September 14, 2009

Five Cooking Tips to Save Energy in the Kitchen

Computer Chip Trivet: Deployed and Ready For Action!

We’re all looking for ways to save money and consume fewer resources for a greener planet. Some of the ways to save energy, like turning the thermostat up or down, seem fairly obvious and don’t feel as if we’re doing enough. One great way to amplify your efforts is to look room by room at how you can save energy. This article tackles perhaps the most energy-hungry room in your home – the kitchen.

Here are five cooking tips to save energy in the kitchen:

#1 Use the right size pan for the cooking job and make sure to match it to the right sized burner. It may sound silly but you can waste a lot of time and energy trying to boil a giant-size pot of potatoes on an itty bitty burner. And you can waste a tremendous amount of energy warming up a small pan of sauce on a giant burner. If you can see more than a half inch of overlap, either the pan overlapping the burner or the burner overlapping the pan, see if there’s a better fit.

Additionally, if you only have to boil three potatoes you don’t need to get out the giant 5-quart pot. And if you have to boil twenty potatoes, you absolutely do need a large pot with an appropriate amount of water – just enough to cover the tops so you don’t have to spend too much time and energy warming all that water.

#2 Don’t preheat your oven. Have you ever been pressed for time and just shoved that tray of chocolate chip cookies in an oven that hasn’t been preheated? What happened? Presumably you may have had to add one or two minutes to the cook time but it certainly didn’t add ten minutes or more to the cook time. With many ovens it takes 10-15 minutes to warm up to 350 degrees, and that’s wasted energy. Don’t waste your time and energy preheating, get those cookies in the oven and enjoy!

#3 Use smaller appliances for smaller jobs. If you’re making an open-faced sandwich, warming up leftovers or eating those frozen and ready-to-cook cookies, then skip the oven and use your toaster oven instead. It uses less energy to heat up. Additionally, your microwave can be used to steam, reheat and even to make eggs, melt chocolate and warm up canned foods in much less time and with much less energy.

#4 When you are making soups, stews and even some barbecue recipes or roasts, consider using a slow cooker instead of cooking them for hours on top of the stove. Slow cookers use less energy and you can cook your meals during low energy times in your home. For example, if you’re using the air conditioner during the day and also cooking, you’re going to make your a/c work harder because your cooking will add heat to the home. However, if you can cook your roast overnight when you’re a/c isn’t running as hard then you’re saving energy.

#5 Grab your mother’s pressure cooker and embrace it for its amazing power to cook foods in a tenth of the time. However, if your mother’s old pressure cooker scares the heck out of you, the newer models are significantly safer.

You can save a tremendous amount of energy focusing your attentions and habits on one room at a time. And what better place to start than in the kitchen, the core of your home and probably your biggest user of energy.

Creative Commons License photo credit: oskay



If you liked this post, submit your email address below to get new posts by email:

Disclaimer: This website is not a substitute for consultation with your health care giver. You should not use any of the exercises or treatments mentioned in this website, without clearance from your physician or health care provider.

Disclosure: When I mention products, you must assume I will receive compensation for doing so. However, I only recommend products and services I myself use or believe in and would recommend to my own sisters and mother. Nevertheless, you should perform your own due diligence before purchasing a product or service mentioned in this website.
Spread the love - share this on social!

Alexis Rodrigo

Comments are closed

>