Thanks, all, for the replies...this is both interesting and helpful.
jazzfood wrote:foil is often used as an air tight seal, generally over plastic wrap to avoid freezer burn. beware of acids though (like tomato product).
Are you saying that you wouldn't freeze acidic substances, like tomatoes, in foil, even with an intervening layer of plastic wrap? I find it interesting that you used foil for freezing...I almost always use either a plastic container (e.g., Tupperware) or plastic wrap/Zip-loc bags. What sorts of things do you freeze in foil?
Pucca wrote:I love the non-stick aluminum foil!
Good call...this product somehow was completely off my radar, though do you find it a lot more effective than spraying regular foil with non-stick cooking spray?
Een wrote:I prefer cake rings to cake pans and cover my sheet pans with parchment.
It's also great to have around when you need to make cones to pipe chocolate and such.
You know, I've always been intrigued by the idea of cake rings...can you really just set them on a baking sheet and not worry about batter seeping out through the bottom?
Do you use parchment alone for piping? It seems like it might be too flimsy to give you the control you'd want. Do you tape it at the bottom to control the size of the hole?
jlawrence01 wrote:We would place 6 servings of each meat in a foil pouch separated with parchment paper. We would reheat the pouches in an oven with a little water in the bottom of the pan.
Would you seal the foil pouches when reheating?
leek wrote:I like to make fish that way (wrap it up with veggies, herbs, etc) and bake. Since I do it at home for me and DH, I use foil. If I were doing it for company I might use parchment, which would be a prettier presentation.
This I may have to try...I don't cook enough fish, and it's still hit and miss for me. Do you use the 10 minutes/inch method? Do you wrap loosely with foil, or seal tightly? Do you ever get any foil-taste transferred to your food?
LAZ wrote:For pans that need lining, I generally use foil...
Do you use the non-stick foil mentioned above, or do you just grease the foil with butter or Crisco or Pam? Or are you thinking of non-baking applications...are there any times you'd line a pan with foil and
not want it non-stick?
(As an aside, your turkey-cooking comments (combined with
this thread on brining) have me thinking about Thanksgiving...we're hosting both sides of the family this year. Now I've only cooked a handful of holiday turkeys, and I admit to liking to mix it up a little bit...
mole poblano one year,
Thompson's turkey (not this variation, but you get the idea) another, sometimes a straightforward brine. I can't imagine having a standby, go to, "this is how I cook a turkey" method down until maybe 20 years from now. Have others experimented that much, do you cook turkeys other times throughout the year, or do you tend to find something that works and stick with it?)