Removing the flavour of smoke [duplicate]
I made something wrong and the food becomes a but (but not totally) burnt and tasted like smoke, what can I do with it? Are there any spices that can change its flavour?
Best Answer
There are a couple of specific cases where you may have some luck rescuing a portion of the dish. THis is not removing the burned flavor, but rather removing the unburned portion:
For a large pot of something like chili or spaghetti sauce, if you realize it is burned on the bottom, you may be able to scoop off the unburned portion at the surface. Don't stir and don't scrape the bottom. You want to leave the burned portion on the bottom of the pan.
It still won't be as good as unburned, as some of the flavors will penetrate, but it may not be totally horrible.
For a large cut of meat, like a roast, you may be able to cut off the burned portion, and rescue the remainder.
However, in general, once something is burned, the smoke and acrid flavors will penetrate it pretty thoroughly and there is no real way to remove that. Masking the flavor with additional spices would be extremely difficult, and almost certainly require an unacceptably large quantity of spice (unless you are a fan of Dave's Insanity Sauce, in which case you may not care).
You have to decide if the food is unpalatable enough that you just have to discard it.
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How do you get rid of smoke taste?
A simple trick to get the smell out of the over smoked or burnt food is to instantly dip it in water. Let it soak for 15 minutes and take it out. The flavor will be reduced by 35%.How do you get the smoky flavor out of soup?
A teaspoon of sugar or a tablespoon of honey may reduce the burnt taste. Another alternative is a small can of chopped tomatoes or tomato puree if what you are making can use them.How do you get the smoke taste out of chicken curry?
How to fix burnt smell from gravy, sauce or curry?How do you balance burnt taste?
A splash of white wine can be a good addition to a food that is barely burnt. You can continue cooking this at a lower temperature, as if you never burned it at all. Other common ingredients that can help resolve burnt flavors include lemon juice, tomatoes, onion, sugar, sherry and Madeira wine.MensXP: Types Of Smokers We All Know | Types Of People While Smoking
More answers regarding removing the flavour of smoke [duplicate]
Answer 2
At home when we accidentally burn food, say usually the bottom part... what we do is to immerse the dish(with the burnt food in it) halfway in water. let it stay for some 10 min. and we take all de food out except that which is sticking to the dish... It really helps remove the smoky flavour..
We have done this many times with success... but this method is most effective when we remove the dish immediately from heat.
Hope it works for u too !
Answer 3
Burnt... just a little bit.
Sauces- as above, pour off the sauce into another container without stirring or scraping the bottom of the pan.
Toast- scrape the burnt edges/crumbs off with a knife
Meat- if it is a large piece of meat, cut off the burnt portion. You can try running a bit of hot water over the burnt area but you are more likely to let the water (with it's burnt notes) seep into the meat that wasn't burnt due to gravity
Onions- use a little dry white wine & quickly deglaze the pan. I keep a bottle of Pesivino for just that purpose. Helps to counter balance the burnt flavor.
That said- things like toast, onions & some sauces are quick & easy to remake unless you used the last of your ingredients on the said attempt. But burnt to the point of smoke, is much more difficult as smoke, like steam, will permeate the rest of the dish. I don't think of burnt to the point of smoke as being just a little bit burnt. If it really has hit the smoke point, you might want to try changing dishes to something that one usually looks for a smokey flavor like barbeque or a Mexican mole sauce.
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Images: Lany-Jade Mondou, Mouktik Joshi, Pixabay, Karolina Grabowska