17 Unrestricted Kitchen and Recipes PLR Articles

$3.99

In this PLR Article Pack, You will get 17 Unrestricted Kitchen and Recipes PLR Articles with Private Label Rights to assist you in dominating the Cooking market.

Want a discount? Become a member by purchasing Official Membership - The Ohana Experience!

Full Description

17 Unrestricted Kitchen and Recipes PLR Articles

In this PLR Article Pack, You will get 17 Unrestricted Kitchen and Recipes PLR Articles with Private Label Rights to assist you in dominating the Cooking market.

These Information PLR articles are available in a Zip folder containing the Text file format product, and its license.

It can be instantly downloaded after the purchase is confirmed.

 

How Can You Use This PLR Article Pack?

  • For Internet Marketing, Affiliate Marketing
  • Reselling
  • List Building
  • Blogging

 

What Can You Do With This Information PLR Article Pack?

  • Convert it into an E-course and resell it
  • Use it on your blog
  • Create an autoresponder series.
  • You may use it to build your email list
  • covert it into any kind of digital or physical info product which you can resell with a Personal Use Only License (PUR) only.

 

17 Unrestricted Kitchen and Recipes PLR Articles

17 Unrestricted Kitchen and Recipes PLR Articles - Feature Image

The Titles in This Product are:

  1. ABC OF SOUP MAKING
  2. BARLEY, THE NUTRITIOUS GRAIN
  3. CEREALS AND THEIR PREPARATION
  4. CIRCUMSTANCES IMPACTING THE QUALITY OF MEAT
  5. COOKING OF GRAINS
  6. DIFFERENT WAYS TO COOK RICE
  7. FIVE FISH SOUPS
  8. FRUIT COCKTAILS
  9. HYGIENE OF DIGESTION.
  10. IMPORTANCE OF FOOD ELEMENTS
  11. +7 MORE

 

Here is a Sample Snippet of what you can expect inside this package

ABC OF SOUP MAKING

Lean, juicy beef, mutton, and veal, form the basis of all good soups; therefore it is advisable to procure those pieces which afford the richest succulence, and such as are fresh-killed. Stale meat renders them bad, and fat is not so well adapted for making them. The principal art in composing good rich soup, is so to proportion the several ingredients that the flavour of one shall not predominate over another, and that all the articles of which it is composed, shall form an agreeable whole.

 

To accomplish this, care must be taken that the roots and herbs are perfectly well cleaned, and that the water is proportioned to the quantity of meat and other ingredients. Generally a quart of water may be allowed to a pound of meat for soups, and half the quantity for gravies. In making soups or gravies, gentle stewing or simmering is incomparably the best. It may be remarked, however, that a really good soup can never be made but in a well-closed vessel, although, perhaps, greater wholesomeness is obtained by an occasional exposure to the air. Soups will, in general, take from three to six hours doing, and are much better prepared the day before they are wanted. When the soup is cold, the fat may be much more easily and completely removed; and when it is poured off, care must be taken not to disturb the settlings at the bottom of the vessel, which are so fine that they will escape through a sieve. A tamis is the best strainer, and if the soup is strained while it is hot, let the tamis or cloth be previously soaked in cold water. Clear soups must be perfectly transparent, and thickened soups about the consistence of cream.

 

To thicken and give body to soups and gravies, potato-mucilage, arrow-root, bread-raspings, isinglass, flour and butter, barley, rice, or oatmeal, in a little water rubbed well together, are used. A piece of boiled beef pounded to a pulp, with a bit of butter and flour, and rubbed through a sieve, and gradually incorporated with the soup, will be found an excellent addition. When the soup appears to be too thin or too weak , the cover of the boiler should be taken off, and the contents allowed to boil till some of the watery parts have evaporated; or some of the thickening materials, above mentioned, should be added. When soups and gravies are kept from day to day in hot weather, they should be warmed up every day, and put into fresh scalded pans or tureens, and placed in a cool cellar. In temperate weather, every other day may be sufficient.

 

Various herbs and vegetables are required for the purpose of making soups and gravies. Of these the principal are, Scotch barley, pearl barley, wheat flour, oatmeal, bread-raspings, pease, beans, rice, vermicelli, macaroni, isinglass, potato-mucilage, mushroom or mushroom ketchup, champignons, parsnips, carrots, beetroot, turnips, garlic, shalots and onions. Sliced onions, fried with butter and flour till they are browned, and then rubbed through a sieve, are excellent to heighten the colour and flavour of brown soups and sauces, and form the basis of many of the fine relishes furnished by the cook. The older and drier the onion, the stronger will be its flavour. Leeks, cucumber, or burnet vinegar; celery or celery-seed pounded. The latter, though equally strong, does not impart the delicate sweetness of the fresh vegetable; and when used as a substitute, its flavour should be corrected by the addition of a bit of sugar. Cress-seed, parsley, common thyme, lemon thyme, orange thyme, knotted marjoram, sage, mint, winter savoury, and basil. As fresh green basil is seldom to be procured, and its fine flavour is soon lost, the best way of preserving the extract is by pouring wine on the fresh leaves.

 

For the seasoning of soups, bay-leaves, tomato, tarragon, chervil, burnet, allspice, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, clove, mace, black and white pepper, essence of anchovy, lemon-peel, and juice, and Seville orange-juice, are all taken. The latter imparts a finer flavour than the lemon, and the acid is much milder. These materials, with wine, mushroom ketchup, Harvey’s sauce, tomato sauce, combined in various proportions, are, with other ingredients, manipulated into an almost endless variety of excellent soups and gravies. Soups, which are intended to constitute the principal part of a meal, certainly ought not to be flavoured like sauces, which are only designed to give a relish to some particular dish.

License Details:

[YES] You get all the articles with private label rights
[YES] You can brand the articles with your name
[YES] You can edit the articles
[YES] You can use the articles to create an autoresponder email series
[YES] You can use articles as web content
[YES] You can use articles as content for your ebooks
[YES] You can use articles as content for your reports
[YES] You can use articles as content for your off-line publications
[YES] You can use translate all articles to any language you want
[YES] You can sell the articles
[YES] You can sell them with resale rights
[YES] You can sell them with master resale rights
[YES] You can sell them with private label rights
[YES] You can add them to your membership sites
[YES] You can sell them on auction sites
[YES] You can use them to build your list
[YES] You can give them as a bonus
[YES] You can package them and sell the packages in any way you want
[YES] You can start a membership site and deliver articles to your members
[NO] You cannot give them away for free under any circumstances

Join Our Family

Members of the Ohana Family are entitled to loads of perks including downloading this product at no additional cost.

0 Customer Reviews

Reviews

Be the first to review “17 Unrestricted Kitchen and Recipes PLR Articles”

Your email address will not be published.