What's an ingredient you love to use to amp up your cooking?
In the "Add a pinch of sugar" thread, many of you mentioned other things you like to add to boost the flavor in your dishes - MSG, tomato powder, soy sauce, etc. What's an ingredient you find that you love to add to dishes to improve the flavor (or aroma, texture, or maybe even the way it looks)?
I am a big fan of mushroom powder. It adds a nice boost of umami with some additional flavor that comes along for the ride. Just throw some dried mushrooms into a spice grinder and grind until powder.
This is the correct answer, MSG is a legit game changer. Just 1/8 tsp does wonders in just about everything that's lacking some oomph.
Greens with a little neutral oil, ginger, garlic, chinkiang vinegar, and that little bit of MSG, stir-fried over ripping high heat for about a minute, beats anything you can get at a restaurant.
Ethiopian Berbere seasoning. A lot of places make a blend with too much cayenne, but if you can find one that isn’t especially spicy, it’s an incredible earthy umami flavor you can put in almost anything.
Acid: vinegar, hot sauce, or some type of citrus. Fat: butter or oil. Heat: Paprika if you only want to pretend but a actually spicy note goes well in almost everything, at least some black pepper.
Tony Chachere's (pronounced sash-er-ee) Creole Seasoning. It was my go to meat seasoning when I was younger before I started branching out. Being from Louisiana, we put Tony's on everything. It's especially good on fries and eggs. You can basically just substitute the salt in any dish as it's pretty salty on it's own.
I do like old bay, mostly in seafood boils. But I grew up on cajun and that's my heart, lol. Yeah you should have Tony's around all over where you are. I remember when I lived in Japan I had to order it online, lol
I buy a block of hot pot seasoning, keep it in the freezer, and shave some off whenever I need some spicy, salty, mouth numbing goodness. I found one that is made with beef tallow, too, which is nicer than the palm oil kind.
Sichuan peppercorns are great to use to boost many dishes too
Rice? Generous splash of white vinegar into the rice cooker, then a pat of butter at the end to melt in the residual heat. If you want something to pair with stir fry, try drizzling with sesame oil instead.
French fries? Toss 'em with a splash of malt vinegar (they already have oil from the frying).
Salad? Toss it with a splash of a good quality balsamic vinegar and extra virgin olive oil. Bonus points for tahini.
Stir fry? Splash some rice vinegar into the pan and drizzle sesame oil over the top at the end.
Pasta? Drizzle of a good quality balsamic vinegar and extra virgin olive oil on the plate.
Pizza? Pat of butter right after you take it out of the oven to melt from the residual heat, then a drizzle of good quality balsamic vinegar.
I could see that! I've never had it in chili. I found some at the international market near me recently with lemon that was nice for marinating.
Furikake and mayo on rice is my go to lol. I'll have to try it with noodles some time. I just love the crunch.
I like using peri peri seasoning for meats but I imagine it'd good with roasted veggies as well. It's salty, smoky, tangy. Although some of the better blends seem to have aromatics. The one I tried seemed like mostly chili and salt similar to soondae salt.
Not very special at all, but I like adding finely chopped flat leaf parsley on top of savory dishes. Looks nice and I really like the taste of parsley.
Pomegranate molasses is fantastic. I'm really curious about apple syrup - I've been seeing a lot of it lately online.
Celery leaves are delicious! I love them in stir fries and salads.
I feel like I read that tomato leaves aren't actually toxic.
I think I've even seen recipes using them sautéed. I love how they smell. I'll have to do a search on they and see if I can find it. Using a few in sauce seems like a great idea.
What sort of dishes will MSG really make pop? Sometimes I feel like I’m lacking something and I can’t put my finger on what it is. I’m thinking MSG may fill that void.