peeled
Peeling may reduce certain nutrients, as fiber and some vitamins concentrate in or near the skin of produce. However, it can also improve digestibility and reduce antinutrients in some cases.
About
Peeled refers to the state of a food item after its outer skin, rind, or protective layer has been removed. This is a preparation method rather than an ingredient itself. Peeling is a fundamental culinary technique applied to fruits, vegetables, nuts, and some proteins to expose the inner flesh and improve texture, appearance, or digestibility. The process may be performed manually with a knife or vegetable peeler, or through blanching and shocking (as with tomatoes or stone fruits), pressure steaming, or other industrial methods.
Culinary Uses
Peeling is employed across all culinary traditions to enhance ingredient quality and usability. Removing thick skins from vegetables like potatoes, carrots, and squashes improves texture and cooking time. Peeling fruits such as apples, pears, and peaches is often done to create uniform appearance in salads and desserts, or to reduce fiber content for certain dishes. In professional kitchens, peeling garlic, ginger, and onions is a preliminary step for nearly all savory preparations. The technique also applies to proteins—peeling shrimp, removing skin from chicken or fish, and deveining are all peeling-adjacent techniques that prepare ingredients for cooking.