Food Network

COOKING
•  Baking
•  Cooking Guides
•  Cooking Demos
 
Baking
Chef Video Tips
Cooking Techniques
Dairy
Entertaining
Fruits and Vegetables
Kid-Friendly
Knife Skills
Meat/Poultry
Seafood
•  Cooking For Kids
•  Culinary Q&A
•  Encyclopedia
•  Holiday Baking
•  International Cooking
•  Recipe Collections
•  Recipes of the Day

Cut a Pocket in Meat for Stuffing


PHOTO
When making a pocket in meat for stuffing, like a chicken breast, or pork chop, it is important to make the opening small, but the pocket wide enough to accommodate all the filling.
PHOTO
First lay the meat flat on the counter. Lay your hand on top and use a thin boning knife and make a small incision in the about midway in the side of the meat.
PHOTO
Then, keeping the knife parallel to the counter, draw the knife through the meat in a circular motion to open up the pocket. If you feel pressure on your hand, it means that the knife runs the risk of poking through the chop of meat.
PHOTO
Fill the chop and then seal shut with a tooth pick if needed.
PHOTO
Use this same technique for large cuts like a breast of veal and sew them shut with butchers twine.
PHOTO
To make a tunnel in a filet of beef or long roast, poke a hole with a boning knife from one end, turn the meat around and then cut from the other end. Then use a chopstick or a wooden spoon to open up the cavity.

Instructor: Robert Bleifer