Cooking lemon juice into stew

Cooking lemon juice into stew - High angle of fresh ripe lemons and zest placed near grater on wooden table

I have recently discovered a much broader use of lemon juice in my cooking and now add it to almost all stews and soups a few minutes before the end of cooking. But I am curious if there are benefits to adding it earlier, e.g. if it will cook in better and give it a zestier flavor if I cook it longer than just adding it at the end of after. One example that comes to mind are fava beans, which are great zesty. The downside of cooking lemon juice is that it can cause undesired curding of some vegetable protein.



Best Answer

Cooking lemon juice longer won't make it "zestier." Like most foods added in small quantities as flavor enhancers, lemon juice has a lot of aromatics and flavor components that could boil off, break down, or get absorbed by your stew/soup with longer cooking.

There's a reason why a fresh lemon or lime slice is often served beside a lot of foods (and drinks) -- you'll get a stronger lemon flavor when it is added fresh at the end of cooking. A splash of lemon juice added earlier will just give a generic acidity to a dish; you might as well use vinegar or any other (cheaper) acid.

The only reason to add it earlier is in a dish where you use a lot and want the lemon flavor to penetrate the dish fully. But in that case I wouldn't tend to use plain lemon juice but perhaps more of the actual fruit. Rinds can be bitter, so you could add zest or chopped up peeled lemon pulp, but lemons are sometimes a bit of work to peel and remove seeds. A better option for this application is preserved lemons (i.e., lemons added to salt and kept for long storage), which can be chopped -- rind and all -- and added to stews earlier in the cooking process.




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Can lemon be added to stew?

Bring to a simmer, cover and bake for about 2 hours or until the beef and vegetables are tender. Just before serving, zest 1 lemon and cut it in half. Stir the zest and the juice of the lemon into the stew. Cut the remaining lemon into wedges and serve with the stew.

Can lemon juice be cooked?

When lemon juice is boiled, it reduces, which means that water evaporates. This concentrates the flavor. This concentration and cooking also changes the flavor. The now cooked juice, while still clearly identifiable as lemon, will be much less bright.

Can you add lemon juice to beef?

Using Lemon JuiceWhile letting a piece of beef marinate in a recipe that includes lemon juice will tenderize the meat, you must still cook it before eating it. The lemon juice will also infuse the meat with a bold flavor because as it tenderizes the meat, the juice is able to seep into the meat more easily.

Do you put lemon juice before or after cooking?

Add lemon juice in toward the end of the cooking process. If you want to enhance the lemon taste, however, adding your lemon juice in at the end of the cooking time will prevent a loss of flavor.



How to Make Homemade Lemonade Using Real Lemons




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