Cooking wine is sort of a holdover from prohibition. People who grew
up thinking Alcohol is Evil didn't want to have any in their homes.
But
they wanted those delicious flavors in cooking. Cooking wine seemed to
be a reasonable compromise.
In essence, cooking wine is really
bad wine that then has lots of salt added to it. This makes it pretty
much undrinkable by anyone looking to 'get drunk'. However, being a
combination of bad wine and lots of salt, it also is pretty much nasty
for adding into food too! If you wouldn't want to put something in your
mouth in the first place, do you really want to put it into a dish that
you heat - meaning its (bad) flavors are now really concentrated down?
Using
cooking wine is, simply put, a way to harm a perfectly good recipe.
There's really no reason at all to use cooking wine instead of regular
wine. If you're worried about youngsters getting into your wine, put it
into a high cabinet. Or put it into a locked cabinet! There are
probably MANY other much nastier substances in your house that should
be locked up if you're worried about this sort of thing. But
deliberately cooking with a nasty substance can literally ruin your
recipes. You rarely save any money by buying cooking wine, either.
If
you have a recipe that calls for wine or cooking wine, use a real wine
from your local wine shop. All of the wines used in cooking should be
found there quite easily. If your recipe calls for cooking wine and you
go with normal wine, be sure to taste your recipe after adding the wine
to see if you should also add in some salt, too. Some common types of
cooking wine are:
Sherry
Sherry is a fortified
(brandy-added) wine from the south of Spain. Because it's fortified,
you can keep a bottle around for months after you open it, as long as
you keep it sealed and cool. It usually has a rich, sweet flavor.
Marsala
Marsala
comes from Sicily, which is the island at the toe of Italy's boot. It's
a wine fortified with brandy and comes in red and white varieties, tho
the red is the most popular type. It's a rich, sweet flavor and is used
very much in Italian cooking, especially Chicken Marsala .
Andrew Hall
www.all-free-recipes.com
Article Source: www.EzineArticles.com
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