Appropriate process for bulk sauteing onions?
In doing some bulk cooking for a vacation, I needed to cook 12 sliced onions and later 6 minced onions for two different dishes; both as a first step in a sauce. In both cases, I used a large Le Creuset dutch oven. I found that the evaporation of the liquids shed from the onions couldn't keep up with the volume of liquids and I seemed to be boiling the onions rather than sauteing.
For the sliced onions, I ended up removing half the volume, draining off the liquid, cooking the onions, and boiling down the liquid to add back to the sauce at a later step. The onions boiled / simmered for 30 mins before I took that action. The dish was fine, but was a curry, so had lots of other flavor. It was also distinctly better after I added the boiled down liquid.
With the minced onion, the liquid eventually boiled off and I continued to cook them. It felt like it took a long time to get to that stage though. The dish was fine, but the texture of the onions was different than how I normally prepare them.
Are there appropriate steps to take when cooking mass quantities of onions as a first step in a dish? Is it ok for them to go through the boil / simmer phase? Should they be cooked in batches? What recipe adjustments should be made?
Best Answer
You simply need to ensure sufficient area/a max thickness of the onion layer. You can let them simmer first in their own juices, but I have never had good results that way. You really need them spread out for sauteing.
In practical terms for a home kitchen, this means cooking in batches. Of course, nothing stops you from using multiple burners at once, and maybe even some kind of external burner if you have one, like a paella cooker going off its own gas canister. As far as I know, there is no other way around it.
If you don't need them sauteed but are OK with merely softened onions (no caramelization, no residual firmness), filling a pot with them and keeping them on low flame for a long time is a good option which frees your attention for other tasks. Don't forget to add sufficient fat on the bottom against burning, butter makes them especially tasty.
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Answer 2
Sautéing shouldn't take much time, as it needs to be done over fairly high heat.
You want to make sure that you're not crowding the pan, and that the pan's sides are low enough to make sure the evaporated moisture doesn't get stuck in the pan. ... in other words, do it in batches.
As the amount of heat a given burner can put out is fixed, once you get past a certain point, the cooking time scales at best linearly. (ie, doubling the recipe requires 2x the time).
The only problem that I see is that the 'jumping' process of a true sauté can end up cooling down the pan some, so you might be able to speed up the process some by stirring more and flipping the food less -- but you'll want to keep a close eye on things, and if you see signs of burning, start tossing the food to cool it down some.
The only other process that I might suggest is stir-frying. If you have a good set up for a wok (proper heat for it), you might want to stir fry your onions in batches, and then set them aside to get a little more cooking from carry-over. And, when you're dealing with this sort of volume, it doesn't hurt to use two pans on two different burners -- you can always recombine them to a single pot when it comes time to simmer the curry to free up the other burner. (but be aware that this also means you're reducing how much liquid will evaporate)
Answer 3
I figure that the boiling is inherently a stage in the sautéing of onions - Perhaps it's not "a true Sauté." You could partially dry them (perhaps in the oven) if you think otherwise? I recently made a ~6 lb to start with - not much by the end - batch of caramelized onion which spent quite a while boiling it's way down before it got to caramelizing. Tastes fine to me...
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