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Mr. Tacoma
New Member
Want to saute like a pro? It's a crucial cooking technique and chicks love it so of course you do.
This gif sucks but it's the only one I can find right now:
First there's some fundamentals:
1. Don't overcrowd the pan, there should be just enough food in there so that damn near all of it is in contact with the bottom of the pan. If you load a saute pan to the brim with food you're not sauteing, you're steaming.
2. Don't ever, EVER add food to a cold pan. If you don't hear a loud almost violent sizzle when the food hits the pan you didn't preheat it enough.
3. Flip it often but not nonstop. You have to set it down and let the pan recover heat often.
Now on technique itself. Saute in French means "to jump" so that's what you need to make the food do. How do you do that without dumping food and hot oil all over the place? Practice.
How do you practice without dumping food and hot oil all over the place? I'm glad you asked.
A saute pan has sloped sides, not straight sides.
The pan on the left is a saute pan. The one on the right is not. If you try to saute with a straight sided pan you'll just make a mess. Use the right tool for the right job, saute with an actual saute pan.
There's nothing I can type to teach you the actual flip besides 'It's all in the wrist.' and 'you need to practice.'
Here's how you practice:
Take a cold saute pan, add a cup or so of breakfast cereal (cheerios works great) and start flipping that bitch. It's a quick flip, just do it. On your first few tries you'll probably spill cereal on the ground but that's a helluva lot better than spilling your dinner. It's a much easier thing to clean than meat, veggies and oil too. Keep practicing your saute technique like the guy in the gif above but with with cereal in a cold pan until you feel confident then move on to the real thing.
You'll be sauteing like a pro in no time. Good luck!
This gif sucks but it's the only one I can find right now:

First there's some fundamentals:
1. Don't overcrowd the pan, there should be just enough food in there so that damn near all of it is in contact with the bottom of the pan. If you load a saute pan to the brim with food you're not sauteing, you're steaming.
2. Don't ever, EVER add food to a cold pan. If you don't hear a loud almost violent sizzle when the food hits the pan you didn't preheat it enough.
3. Flip it often but not nonstop. You have to set it down and let the pan recover heat often.
Now on technique itself. Saute in French means "to jump" so that's what you need to make the food do. How do you do that without dumping food and hot oil all over the place? Practice.
How do you practice without dumping food and hot oil all over the place? I'm glad you asked.
A saute pan has sloped sides, not straight sides.

The pan on the left is a saute pan. The one on the right is not. If you try to saute with a straight sided pan you'll just make a mess. Use the right tool for the right job, saute with an actual saute pan.
There's nothing I can type to teach you the actual flip besides 'It's all in the wrist.' and 'you need to practice.'
Here's how you practice:
Take a cold saute pan, add a cup or so of breakfast cereal (cheerios works great) and start flipping that bitch. It's a quick flip, just do it. On your first few tries you'll probably spill cereal on the ground but that's a helluva lot better than spilling your dinner. It's a much easier thing to clean than meat, veggies and oil too. Keep practicing your saute technique like the guy in the gif above but with with cereal in a cold pan until you feel confident then move on to the real thing.
You'll be sauteing like a pro in no time. Good luck!