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Food

Cooking food early

(33 Posts)
hulahoop Sun 24-Jul-22 12:29:57

I have never cooked food e.g.veg early then use microwave to reheat does anyone do this and is it ok.

PollyDolly Sun 24-Jul-22 12:48:34

I've done it with curries and chilli when I've catered for a family buffet but wouldn't dream of pre-cooking green vegetables and re-heating them; I've experienced too many spoiled meals in restaurants where this is common practice.

Charleygirl5 Sun 24-Jul-22 12:49:53

I try not to reheat the food I have cooked the same day. What I may do is cook two meals today, eat one and pop the remainder in the fridge for tomorrow and then pop it in the microwave but I would eat it immediately.

Casdon Sun 24-Jul-22 12:52:09

I’m not sure why you’d cook vegetables in advance, as they only take 5 minutes to cook from fresh in the microwave anyway?

Kim19 Sun 24-Jul-22 12:54:19

Nope, don't do reheating other than leftovers.

hulahoop Sun 24-Jul-22 13:32:51

That's what I thought I will cook fresh thanks for your replies .

J52 Sun 24-Jul-22 13:45:02

Mashed potatoes are fine if cooked earlier in the day, chilled and then microwaved.
Chillie, curries and Ragu are better the next day because the flavours meld. Of course it goes without saying, strict hygiene must be observed for the chilling and refrigerating process.

aonk Sun 24-Jul-22 16:38:31

At Christmas or other times when I’m cooking for a large number I cook vegetables early, put in serving dishes and then reheat in the microwave. I then make the gravy with the vegetable water. Then wash up the saucepans and put them away. Otherwise I cook everything just before serving.

grannysyb Sun 24-Jul-22 17:11:05

Mary Berry par cooks veg the day before Christmas and finishes them off on the day.

michaieldavid0 Fri 27-Feb-26 11:49:08

Message deleted by Gransnet. Here's a link to our Talk guidelines.

RosiesMawagain Fri 27-Feb-26 11:59:30

Reported.
Egg-sucking advice also available?

shysal Fri 27-Feb-26 12:06:00

When my husband and I were separated but still living in the same house, he used to cook for himself this way. I think it was because he was incapable of working out when to start things to all finish together!
I have seen Mary Berry and Prue Leith cook veg ahead of time. As others have said veg are so quick to cook in real time, why bother to do them before?

Cressy Fri 27-Feb-26 12:09:21

Old thread but I did watch Prue Leith last Sunday demonstrating how to cook green veg in advance….

CariadAgain Fri 27-Feb-26 12:09:53

No chance here - as I don't even have a microwave. I read about the health hazards of them years ago - so many years ago we're probably talking decades by now. That was followed by me chucking mine out instantly....

Witzend Fri 27-Feb-26 12:14:05

To me nearly all veg, especially green veg, should be cooked at the last minute, and for the absolute minimum time. I truly loathe e.g. soggy, overcooked cauliflower and broccoli.

Obviously anything like carrot and swede mash would be a different matter.

Usedtobeblonde Fri 27-Feb-26 13:21:57

No putting the sprouts on in August then?
Victoria Wood, very much missed.

M0nica Fri 27-Feb-26 13:45:56

I will reheat anything at any stage of the process. I reheated leeks in butter today, just left them in the frying pan and turned the heat on.

Why did Ido it? because I was cooking sevral dishes all at once rather than seriaally one after the other. That meant I had 15 minutes when the main course was in the oven and the veg on the ide when I could sit down with a coffee and read the papers.

olderme Sat 21-Mar-26 16:26:52

I do it all the time because I have to. I cook full meal in the morning, divide in two, plate both, cover and put in the Fridge. Microwave one at tea
time, the other the next day.
The reason is that I have more energy in the morning and I still prefer home cooking to ready meals. Never had a problem with this method. And it saves fuel.

ferry23 Sat 21-Mar-26 23:35:21

CariadAgain

No chance here - as I don't even have a microwave. I read about the health hazards of them years ago - so many years ago we're probably talking decades by now. That was followed by me chucking mine out instantly....

And here we all are, years later. Still here.

TheSunRisesInTheEast Sun 22-Mar-26 01:23:17

I cook all the veg in advance, wash, dry and put the saucepans away, put the veg in an earthenware square dish and reheat for a couple of minutes in the microwave just before serving. It cuts down on the washing up after eating, and I don't have to eat my meal looking at dirty pots stacked up in the sink.

ferry23 Sun 22-Mar-26 09:22:39

TheSunRisesInTheEast

I cook all the veg in advance, wash, dry and put the saucepans away, put the veg in an earthenware square dish and reheat for a couple of minutes in the microwave just before serving. It cuts down on the washing up after eating, and I don't have to eat my meal looking at dirty pots stacked up in the sink.

Why don't you just cook them in the microwave to start with?

TheSunRisesInTheEast Sun 22-Mar-26 11:03:30

I prefer to boil them in separate saucepans and keep an eye on them, not too hard, not too soft, then I drain with a colander and use the vegetable juices with gravy granules to make the gravy 🙂.

JamesandJon33 Sun 22-Mar-26 11:20:31

I cook pasta in advance and freeze it for24 hours. Reheat when I need it.Does something to the carbs so doesn’t give such a sugar spike when diabetics eat it.

Basgetti Sun 22-Mar-26 12:32:13

Our son currently works in hospitality, free meals on shift, but has become increasingly fed up with what’s on offer. On a day off, he batch cooks something tasty and healthy, freezes and takes one into work to reheat each shift.

Norah Sun 22-Mar-26 12:46:41

Not me, veg cooking is accomplished during meal cooking.

I do re-heating of leftovers, if necessary, another day.

No microwave, merely a double boiler.