How to absorb/remove excess water that you've added to a dish?

How to absorb/remove excess water that you've added to a dish? - Food Photography of Food and Wine Bottles on Table Inside Boat

My cooking style involves putting a bunch of ingredients (e.g. chicken, rice, mushrooms, tomatoes) in a pot, adding water and seasoning, turning on the heat, and coming back half an hour later. (Don't steal my techniques please.)

The problem is that this [highly scientific] method is sometimes inaccurate in the amount of water that remains in the dish after half an hour. If the water is running low, I can just add more, problem solved. But what can I do if there is too much water?

It's true that I can try to learn from my mistakes and add less water next time. However, is there a way to save the dish? I know I can just remove the top, turn up the heat, and let the extra water boil off, but sometimes that will overcook everything to a mush.

Is there anything I can add that absorbs the water? Kind of like rice, but maybe faster?



Best Answer

Stuff happens to us all, especially when using highly scientific methods. If your seasonings/flavors are the way you want them and the only issue is too much liquid, just ladle out until you are left with amount of liquid you want.

You can even save the seasoned liquid you take out (stored in refrigerator) and use it later when preparing another dish.




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Quick Answer about "How to absorb/remove excess water that you've added to a dish?"

  • Remove the excess broth/water with a ladle.
  • Boil it down in a separate pot, while letting the main pot stop cooking and cool. This takes quite a while depending on the amount. Say 30-60 minutes for several cups. ...
  • Add the reduction back to the main dish.


  • What do I do if I put too much water in my dish?

    Cornstarch thickens any watery dish. Cornstarch: Prepare a solution by adding cornstarch. Take a little water from the dish and mix it with the cornstarch and put it back to the dish. Cornstarch thickens the watery element in the dish.

    How do you evaporate water from a dish?

    Cooking a soup, stew, or sauce uncovered allows water to evaporate, so if your goal is to reduce a sauce or thicken a soup, skip the lid. The longer you cook your dish, the more water that will evaporate and the thicker the liquid becomes\u2014that means the flavors become more concentrated, too.

    How do you reduce the liquid in a dish?

    Reduction is performed by simmering or boiling a liquid such as a stock, fruit or vegetable juices, wine, vinegar, or a sauce until the desired concentration is reached by evaporation. This is done without a lid, enabling the vapor to escape from the mixture.

    How do you reduce water in soup?

    Add flour or cornflour You can also use flour or cornflour to thicken a soup. Put a tablespoon of either into a small bowl and stir in 2-3 tbsp of the soup until you have a smooth mixture. Stir this back into the soup and bring it to a simmer.



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    More answers regarding how to absorb/remove excess water that you've added to a dish?

    Answer 2

    Another solution if you dont have any thickeners on hand is to strain the 'soup' using a fine wire mesh sieve, then boil off the excess fluid stirring frequently until its the consistency/volume you want, then recombine.

    Depending on what you're cooking this may destroy the flavour in the sauce, though in my experience this does not happen often.

    Answer 3

    This sounds just like my cooking technique, and I have come up with a few ways to recover from overwatering.

    Always lowball the amount of water

    Like you said, you can always add water later. But if you're not watching the dish, you don't want the water to run out and burn.

    Corn starch

    Corn starch is a good way to thicken up the water into something more saucy. This is my preferred method if the extra water actually has flavor, because it adds a nice sauciness to the dish. Make a corn starch 'slurry' by mixing cold water and some corn starch, then add that to the hot dish that still cooking. You want to cook the dish for a few minutes after adding corn starch to let it thicken and cook out the raw flour flavor. You'll have to adjust the amount of corn starch depending on how much water there is, but a little goes a long way, its WAY more absorbent than flour.

    Remove the lid and stir occasionally

    This is the easy way, but it takes a while and sometime you can cook your dish in to mush. This lets excess water evaporate, and stirring just helps that a little.

    Answer 4

    Your highly technical method, being what it is, provides its own solution to too much water. Just let it simmer a few more minutes with no lid. That's it. The flavors will intensify as the liquids reduce. Keep it right at that point between a simmer and a boil, it won't take long at all.

    Answer 5

    In searching for a solution to this, including this thread, I've figured out my own that method works well (for instance, when I'm on autopilot and added 4-6 cups of water to a soup before remembering that I'm making a chili):

    1. Remove the excess broth/water with a ladle

    2. Boil it down in a separate pot, while letting the main pot stop cooking and cool. This takes quite a while depending on the amount. Say 30-60 minutes for several cups. Depending on your patience, let it at least remove some water or, ideally, let it get down to a thick flavorful sauce.

    3. Add the reduction back to the main dish.

    This way, you don't completely overcook your main dish into mush, and still don't lose the flavor that went into the accidental water addition. The only downside is the time required.

    Answer 6

    Depending on how much water you have left over I might do one or more of the following:

    1. Toss in quinoa (GF ancient grain, 10m cooking time, estimate the same water:grain ratio as rice)

    2. Bulgur wheat/couscous (gluten-y, and will absorb lots of water without needing much cooking time at all...too much and it get's mushy fast)

    3. TPV (texturized vegetable protein, may or may not be comprised totally of vital wheat gluten or soy protein, doesn't really need much heating, it absorbs water like a champ)

    4. Dehydrated onions, carrots, or celery if they don't interfere with the flavor profile

    5. If there is an INORDINATE amount of water, I will just give up and decide it's now a soup...I will incorporate one of the previous grain additions and pitch in some egg whites(think like egg-drop soup, drizzling egg whites slowly into the warm water to get coagulation)

    6. If you don't like cornstarch... xanthan gum or arrowroot may also be useful in small quantities for thickening. Some people have reported a bitter taste using these in large quantities, so be aware.

    Hope these were helpful.

    Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

    Images: suzukii xingfu, Karolina Grabowska, Karolina Grabowska, Sora Shimazaki