me_again 1 day ago

Marco Pierre-White recommends grating onions, which ingeniously avoids the entire issue.

Grating the Gordian knot, if you will.

https://youtu.be/glIUUrh6qtQ?t=40

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tptacek 1 day ago

He grates for a tomato sauce, which makes sense, but you wouldn't want that as your default onion cut.

account42 1 day ago

Is there really a default onion cut? Desired sizes vary vildly depending on what you are making.

tptacek 15 hours ago

No, but it would have taken a lot more words to convey the same idea, so I'm happy just giving the gist. Most of the time, you don't want to grate your onions.

akira2501 1 day ago

This is the MPW way:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UBj9H6z6Uxw

"Perfection is lots of little things done well."

account42 1 day ago

It avoids the issue except for the remaining bit which you can't grate without risking your fingers.

For garlic, I prefer crushing them for many recipes. This creates much rougher outlines that blend better into the food and crisp nicely when fried.

tdeck 1 day ago

At that point why not just grind them in a food processor?

account42 1 day ago

That's going to end up with a slush of onion fibre + onion juices. Very much different from even small bits of cut onion. Some recipes call for blended onions though.

bigstrat2003 21 hours ago

A good food processor will cut the material, not blend it.

mi_lk 1 day ago

Some food processors with the right setting give you chopped food not blended

marcopw 20 hours ago

“You can grate the onion, or not, its your choice really”