuts, when to use high vs low, timing charts, and the mistakes that ruin an 8-hour braise.
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Everything you need to know about sous-vide: how it works, what to cook, and the science behind precise temperature cooking.
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Master the stovetop: how heat transfer works on gas, electric, and induction, choosing the right pan, searing, simmering, deglazing, and building pan sauces.
Read the guide →Why techniques work — explained
Food Science
Bones, cartilage, and connective tissue contain collagen, a tough structural protein. When cooked in…
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Yes, convection typically cuts cooking time by 15-25%. The fan strips away a thin layer of cooler, h…
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Every oven has hot spots — zones where temperature runs 10-30°C above the set point. They form becau…
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At least 15-20 minutes for roasting and baking — not just until the beep. The beep signals that the…
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For large cuts, use both methods in sequence. Covered roasting traps steam and delivers fast, moist…
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At 120°C, a pressure cooker breaks down the pectin and hemicellulose in bean cell walls much faster…
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The Maillard reaction requires a dry surface and temperatures above 140°C. A sealed pressure cooker…
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Use natural release for braised meats, beans, and anything that benefits from resting time — the slo…
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Both work by converting collagen to gelatin, but a pressure cooker does it in 30–45 minutes at 120°C…
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Dairy proteins denature and clump when exposed to sustained heat and acid. A slow cooker delivers bo…
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High reaches ~95°C and low reaches ~80–85°C. Both break down collagen and cook food safely — the dif…
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No, it's not required for safe cooking. But you should do it anyway — searing creates Maillard compo…
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