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29 Incredibly Cool Charts About Cooking And Food That Will Make You So Much Smarter

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4 min read
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1.This chart in the menu of a Japanese restaurant explains the etiquette for eating sushi, and honestly I had no idea (I definitely mix wasabi and soy sauce, sorry):

Guide on how to eat sushi, listing do's and don'ts with illustrations: no soy sauce on rice, eat in one bite, use wasabi sparingly, don't cut or pass sushi with chopsticks
u/ThreeDrawersDown / Via reddit.com

2.This delightfully hand-drawn chart explains the difference in coffee beans:

A hand-drawn infographic comparing Arabica and Robusta coffee beans, detailing taste, caffeine content, altitude, price, and usage purposes
u/ssigea / Via reddit.com

3.Mmmmm...this chart lists all the best cheese dishes in the world:

A table from TasteAtlas ranking the "Best Cheese Dishes in the World" as of April 2023, with top dishes like Raclette, Saganaki, and Shahi Paneer scoring highest
u/L0o0o0o0o0o0L / Via reddit.com

In case you're wondering what Raclette is (and you know you are), it's a Swiss dish where delicious, creamy melted cheese is scraped onto (usually) potatoes:

Melted cheese being poured over a baked potato on a plate with olives, pickles, and sliced cured meats
Margouillatphotos / Getty Images/iStockphoto

4.What's the difference between a rare, medium rare, medium, medium well, and well done steak? This chart has the answer:

Sign listing steak doneness descriptions: Rare, Medium Rare, Medium, Medium Well, Well Done, with humorous notes on cooking levels
u/madairman / Via reddit.com

5.And this chart explains the cooking differences for burgers:

A chart showing the different ways to cook a burger
u/erikhenao32 / Via reddit.com

6.Never wonder, "Wait...do I put the veggies in the water before or after I boil it?" ever again:

An infographic from FarmersAlmanac.com on when to boil water for vegetables: start vegetables that grow underground (beets, carrots, potatoes) in cold water; place vegetables that grow above ground (corn, peas, greens) in boiling water

7.Make box cake taste like it was baked by the fanciest bakery in town with these easy tips:

Baking tips chart
u/PuzzledLifeguard / Via reddit.com

8.Here's the ultimate chart for understanding apples:

An apple chart
surfinmozart / Via reddit.com

9.Here's a chart that takes the mystery out of knowing which onion to use:

Infographic titled "Use the Right Onion" by @veganfityle details five onion types (sweet, red, white, yellow, shallot) and their best culinary uses
Vegan Fit Lyfe / Via reddit.com

10.This chart shows you the most popular sandwich in every US state, from Alabama (pulled chicken with white sauce) to Wyoming (trout sandwich):

Infographic showing the most popular sandwiches by U.S. state, including Reuben, lobster roll, Cuban, Philly cheesesteak, and pulled pork
Titlemax / Via reddit.com

11.This chart tells you which tea to drink in every situation:

Illustrated guide showing remedies for various ailments by drinking tea: green tea for slow metabolism, chamomile for sleepless nights, elderflower for colds, lemon balm for stress, ginger tea for nausea, and peppermint for bloating
u/Relojero / Via reddit.com

12.This chart takes the mystery out of coffee:

An infographic titled "Know Your Coffee" depicting 10 types of coffee: Espresso, Capuccino, Latte, Americano, Mocha, Macchiato, Frappuccino, and Affogato with illustrations

13.This chart makes buying sliced meat a cinch:

Boar's Head deli counter sign showing five meat slice options: No. 1 Shaved, No. 2 Very Thin, No. 3 Thin, No. 4 Sandwich Cut, No. 5 Dinner Cut
u/xcsun25 / Via reddit.com

14.This one explains how to slice a lime to get the most juice out of it (and spoiler...most of us are doing it wrong):

Box of limes with instructions on slicing to obtain the most juice, suggesting cutting into three sections. Teaches that this method results in 100% juice
u/Longjumping-Ad-7241 / Via reddit.com

15.And this chart explaining when you should eat a banana has made me rethink my whole life (or at least when I eat bananas):

Diagram showing stages of banana ripeness with text explaining nutritional benefits, from underripe to overripe. Heading: "When to eat a banana?"
HPN AUSTRALIA / Via reddit.com

16.This chart has all the deets on how you can pick a perfect watermelon:

Infographic on how to select a ripe watermelon based on ground spot, webbing, gender, and stem tail
u/Atomic_Panda95 / Via reddit.com

17.This trick for measuring out rice and water is a game-changer:

Step-by-step finger motion drawing demonstrating hydration testing method in a bowl of water
u/aespadax / Via reddit.com

18.This is just kind of interesting — here's how to know what state your milk is from:

Image lists state and plant codes for milk origins. Title: "WHERE IS MY MILK FROM??" Sample code circled in red: 36-09, New York
u/nineinchrain / Via reddit.com

19.And this chart shows you where common foods are grown in the United States:

Map of the U.S. showing the proportion of total production for various crops by state, based on USDA NASS data from 2017-2019
u/ineptnoob / Via reddit.com

20.Now you can speak food fluently on both sides of the pond:

A chart showing British vs. American food words
u/Rccan2325 / Via reddit.com

21.This chart shows why you should consider Nutella — delicious as it may be — a dessert treat and not a healthy snack:

Two Nutella jars labeled with ingredients: palm oil, skim milk powder, cocoa, hazelnuts, and sugar
u/miragen125 / Via reddit.com

22.This chart will basically make you a wine expert:

Comparison chart of red wines and white wines by sweetness level, ranging from dry to sweet

23.And — LOL — this chart tells you how to perfectly pair wine and donuts:

A chart showing which donuts go with which wines
Coravin / Via reddit.com

24.This is what a strawberry looks like throughout its life cycle, and, wow, I did not know it looked like a flower at one point:

The image shows the life cycle of a strawberry, from tiny budding flowers to fully ripened strawberries arranged in a circular sequence
u/mexicaitlin / Via reddit.com

25.This is supposed to be KFC's secret recipe — and according to former employees, it's right:

KFC's secret recipe ingredients display: thyme, black pepper, oregano, salt, garlic salt, celery salt, ground ginger, white pepper, paprika, basil, dried mustard, seasoned flour

In the comments on Reddit, a self-proclaimed former KFC employee confirmed the mix above is correct, and added more detail on how to make chicken KFC-style.

Substantial-Chef5102 / Via reddit.com

26.This chart shows you what 1,500 calories looks like at 25 different fast-food restaurants (and I think I'd pick the Panda Express meal...how about you?):

Infographic showing calorie counts of foods from various fast food chains, including McDonald's, Wendy's, Subway, Taco Bell, Starbucks, Chick-fil-A, and more
u/Mindless_Trick_8048 / Via reddit.com

27.This one shows you how to test an egg for freshness:

Diagram showing how to test a raw egg for freshness. Fresh eggs sink, one-week-old eggs stand upright, and stale (2-3 weeks old) or very old eggs float
u/kunalkrishh / Via reddit.com

28.This chart explains all of the different types of spoons (and it made me think, there's a soda spoon?!):

Various types of spoons, each labeled by use: sugar, ice-cream, dessert, soup, serving, tablespoon, salad, soda, teaspoon, and coffee spoon
u/_Mr_Serious / Via reddit.com

29.And this chart explains all the different dinner place settings, which I'll remember for the next time the King of England invites me over:

Infographic showing informal and formal dinner place settings with labeled items: forks, knives, spoons, plates, napkin, glasses, and dessert utensils
u/ShadowMosesss / Via reddit.com
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