I know! When I want chocolate covered strawberries I just break a bar into chunks, put it in a coffee cup and use a microwave. I'm sure if I tried to melt chocolate outside I'd get a fair addition of flies in it, which... ick.
@@Rime_in_Retrograde so if you didn’t have a microwave? You were away from home, you had no electricity. You wouldn’t see the use? A lot of people don’t have a microwave. 😒 ironically your comment gave me the ick. Just showed how little you’ve tried to think about what others may not have. I don’t even have the kitchen space for a microwave, can imagine you’ve not got a lot that others have. I’m f they told you to just use it or you’re dirty, would that make sense?
@@kirstybrown1185There’s maybe more than 2 alternatives to the microwave, not including the sun. The bugs, dust, other yucky particles that would get stuck in the chocolate is just a no. 0/10. Unless you melt it still in the packaging but even then it would still just stick to the packaging and be a sticky mess. If you don’t have a microwave just do a water bath. And don’t make excuses about boiling water, unless you live on skidrow
@@kirstybrown1185 if you want chocolate for a drizzle or something, you can leave it in the packaging and melt it with any heat source, even sitting on it and just cut off a corner. Sunlight sounds a little slow, but I am rather Northern European, not very hot over here
I like how the most viewed hack is literally "Use a spiralizer for its intended purpose." I fully anticipate the new tiktoc trend being "Food hack! Use a spatula to flip food!"
I've had that tool, an apple parer/corer/slicer for years. It can do potatoes, onions or anything. Mine is stainless steel and makes easy peasy work of doing the hard work after a day of apple picking. If you make 2 cuts in the spiral, your apple or onion is perfect for cooking.
I love how positive you are and even if you don't like something you stick to professional criticism and don't attack the creators. Makes your videos genuinely pleasant and uplifting to watch 😊
The egg flip lid one to me mostly seems like a burn waiting to happen. You have essentially three points of danger there - transferring the eggs to lid (which also includes the butter or oil which will be even hotter than the eggs), holding onto/balancing the lid (which, if glass as in the video, can heat up fairly quickly) and the transferal back to the pan but flipped in a very quick motion that can be messed up very easily. Safely cooked eggs reach at least 60C, which is enough to give a burn in seconds, and this is ignoring the oil around it that will be even hotter. I've seen the same hack that have you flip the lid and the pan at the same time (you put the lid over the pan and then flip), so this version is just barely safer but it's still an unnecessary hazard. Just flipping the eggs normally is a singular movement and is a lot more controlled than the lid. For eggs flipping, I just recommend either not flipping at all (it honestly doesn't make that much of a difference if you don't want to risk a yolk breaking) *or* to get a bigger silicone spoon that can easily scoop up the eggs, tilt your pan a little while you are flipping and just figure out the technique with practice and accepting that the first few egg flip attempts will have broken yolks. I prefer not to flip out of partial laziness, I just scoop oil and pour it over the whites to help it cook.
For the Garlic.... Just put the whole bag into the freezer.... And then you can just take out the cloves 1 by 1 or how many you need.... it cuts super easy, and smashes really well...
Is my neighborhood the only place that bugs exist???? If I put open chocolate bars outside, every bug and critter nearby would be in it by the time I got back.
@KingWin0114 Ok, but why? Why put it outside in the first place, and why go to the trouble to dirty a glass bowl to cover it while it's 'sunbathing'? It's just plain silly!
The Bell Pepper hack is actually amazing if you change just one thing about it - instead of peeling it back and just cutting at the bottom, cut down along the inner ridges and cut through the bottom all in one long slice. Clears out all the seeds, the white inner bits, and gets you so much more of the pepper so you don’t have that wastage at the end! I only ever have the seed core and the stems left over doing it that way.
It’s called a spiralizer and has been around for at least a decade. It’s not a unitasker - you can spiralizer so many vegetables. I’m sure you’ve heard of Zoodles. A spiral Lizer is how you make noodles from zucchini. And I’ve never heard of coring onion. I really don’t know what’s the purpose of Korean onion will be, but a spiralizer always leaves a core of any vegetable you use it for. You can use it to cook or check it but if you do a lot of it, you could put them in a bag put them in the freezer and use it for a vegetable stock probably.
9:29 little fun fact! This isn’t really a tiktok food hack, this was a viral coffee that became popular due to a cafe selling it in Dubai! Since it’s not available to many people, they’ve started making it themselves! No hate to you or the creator just thought I would let you know:))
The chocolate-coating would be a ton better in a mug or glass cup, and then you pour piping-hot fresh coffee in. So it's a mocha that slowly gets more and more chocolately as you drink. You wouldnt be able to 'crackle' it, but thats silly anyway😂
Funny thing with the ketchup & lettuce hacks - I've been doing those since I was a teen, and I'm nearly 50. As for the pasta toothpick trick, I don't know how well that would work with thin pasta like angel hair or thin spaghetti - I'd worry it would slip out with the water.
once when i was traveling i had to stay at a hotel for one night and i got room service breakfast for whatever reason. the scrambled eggs looked EXACTLY like the one in the video. now i know why lol
The crackly chocolate-- That's exactly the mix you pour onto ice cream & it will solidify immediately. It's not a hack. It's been around for so long. It's called the chocolate shell. Have to use coconut oil as it solidifies when cold.
the problem is that its very easy to slip and end up with all your pasta in the sink. so its less control+strength needed to just let the lid rest against the toothpick. i just have a pot that has a perforated lid.
Yes! I’ve been draining my pasta using the lid ever since I started cooking and have never had an issue or needed a toothpick. Most of these ‘hacks’ are completely useless and are just for viewing traffic.
@@gwennorthcutt421 exactly this. Have I just tilted the lid every time for years? yes. Would the toothpick make it easier to feel more in control ? yes. Will I bother using this hack... nah. But it's still a hack that would make it even easier so it fits the brief 🤷♀
@@gwennorthcutt421 easy to slip? ur holding it in place tho, for years me n my mom have been doing it that way and ive never seen the lid slip like that
Oh, I wrap usual mochi dough into rice paper. This way the dough doesn't stick everywhere even without using starch coat, and fruit fillings don't fall out
I had no idea people got the core out of lettuce any other way. I've done it the whack on the counter way my whole life, it's the way my mom taught me and the way her parents taught her. All you have to do to make it last is put it in the fridge in a ziplock bag or a sealed container with a damp paper towel at the bottom of the bag and place the lettuce head in with the core-hole facing down and it will last weeks, I've had it last easily 1-2 months with only a few parts turning or looking soggy.
There's a couple of these "hacks" I remember when I was a kid (I'm 72). The ketchup wind-up, and I had forgotten the cabbage one. I will have to do that since I have a head.
I do the garlic hack with tomato paste and even raw minced meat prepared to become meatballs when I don't want to bother forming them. Little meat squares are too cute :)
I feel like a lot of people griping about the hacks complain about everything. Some people are just allergic to positive feelings, they don't want to be pleased by anything.
The first egg hack was good, but done wrong. You had to flip the pan over the lid after sliding the eggs on the lid. And slowly turn the pan and lid together
She followed a recipe, you’re telling her she did something wrong and you didn’t understand that she copied steps. The original video did it wrong. Is that what you mean?
@@thealmightyollar i live with my bf but at home my family always used to keep it like that or laying on the side, but i get it can be hard with others!
9:12 I actually tried the Cracking Latte, my local coffee shop sells it, tho I didn't know it was viral until the barista said it was and checked for myself. Presentation/execution wise 9/10, taste wise 7/10.
The lettuce hack has been done in some manner at least since the 1960s. We would slam the core onto the edge of the counter [squared off edges, not rounded] and the core would come right out
I have one of those spiraliser things. I got it during the spiral food craze a few years back. I used it for everything for about a week. Washing it was a nightmare. It’s been in the box in storage since. Glad to see they’re back again! Don’t think I ever tried an onion though. 😂
It's exactly the opposite Milk chocolate has waaaaaaay less fat, they use milk powder without fat, it has more sugar and less fat Cocoa has a huge amount of fat, sugar has nonfat at all Sugar melts easy, fat not so much
1’m 40 years old and my best friend and I used to do the ketchup swing thing when we were teenagers. Her mom would always get mad thinking we were going to make a mess, but we thought it was so funny. We had a little sound we made while we did it too.
I was shown the lettuce on when I was around 17. She just pushed into hard onto the counter and sure enough, you can just pop it out. Then run water through the hole, cleans each leaf. Then pull it apart 🥰
Instead of flipping the eggs with a lid, you could just cover the pan with the lid, add a splash of water and let it steam the top part of the egg. Perfectly cooked egg whites, and jammy yolks are almost guaranteed that way (and less likely to break)
As an alternative, you could use mint tea or mint hot chocolate for a nice flavor for the crack cup and that way, you can crack it immediately and still get a decent crack, as well as getting the flavor of the chocolate in the drink.
Hiya😃 I just wanted to ask you to try this recipe :👇 -Bring the mango, and add honey, and oats for the topping if you know it. -get any bowl I requested small get vanilla ice cream pour it in the small bowl add classic milk and oat as a topping
That last one comes in handy when making Kanda Bhaji, which are fried onion fritters (an Indian recipe). It's similar to street food that people enjoy with chai.
Also, if you put your onion in your freezer for 5 minutes or fridge for 30 minutes before cutting, you won’t cry. Don’t cut the root end either because that’s where the compound that causes you to cry comes from.
I store garlic and ginger in the freezer if I buy too much, it works very well. My granny used to smack a head of iceberg lettuce on the counter to get the core out 😄 I do it if I'm making a big salad
I have the same Fisher Price-looking spiralizer. It's great. I do use it a lot more in the summer to make cucumber noodles or whatever, but it's useful. Not sure why she'd call it a coring gadget, or why you'd use it on onions.
The lettuce 'hack' is just a normal thing to do in the culinary field. You can also just twist the stem. People have been twisting and slamming the lettuce stem for years. My mother used to do the same thing back in the 90's, and she learnt that from her grandmother. I wouldn't call it a hack, but just how you remove the core. The real question I have is who cut's their lettuce? Aside from shredding it for fast food, I have never cut lettuce. Lol the thought of cutting lettuce just seems weird to me. Though it did give me a chuckle.
If I bought lettuce heads like that I definitely would cut it. I never would have thought of slamming it or twisting it to get the stem out. If you don't have parents who know much about cooking, then you're left growing up without that kind of knowledge and end up learning it far later than you probably should have. Unfortunately, that's the situation I'm in. Mom doesn't cook much, and if she does, it's rarely ever with fruits or vegetables. Don't have a dad to speak of so no chance there.
Excellent video. I'm trying to avoid the rage-bait nonsense "hacks" on TikTok, so your videos let me get my fix without having to rant about why it wouldn't work! I'll probably give that garlic technique a try, as I can never get through a bag before it goes bad. I don't know why I never thought of just mincing it all in the food processor. I use a device similar to the onion slicer when I'm processing a lot of apples (for pies/cobblers, or freeze drying) but I need to chop an onion or two a day (hey, everything's better with an onion!). I can't imagine getting that thing out, using it, cleaning it, putting it away, then cutting my onions down to a shape that I actually need that frequently. I'll probably just stick to my trusty chef's knife!
Don't ever do the frying with the plastic bottle! If the hot oil spills too much, it will melt the plastic on your hands and it will be worse than just oil cause it will stick to the skin!
For 7th place use a bag putting the cap in a corner and just twirl the bag in the same motion as the arm you can got faster and it works better. Also don't use a flimsy or cheap bag it could cause injury if you do.
im gonna use the pasta water one, because my lids for some reason always slide back on when im starting to pour and one time i even lost all my noodles and had to start over cooking
Regarding the first hack, the egg flip, the original hack shows the eggs being slid onto the inverted lid, the pan then inverted and pressed onto the lid, then the whole assembly rotated back to "normal" and the lid removed. This technique actually works - it's how I flip the pie when I'm making Spaghetti Pie. But it's a bit clumsy and you have to be careful of dripping oil when you flip the pan - I usually drain the pan first after I slide the pie ono a plate (I don't use a lid) first. Thank you for the video!
The rice bowl hack would be good if your having company and want to make the take out look nice on the table. I've been doing the lettuce like that to remove the core, since I was little in the kitchen with my mom. So about 40 yrs. Lol 😂
The lettuce slamming thing. My mom taught me this when I was a kid and im now mid 40's. I thought that everyone knew this and did it till my husband and I moved in together when I was in my 20s and he had no idea what I was doing. I did not see this as a hack.
The garlic trick has been around for a long time and if you find your self with a lot of garlic great way to keep it - way better than that stuff in a jar 🥂
scrambled eggs in water looks absolutely disgusting.
Hahha does look disgusting but it was surprisingly fluffy! Probably need to treat it like poached eggs and dry on paper towel. lol so weird
It's actully a part an really good recipe but um it's more like a tomato egg soup so your kinda right lol
@@yuecui2978 yeah I was just thinking that 😭 it's literally how we make egg and tomato soup
I agree
I agree
The way leaving chocolate out in the sun to melt as a “hack” is REACHING to say the least lol
I know! When I want chocolate covered strawberries I just break a bar into chunks, put it in a coffee cup and use a microwave. I'm sure if I tried to melt chocolate outside I'd get a fair addition of flies in it, which... ick.
@@Rime_in_Retrograde so if you didn’t have a microwave? You were away from home, you had no electricity. You wouldn’t see the use? A lot of people don’t have a microwave. 😒 ironically your comment gave me the ick. Just showed how little you’ve tried to think about what others may not have. I don’t even have the kitchen space for a microwave, can imagine you’ve not got a lot that others have. I’m f they told you to just use it or you’re dirty, would that make sense?
@@kirstybrown1185There’s maybe more than 2 alternatives to the microwave, not including the sun. The bugs, dust, other yucky particles that would get stuck in the chocolate is just a no. 0/10. Unless you melt it still in the packaging but even then it would still just stick to the packaging and be a sticky mess. If you don’t have a microwave just do a water bath. And don’t make excuses about boiling water, unless you live on skidrow
@@kirstybrown1185 if you want chocolate for a drizzle or something, you can leave it in the packaging and melt it with any heat source, even sitting on it and just cut off a corner. Sunlight sounds a little slow, but I am rather Northern European, not very hot over here
Jus leave it in ur pocket
i knew the pancake hack wouldnt work because you can tell they were not done in an air fryer from the browning.
but imagine if they did 😏
I like how the most viewed hack is literally "Use a spiralizer for its intended purpose." I fully anticipate the new tiktoc trend being "Food hack! Use a spatula to flip food!"
First hack will be.."how to flip eggs"..😂😂
Sometimes I genuinely question the iq of tiktok users but then remind myself there's a reason theres so many jokes on them 😂.
I've had that tool, an apple parer/corer/slicer for years. It can do potatoes, onions or anything. Mine is stainless steel and makes easy peasy work of doing the hard work after a day of apple picking. If you make 2 cuts in the spiral, your apple or onion is perfect for cooking.
@@RWCLtd3Also carrots, zucchini, cucumbers, anything that fits! They’re so useful!!
I love how positive you are and even if you don't like something you stick to professional criticism and don't attack the creators. Makes your videos genuinely pleasant and uplifting to watch 😊
The egg flip lid one to me mostly seems like a burn waiting to happen. You have essentially three points of danger there - transferring the eggs to lid (which also includes the butter or oil which will be even hotter than the eggs), holding onto/balancing the lid (which, if glass as in the video, can heat up fairly quickly) and the transferal back to the pan but flipped in a very quick motion that can be messed up very easily. Safely cooked eggs reach at least 60C, which is enough to give a burn in seconds, and this is ignoring the oil around it that will be even hotter. I've seen the same hack that have you flip the lid and the pan at the same time (you put the lid over the pan and then flip), so this version is just barely safer but it's still an unnecessary hazard. Just flipping the eggs normally is a singular movement and is a lot more controlled than the lid.
For eggs flipping, I just recommend either not flipping at all (it honestly doesn't make that much of a difference if you don't want to risk a yolk breaking) *or* to get a bigger silicone spoon that can easily scoop up the eggs, tilt your pan a little while you are flipping and just figure out the technique with practice and accepting that the first few egg flip attempts will have broken yolks. I prefer not to flip out of partial laziness, I just scoop oil and pour it over the whites to help it cook.
For the Garlic.... Just put the whole bag into the freezer.... And then you can just take out the cloves 1 by 1 or how many you need.... it cuts super easy, and smashes really well...
Is my neighborhood the only place that bugs exist???? If I put open chocolate bars outside, every bug and critter nearby would be in it by the time I got back.
A southern thing lol 😂
I’d have used my brain and put something over it, maybe she did too. 🤷♀️ Wild concept though.
How about just cover it with a glass bowl ..?
Same
@KingWin0114 Ok, but why? Why put it outside in the first place, and why go to the trouble to dirty a glass bowl to cover it while it's 'sunbathing'?
It's just plain silly!
The Bell Pepper hack is actually amazing if you change just one thing about it - instead of peeling it back and just cutting at the bottom, cut down along the inner ridges and cut through the bottom all in one long slice. Clears out all the seeds, the white inner bits, and gets you so much more of the pepper so you don’t have that wastage at the end! I only ever have the seed core and the stems left over doing it that way.
Mom taught me the lettuce thing 50 YEARS AGO!!!!😵💫
Cracks me up how young people think they're inventing the wheel for the very first time 😝
U very old then
Same! I've always done iceberg that way, since I was a kid :)
@@wearelegion1163none of the people in the videos she showed said they created the hack, they were simply just sharing an easy way to part lettuce.
RIGHT?! For cabbage too. 😂
I’ve been doing that lettuce hack for years. All you have to do is slam it down on a hard surface.
When you said what in the 5min crafts is this to the tongs hack, I died 😂
I subbed because of the 5mins reference 🤣
It’s called a spiralizer and has been around for at least a decade. It’s not a unitasker - you can spiralizer so many vegetables. I’m sure you’ve heard of Zoodles. A spiral Lizer is how you make noodles from zucchini. And I’ve never heard of coring onion. I really don’t know what’s the purpose of Korean onion will be, but a spiralizer always leaves a core of any vegetable you use it for. You can use it to cook or check it but if you do a lot of it, you could put them in a bag put them in the freezer and use it for a vegetable stock probably.
9:29 little fun fact! This isn’t really a tiktok food hack, this was a viral coffee that became popular due to a cafe selling it in Dubai! Since it’s not available to many people, they’ve started making it themselves! No hate to you or the creator just thought I would let you know:))
The chocolate-coating would be a ton better in a mug or glass cup, and then you pour piping-hot fresh coffee in. So it's a mocha that slowly gets more and more chocolately as you drink. You wouldnt be able to 'crackle' it, but thats silly anyway😂
Funny thing with the ketchup & lettuce hacks - I've been doing those since I was a teen, and I'm nearly 50.
As for the pasta toothpick trick, I don't know how well that would work with thin pasta like angel hair or thin spaghetti - I'd worry it would slip out with the water.
The chocolate strawberry hack would be fun to do when camping 🏕️
The egg flip hack forces you to work hard to clean ALL the oil from the lid... lids are always harder to digrease
once when i was traveling i had to stay at a hotel for one night and i got room service breakfast for whatever reason. the scrambled eggs looked EXACTLY like the one in the video. now i know why lol
Whoaaa!! lol
The eggs at a lot of hotels are cooked sort of sous vide style, they come in a sealed plastic bag and they are put into boiling water to cook.
The crackly chocolate--
That's exactly the mix you pour onto ice cream & it will solidify immediately.
It's not a hack.
It's been around for so long.
It's called the chocolate shell.
Have to use coconut oil as it solidifies when cold.
My mom taught me that lettuce trick as a kid in the 90s. It's not new. It's cool that more people can learn it now through watching videos.
You dont even need the toothpick for the pasta hack just put the lid on crooked and it pors just fine at least thats how we do it in eastern europe
the problem is that its very easy to slip and end up with all your pasta in the sink. so its less control+strength needed to just let the lid rest against the toothpick. i just have a pot that has a perforated lid.
Yes! I’ve been draining my pasta using the lid ever since I started cooking and have never had an issue or needed a toothpick. Most of these ‘hacks’ are completely useless and are just for viewing traffic.
@@gwennorthcutt421 exactly this. Have I just tilted the lid every time for years? yes. Would the toothpick make it easier to feel more in control ? yes. Will I bother using this hack... nah. But it's still a hack that would make it even easier so it fits the brief 🤷♀
I used to do it with the lid, just flip it upside down and move it slightly. 😅
@@gwennorthcutt421 easy to slip? ur holding it in place tho, for years me n my mom have been doing it that way and ive never seen the lid slip like that
A lot of restaurants use the lettuce hack. My mom used that when I was growing up.
2:14 a trick is to wet the inside of the big bowl and the outside of the small bowl
Oh, I wrap usual mochi dough into rice paper. This way the dough doesn't stick everywhere even without using starch coat, and fruit fillings don't fall out
The forks in the bottles for frying…just use oven mitts (glove type), super secret hack!
naur you weren't supposed to drop the eggs onto the counter. You were supposed to drop them into the pan🥲
I had no idea people got the core out of lettuce any other way. I've done it the whack on the counter way my whole life, it's the way my mom taught me and the way her parents taught her. All you have to do to make it last is put it in the fridge in a ziplock bag or a sealed container with a damp paper towel at the bottom of the bag and place the lettuce head in with the core-hole facing down and it will last weeks, I've had it last easily 1-2 months with only a few parts turning or looking soggy.
I had a coworker do the ketchup hack with a squeeze bottle . it squirted all over the ceiling and wall . It was hilarious 😂
There's a couple of these "hacks" I remember when I was a kid (I'm 72). The ketchup wind-up, and I had forgotten the cabbage one. I will have to do that since I have a head.
I do the garlic hack with tomato paste and even raw minced meat prepared to become meatballs when I don't want to bother forming them. Little meat squares are too cute :)
I feel like a lot of people griping about the hacks complain about everything. Some people are just allergic to positive feelings, they don't want to be pleased by anything.
I've been doing that to my iceberg since childhood. I think my mom taught me that? ha!
The first egg hack was good, but done wrong. You had to flip the pan over the lid after sliding the eggs on the lid. And slowly turn the pan and lid together
Exactly!
Original video here: www.tiktok.com/t/ZTNmn6SHc/
boy if u dont just flip ur eggs like a normal person--
She followed a recipe, you’re telling her she did something wrong and you didn’t understand that she copied steps. The original video did it wrong. Is that what you mean?
The lettuce hack, is one I've been doing for years since I learned how to do it in a kitchen I worked at, plus its super fun to do
For the ketchup 'hack', why not just stand the bottle on its lid and let gravity do the work?
She said it takes too long so this is a quick fix!
Exactly, just keep the bottles upside down in the fridge and you never have to bother dislocating your shoulders!
Exactly. I mean, they literally make ketchup bottles designed for this.
If you live with other people there's a good chance someone will forget to put the ketchup upside down
@@thealmightyollar i live with my bf but at home my family always used to keep it like that or laying on the side, but i get it can be hard with others!
Reminds me of hotel eggs 5:09
My mom would make homemade magic shell for our ice cream with chocolate and coconut oil when we were growing up.
9:12 I actually tried the Cracking Latte, my local coffee shop sells it, tho I didn't know it was viral until the barista said it was and checked for myself. Presentation/execution wise 9/10, taste wise 7/10.
for those pancakes and in general I recommend dual blaze air fryer. I've recently replaced my old one and can't recommend enough .
The lettuce hack has been done in some manner at least since the 1960s. We would slam the core onto the edge of the counter [squared off edges, not rounded] and the core would come right out
I recently found your channel and it has been a blast! I love your content and your vibes are just amazing keep it going!!
I have one of those spiraliser things. I got it during the spiral food craze a few years back. I used it for everything for about a week. Washing it was a nightmare. It’s been in the box in storage since. Glad to see they’re back again! Don’t think I ever tried an onion though. 😂
Milk chocolate had more fat than dark chocolate, so yes it definitely will melt fasted
It's exactly the opposite
Milk chocolate has waaaaaaay less fat, they use milk powder without fat, it has more sugar and less fat
Cocoa has a huge amount of fat, sugar has nonfat at all
Sugar melts easy, fat not so much
Pirate 🏴☠️ @ 11:42 😂
Imagine if they just had a range of utensils to swap in and out for the hooks!
The lettuce hack was shown to me by my grandmother….
The ketchup centrifuge, so funny! 😂
The lettuce hack is totally a restaurant thing, of course it works! 😍
1’m 40 years old and my best friend and I used to do the ketchup swing thing when we were teenagers. Her mom would always get mad thinking we were going to make a mess, but we thought it was so funny. We had a little sound we made while we did it too.
You moving your hair with your fork hand reminds me of the Kristen Wiig character from SNL w the tiny hands. ‘And I’m Deunice.’ 😂
I was shown the lettuce on when I was around 17. She just pushed into hard onto the counter and sure enough, you can just pop it out. Then run water through the hole, cleans each leaf. Then pull it apart 🥰
Instead of flipping the eggs with a lid, you could just cover the pan with the lid, add a splash of water and let it steam the top part of the egg. Perfectly cooked egg whites, and jammy yolks are almost guaranteed that way (and less likely to break)
As an alternative, you could use mint tea or mint hot chocolate for a nice flavor for the crack cup and that way, you can crack it immediately and still get a decent crack, as well as getting the flavor of the chocolate in the drink.
we need a video where honeysuckle shows us her food hacks 🧡💪
Hiya😃
I just wanted to ask you to try this recipe :👇
-Bring the mango, and add honey, and oats for the topping if you know it.
-get any bowl I requested small get vanilla ice cream pour it in the small bowl add classic milk and oat as a topping
That last one comes in handy when making Kanda Bhaji, which are fried onion fritters (an Indian recipe). It's similar to street food that people enjoy with chai.
Everything old is new 😊…my 75 year old father had been doing that with the lettuce for decades. It works so well. Highly recommend doing that.
Your kitchen looks so nice 4:19
“What in the five minute hack” had me screaming 😅😅😂
ive never been early to ANY of ur videos soso exciteddd
Yay!!! 🥳🥳🥳
This waa a fun video. Thanks for making it. 😊❤
The second to last one is what I do with wild garlic; purée the leaves, put them in a bag, freeze them a bit and then turn them into a garlic bar.
I give the spiral a 10 out of 10 for me. I got one of those about 5 years ago and I absolutely love it!
You have gained a new subscriber 🥰
I’ve hit my lettuce against the counter like that for years 😂
Your channel is so fun and unique. I love it!
Also, if you put your onion in your freezer for 5 minutes or fridge for 30 minutes before cutting, you won’t cry. Don’t cut the root end either because that’s where the compound that causes you to cry comes from.
The easiest way to cut onion w/o crying is to run some hot water, and chop them close to the sink. The hot water absorbs the fumes.
I store garlic and ginger in the freezer if I buy too much, it works very well. My granny used to smack a head of iceberg lettuce on the counter to get the core out 😄 I do it if I'm making a big salad
On the 15th hack use a plate and just slide them back in 💯 works a charm
Super yummy 💛💛💛
Good vid and thanks. The garlic hack was the best for me and will definitely take it on board.
back when i worked in the kitchenware store i swear i used to sell at least 4 or 5 spiralizers a day. they were such a cooking fad like 10 years ago
the pasta lid hack .......that's how we always do it at home, ever since I was young lmao
I have the same Fisher Price-looking spiralizer. It's great. I do use it a lot more in the summer to make cucumber noodles or whatever, but it's useful. Not sure why she'd call it a coring gadget, or why you'd use it on onions.
The lettuce 'hack' is just a normal thing to do in the culinary field. You can also just twist the stem. People have been twisting and slamming the lettuce stem for years. My mother used to do the same thing back in the 90's, and she learnt that from her grandmother. I wouldn't call it a hack, but just how you remove the core. The real question I have is who cut's their lettuce? Aside from shredding it for fast food, I have never cut lettuce. Lol the thought of cutting lettuce just seems weird to me. Though it did give me a chuckle.
If I bought lettuce heads like that I definitely would cut it. I never would have thought of slamming it or twisting it to get the stem out. If you don't have parents who know much about cooking, then you're left growing up without that kind of knowledge and end up learning it far later than you probably should have. Unfortunately, that's the situation I'm in. Mom doesn't cook much, and if she does, it's rarely ever with fruits or vegetables. Don't have a dad to speak of so no chance there.
So cool😂😂❤❤❤
I usually just shook the bottle of ketchup up and down with force (lid on the bottom) and it works pretty well
Excellent video. I'm trying to avoid the rage-bait nonsense "hacks" on TikTok, so your videos let me get my fix without having to rant about why it wouldn't work!
I'll probably give that garlic technique a try, as I can never get through a bag before it goes bad. I don't know why I never thought of just mincing it all in the food processor.
I use a device similar to the onion slicer when I'm processing a lot of apples (for pies/cobblers, or freeze drying) but I need to chop an onion or two a day (hey, everything's better with an onion!). I can't imagine getting that thing out, using it, cleaning it, putting it away, then cutting my onions down to a shape that I actually need that frequently. I'll probably just stick to my trusty chef's knife!
When did they slam the eggs into the pan?
Don't ever do the frying with the plastic bottle! If the hot oil spills too much, it will melt the plastic on your hands and it will be worse than just oil cause it will stick to the skin!
The melted chocolate feels like the chocolate version of this is not a bug, it's a feature 😂
The scrambled egg technique is what I use with ramen, to add protein to it.
For 7th place use a bag putting the cap in a corner and just twirl the bag in the same motion as the arm you can got faster and it works better. Also don't use a flimsy or cheap bag it could cause injury if you do.
im gonna use the pasta water one, because my lids for some reason always slide back on when im starting to pour and one time i even lost all my noodles and had to start over cooking
I love your videos :3
Regarding the first hack, the egg flip, the original hack shows the eggs being slid onto the inverted lid, the pan then inverted and pressed onto the lid, then the whole assembly rotated back to "normal" and the lid removed. This technique actually works - it's how I flip the pie when I'm making Spaghetti Pie. But it's a bit clumsy and you have to be careful of dripping oil when you flip the pan - I usually drain the pan first after I slide the pie ono a plate (I don't use a lid) first.
Thank you for the video!
Editor put in wrong tiktok for that one
Spaghetti pie? Not aproved!
How did dude the pan lines on his pancakes in the air fryer 😂😂😂😂
I just grab the lettuce core and twist it out normally, then store in zip lock bag with paper towel to keep it longer 😌
So called scrambled eggs in water looked absolutely horrible😅😅
The garlic hack is my favorite 😊
The rice bowl hack would be good if your having company and want to make the take out look nice on the table. I've been doing the lettuce like that to remove the core, since I was little in the kitchen with my mom. So about 40 yrs. Lol 😂
The lettuce slamming thing. My mom taught me this when I was a kid and im now mid 40's. I thought that everyone knew this and did it till my husband and I moved in together when I was in my 20s and he had no idea what I was doing. I did not see this as a hack.
my mother used to do the lettuce thing on the counter, we hated it because it made the lettuce go bad quickly, as you said!!!
i've been doing the ketchup hack since i was a kid, other than letting it sit upside down so u can have more ketchup on ur next use
cutting that pepper looked messy XD I just cut off the top then cut out the core. No seeds everywhere and less waste!
OMG, a toothpick to drain water out of a pan. Tilt the lid and use the side of the lid that has little holes in it to make it easier.
The garlic trick has been around for a long time and if you find your self with a lot of garlic great way to keep it - way better than that stuff in a jar 🥂
For the ketchup bottle I do essentially the same thing but I put it cap side down in a plastic bag.👍
Oh nice
the pasta draining one looks pretty useful if you don’t have a colander but yeah most people do 😭
Slamming the head of lettuce on the counter has always been my favorite part of making a salad. Shocking this was a hack the whole time.