Chefs’ most controversial cooking tips

Torri Donley

In June the chef Jim Fuller caused something of a foodie firestorm when he announced that we have all been cooking mushrooms the wrong way. Convention says raw mushrooms hate moisture; you are even meant to brush the dirt off rather than washing them before cooking. Fuller, an American who […]

In June the chef Jim Fuller caused something of a foodie firestorm when he announced that we have all been cooking mushrooms the wrong way. Convention says raw mushrooms hate moisture; you are even meant to brush the dirt off rather than washing them before cooking.

Fuller, an American who now lives in Australia, said he always boils his mushrooms in a wok before frying them. After experiencing waves of indignation from people horrified by the prospect of being served a bowl of boiled mushrooms, Fuller took to Instagram to clarify, stating: “You can’t over-boil a mushroom.”

With this in mind, we asked other chefs for their most unconventional culinary tips.

Definitely boil things

Tom Hunt
Ecochef and author of Eating for People, Pleasure and Planet

Tom Hunt boils aubergines in coconut milk. Photograph: iStock
Tom Hunt boils aubergines in coconut milk. Photograph: iStock

“Boiled mushrooms are usually disgusting,” Hunt says on learning of Fuller’s technique. Then he softens his stance a little, adding: “An authentic Thai curry is normally quite watery, and that’s where you’d find something like that.” Finally, he comes clean; he boils porous veg, too.

“The other day we were going to have a barbecue, so we cut up some aubergines and peppers and bits and bobs. But then we got tired and decided not to, so I boiled them with half a can of coconut milk. Somehow even the boiled aubergine was delicious. It’s not something I’d normally do – boiled aubergine is a bit like boiled mushroom – but, actually, it became really silky. Some of it broke down and thickened the stew and it was really delicious.”

Age your fish

Robin Gill
Chef-patron of Darby’s, Sorella, and Rye by the Water, in the UK

The traditional view is that the sooner you eat a fish, the better it is. But Robin Gill suggests otherwise. “I clean the fish, taking out any offal and gills, then dip it in a salt brine for a time, based on the weight ratio,” he says. “I then hang the fish in our cold room, which has Himalayan salt in it, and dry-age the fish for between five and 14 days, calculated by how oily the fish is and its muscle composition. The result is incredible for cooking and eating.”

Microwave your cakes

Damien Wager
Pastry chef at Edible Art Patisserie in Cheltenham

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