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How to prevent cooked noodles & dumplings from getting soggy
How do I prevent an egg cracking while hard boiling it?(How) can I prevent pasta water from boiling over with the lid closed?How is boiled rice different from steamed?How can I replicate authentic German potato dumplings?Using a wooden spoon to prevent pots from boiling over?How to color Jiaozi (chinese dumplings)?How do I cook store-bought glutinous rice dumplings?How to prevent watery dippy eggsHow to prevent milk overflow from pan?Does salt prevent water from absorbing nutrients and falvours from food?
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I enjoy making spaetzel and gnocchi and have become quite good at it, but I always run into the same problem.
After boiling the dumplings, I put the cooked dumplings into a bowl, where water tends to collect and the dumplings at the bottom of the boil become soggy.
My temporary fix has been to mix the bowl every couple of minutes to ensure I don't end up with half soggy and half normal dumplings.
How can I prevent water from accumulating in a bowl and my dumplings from getting soggy?
Ideally, I would prefer top use typical kitchen tools and not have to buy a special tool to accomplish this.
boiling dumplings
add a comment |
I enjoy making spaetzel and gnocchi and have become quite good at it, but I always run into the same problem.
After boiling the dumplings, I put the cooked dumplings into a bowl, where water tends to collect and the dumplings at the bottom of the boil become soggy.
My temporary fix has been to mix the bowl every couple of minutes to ensure I don't end up with half soggy and half normal dumplings.
How can I prevent water from accumulating in a bowl and my dumplings from getting soggy?
Ideally, I would prefer top use typical kitchen tools and not have to buy a special tool to accomplish this.
boiling dumplings
3
Have you tried a colander, rather than a bowl?
– moscafj
May 12 at 1:02
@moscafj that would definitely work for smaller batches, but I tend to make them in large batches, they won't all fit in the colander
– ctwheels
May 12 at 1:05
add a comment |
I enjoy making spaetzel and gnocchi and have become quite good at it, but I always run into the same problem.
After boiling the dumplings, I put the cooked dumplings into a bowl, where water tends to collect and the dumplings at the bottom of the boil become soggy.
My temporary fix has been to mix the bowl every couple of minutes to ensure I don't end up with half soggy and half normal dumplings.
How can I prevent water from accumulating in a bowl and my dumplings from getting soggy?
Ideally, I would prefer top use typical kitchen tools and not have to buy a special tool to accomplish this.
boiling dumplings
I enjoy making spaetzel and gnocchi and have become quite good at it, but I always run into the same problem.
After boiling the dumplings, I put the cooked dumplings into a bowl, where water tends to collect and the dumplings at the bottom of the boil become soggy.
My temporary fix has been to mix the bowl every couple of minutes to ensure I don't end up with half soggy and half normal dumplings.
How can I prevent water from accumulating in a bowl and my dumplings from getting soggy?
Ideally, I would prefer top use typical kitchen tools and not have to buy a special tool to accomplish this.
boiling dumplings
boiling dumplings
asked May 12 at 0:59
ctwheelsctwheels
1073
1073
3
Have you tried a colander, rather than a bowl?
– moscafj
May 12 at 1:02
@moscafj that would definitely work for smaller batches, but I tend to make them in large batches, they won't all fit in the colander
– ctwheels
May 12 at 1:05
add a comment |
3
Have you tried a colander, rather than a bowl?
– moscafj
May 12 at 1:02
@moscafj that would definitely work for smaller batches, but I tend to make them in large batches, they won't all fit in the colander
– ctwheels
May 12 at 1:05
3
3
Have you tried a colander, rather than a bowl?
– moscafj
May 12 at 1:02
Have you tried a colander, rather than a bowl?
– moscafj
May 12 at 1:02
@moscafj that would definitely work for smaller batches, but I tend to make them in large batches, they won't all fit in the colander
– ctwheels
May 12 at 1:05
@moscafj that would definitely work for smaller batches, but I tend to make them in large batches, they won't all fit in the colander
– ctwheels
May 12 at 1:05
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
I would suggest removing from boiling water and draining in a colander. Then, removing to a cookie sheet so that the dumplings are in one layer, and more moisture can flash off. If you are making large batches, I assume you are adding a further cook or re-heat step to finish.
Thank you! I'll give this a shot the next time I make gnocchi. I think it's exactly what I need
– ctwheels
May 12 at 1:21
Broiler pan might work well too because the slots will let dumplings drain, and pan below will collect water.
– Willk
May 12 at 16:45
add a comment |
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
I would suggest removing from boiling water and draining in a colander. Then, removing to a cookie sheet so that the dumplings are in one layer, and more moisture can flash off. If you are making large batches, I assume you are adding a further cook or re-heat step to finish.
Thank you! I'll give this a shot the next time I make gnocchi. I think it's exactly what I need
– ctwheels
May 12 at 1:21
Broiler pan might work well too because the slots will let dumplings drain, and pan below will collect water.
– Willk
May 12 at 16:45
add a comment |
I would suggest removing from boiling water and draining in a colander. Then, removing to a cookie sheet so that the dumplings are in one layer, and more moisture can flash off. If you are making large batches, I assume you are adding a further cook or re-heat step to finish.
Thank you! I'll give this a shot the next time I make gnocchi. I think it's exactly what I need
– ctwheels
May 12 at 1:21
Broiler pan might work well too because the slots will let dumplings drain, and pan below will collect water.
– Willk
May 12 at 16:45
add a comment |
I would suggest removing from boiling water and draining in a colander. Then, removing to a cookie sheet so that the dumplings are in one layer, and more moisture can flash off. If you are making large batches, I assume you are adding a further cook or re-heat step to finish.
I would suggest removing from boiling water and draining in a colander. Then, removing to a cookie sheet so that the dumplings are in one layer, and more moisture can flash off. If you are making large batches, I assume you are adding a further cook or re-heat step to finish.
answered May 12 at 1:10
moscafjmoscafj
28.7k14282
28.7k14282
Thank you! I'll give this a shot the next time I make gnocchi. I think it's exactly what I need
– ctwheels
May 12 at 1:21
Broiler pan might work well too because the slots will let dumplings drain, and pan below will collect water.
– Willk
May 12 at 16:45
add a comment |
Thank you! I'll give this a shot the next time I make gnocchi. I think it's exactly what I need
– ctwheels
May 12 at 1:21
Broiler pan might work well too because the slots will let dumplings drain, and pan below will collect water.
– Willk
May 12 at 16:45
Thank you! I'll give this a shot the next time I make gnocchi. I think it's exactly what I need
– ctwheels
May 12 at 1:21
Thank you! I'll give this a shot the next time I make gnocchi. I think it's exactly what I need
– ctwheels
May 12 at 1:21
Broiler pan might work well too because the slots will let dumplings drain, and pan below will collect water.
– Willk
May 12 at 16:45
Broiler pan might work well too because the slots will let dumplings drain, and pan below will collect water.
– Willk
May 12 at 16:45
add a comment |
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3
Have you tried a colander, rather than a bowl?
– moscafj
May 12 at 1:02
@moscafj that would definitely work for smaller batches, but I tend to make them in large batches, they won't all fit in the colander
– ctwheels
May 12 at 1:05