20 Things You've Been Doing Wrong in the Kitchen Your Entire Life

20 Things You've Been Doing Wrong in the Kitchen Your Entire Life

Are you scrambling eggs, making chocolate chip cookies, and measuring pasta the right way? It might not seem obvious, but there are plenty of basic things you could be doing the "wrong" way in the kitchen. There's somewhat of an art to cutting a lime, cooking chicken, mincing garlic, and roasting crispy potatoes. These 20 helpful hacks will make you a serious cooking pro if you're not already. Keep reading to learn every cooking shortcut and tip that will save you time, stress, and sanity in the kitchen. You just might learn an unexpected tip you never knew you needed.

1. Storing Lemons Storing-Lemons.jpg

You can say goodbye to moldy lemons in your fridge thanks to this ingenious hack for keeping them fresh for up to three months. All you need is a bowl of water.

Get the tip: how to keep lemons fresh longer

2. Roasting Potatoes Roasting-Potatoes.jpg

The best roasted potatoes are boiled in salted water and roasted in the oven for a perfectly soft interior and supercrunchy exterior. The other secret ingredient — whole-grain mustard — takes their flavor to the next level.

Get the recipe: mustard roasted potatoes

3. Cutting a Lime Cutting-Lime.jpg

Cutting a lime in half barely gives you any juice . . . and that's because that's not the proper way to cut it.

Get the tip: how to cut a lime

4. Scrambling Eggs Scrambling-Eggs.jpg

Protein, including eggs, hates heat. If you've always ended up with overcooked and rubbery scrambled eggs, you're probably cooking them too quickly at too high a heat. Low and slow is the only way to go for soft, custardy scrambled eggs.

Get the recipe: Gordon Ramsay's scrambled eggs

5. Making Peanut Butter Cookies Making-Peanut-Butter-Cookies.jpg

You only need four ingredients (peanut butter, sugar, egg, and vanilla) for perfect peanut butter cookies.

Get the recipe: easy peanut butter cookies

6. Draining Pasta Draining-Pasta.jpg

Almost every time you make pasta, you should save about half a cup of the pasta water before pouring the rest down the drain. The salty, starchy liquid that the pasta cooked in becomes a crucial part to achieving a silky, cohesive sauce in most pasta dishes like carbonara, cacio e pepe, and garlic white wine pasta.

Get the tip: why you should save pasta water

7. Wasting Spoiled Wine Wasting-Spoiled-Wine.jpg

Don't toss your spoiled bottle of wine! You can easily save it by swirling a (clean) penny around in a glass of the wine.

Get the tip: how to save spoiled wine

8. Making Chocolate Chip Cookies Making-Chocolate-Chip-Cookies.jpg

If you're not adding salt to the top of freshly baked chocolate chip cookies, you're doing it wrong. A sprinkling of good-quality flake salt completely transforms the flavor of chocolate chip cookies and immediately elevates them.

Get the recipe: easy chocolate chip cookies with flake salt

9. Making Fettuccine Alfredo Making-Fettuccine-Alfredo.jpg

One-pot fettuccine alfredo might actually change your life. There's no need to make the cheese sauce in a separate pan when the pasta can be cooked in the liquid for maximum flavor and easy cleanup.

Get the recipe: one-pot fettuccine alfredo

10. Filling Your Muffin Tin Filling-Your-Muffin-Tin.jpeg

A spring-loaded ice cream scoop will be your key to evenly portioned cookies and cupcakes.

Get the tip: how to bake equal-size cupcakes

11. Making Mashed Potatoes Making-Mashed-Potatoes.jpg

Since you're already adding heavy cream and butter to your mashed potatoes, you should actually be cooking the potatoes in the cream and butter. Chef Tyler Florence's mashed potatoes will convince you there's no other way to make them.

Get the recipe: Tyler Florence's mashed potatoes

12. Cooking Bacon Cooking-Bacon.jpg

Sizzling bacon on the stovetop only results in greasy splatters and painful burns. You should roast bacon in the oven on a cookie sheet lined with foil so that the bacon cooks evenly and the cleanup is effortless.

Get the recipe: oven-roasted bacon

13. Forgoing Lemon Zest When You Don't Have a Microplane Forgoing-Lemon-Zest-When-You-Dont-Have-Microplane.jpg

Don't have a Microplane? Get citrus zest anyway by peeling the skin and chopping it up.

Get the tip: how to get lemon zest without a Microplane

14. Making Burgers Making-Burgers.jpg

You'll never buy ground beef again once you learn how to make burgers from sirloin tips rather than ground chuck. The flavor and texture are far superior to store-bought ground beef.

Get the recipe: America's Test Kitchen burger recipe

15. Mincing Garlic Mincing-Garlic.jpg

Peeling and mincing garlic is one of the most tedious kitchen tasks, and knocking it out with your Microplane is so much easier and more efficient.

Get the tip: how to chop garlic with a Microplane

16. Complicating Chicken Complicating-Chicken.jpg

All you need for the best-ever oven-baked chicken is salt — seriously.

Get the recipe: best chicken recipe

17. Measuring Spaghetti Measuring-Spaghetti.jpg

Perfectly measuring spaghetti can be stressful — it's easy to end up with too much or too little. Turns out the secret to a perfect portion of spaghetti lies in the kitchen tool you're already using to make it.

Get the tip: how to measure spaghetti

18. Making PB&J Sandwiches Making-PBJ-Sandwiches.jpg

Who says eating peanut butter and jelly for lunch as an adult is unacceptable? You can elevate the classic sandwich by using a combination of creamy and crunchy peanut butter, Nutella, strawberries, bananas, marshmallow fluff, jelly, and honey.

Get the recipe: adult peanut butter and jelly sandwich

19. Making Quesadillas Making-Quesadillas.jpg

Eating quesadillas is messy. Make them dip-friendly and a lot more fun to eat by making quesadilla roll-ups instead of flat quesadillas.

Get the recipe: quesadilla roll-ups

20. Tossing Eggs After They Go Bad Tossing-Eggs-After-Go-Bad.jpg

If you're not going to finish all your eggs before they go bad, freeze them! Fresh eggs will last about five weeks in the fridge but up to six months in the freezer. The simplest way to freeze eggs is by dividing them in a muffin tin. Freeze until they are solid, transfer to a resealable freezer-safe plastic bag, and store until you're ready to use.

Get the tip: how to freeze eggs

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