Friday, June 6, 2008
Recipe Dealbreakers
A lot of people said that their "dealbreaker" is odd ingredients-- you know, the spice you need a teaspoon of but rarely use again. Terry often says, "Man, I'd love to make that, but I don't have X," and usually I have it-- I love buying sauces and spices.
Another comment that came up on the Ruhlman blog is cook vs. some other designation-- that you have to be willing to do everything to be a cook, otherwise you're just faking it. This reminds me of the Foodie discussion we had here a couple of months ago.
So are you a cook? What makes a cook? Is there anything you refuse to touch in a recipe?
Friday, June 6, 2008
Recipe Dealbreakers
A lot of people said that their "dealbreaker" is odd ingredients-- you know, the spice you need a teaspoon of but rarely use again. Terry often says, "Man, I'd love to make that, but I don't have X," and usually I have it-- I love buying sauces and spices.
Another comment that came up on the Ruhlman blog is cook vs. some other designation-- that you have to be willing to do everything to be a cook, otherwise you're just faking it. This reminds me of the Foodie discussion we had here a couple of months ago.
So are you a cook? What makes a cook? Is there anything you refuse to touch in a recipe?
10 comments:
- Marla said...
-
I wish I had a more profound blog to give you for linkage. ;) And I WILL give you tasty tofu recipes.
- June 6, 2008 at 5:47 PM
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-
Well, needless to say, as a vegan, recipe/ingredient dealbreakers are obviously any animal products.
But other than that, I'm a pretty adventurous cook (yes, you can be an adventurous vegan cook!). I'm open to trying anything: spices, indigenous vegetables/soy products, etc.
And as for great tofu recipes, I can assure you Julie, if you've had tofu that tastes like paste, then it wasn't prepared properly.
Trust me...and I'll prove it someday!
:) - June 6, 2008 at 8:14 PM
-
-
I have a sixth sense about recipes, I used to work for a cookbook author, I read and helped test a lot of them, the room we worked in had hundreds of cookbooks, over 60 feet of them, I can spot a good one from ten paces. Bad or poorly written directions are the number one dealbreaker. The number one plus for me is unusual pairings or unique ingredients.
- June 7, 2008 at 8:32 AM
- Julie said...
-
Maureen-- I LOVE tofu I get in restaurants, I just haven't been able to duplicate it at home. I would love for you to show me how!
Vudutu-- I'm with you on poorly written directions. I've had problems with some fairly well-respected cookbook writers with accuracy, as well. I usually just correct them as I go. - June 7, 2008 at 6:02 PM
-
-
Julie, I usually do the recipe pretty much by the book the first time then tweek it. My SO takes one look and twists and pounds it into her own immediately.
I was astounded by the number of mistakes, this was a very large book, we had a copy with post-it notes sticking out all over. The cycle was interesting, work and test like mad then when an edition came out immediately start checking it again and correcting. - June 9, 2008 at 7:32 AM
- Julie said...
-
Vudutu, I sound more like your SO. If I see something that doesn't make sense in a recipe, I just change it. Terry always marvels at how I use recipes-- or, more likely than not, don't use them. Or just use them for inspiration.
- June 9, 2008 at 9:56 AM
- Amber said...
-
If a recipe call for breadcrumbs, I won't make it. My mother never cooked with them, and I honestly feel there are much better recipes out there to try. Unless you have a killer recipe that includes breadcrumbs, I think I will live without them just fine.
- June 9, 2008 at 10:56 AM
- Julie said...
-
Cin Twin, store bought bread crumbs or fresh? I have a few recipes-- like one for a traditional white gazpacho-- that call for good breadcrumbs (not the ones in the cardboard box).
- June 9, 2008 at 11:00 AM
- Jaime said...
-
If I see a recipe that uses any cream of anything soup I won't make it. That stuff grosses me out and its so much tastier to make a white sauce yourself.
- June 9, 2008 at 8:26 PM
- Julie said...
-
Jaime, I generally agree with you, though I make an exception for green bean casserole at Thanksgiving. This year, however, I intend on doing one completely from scratch (though maybe not the onions...).
- June 9, 2008 at 10:44 PM
Friday, June 6, 2008
Recipe Dealbreakers
A lot of people said that their "dealbreaker" is odd ingredients-- you know, the spice you need a teaspoon of but rarely use again. Terry often says, "Man, I'd love to make that, but I don't have X," and usually I have it-- I love buying sauces and spices.
Another comment that came up on the Ruhlman blog is cook vs. some other designation-- that you have to be willing to do everything to be a cook, otherwise you're just faking it. This reminds me of the Foodie discussion we had here a couple of months ago.
So are you a cook? What makes a cook? Is there anything you refuse to touch in a recipe?
10 comments:
- Marla said...
-
I wish I had a more profound blog to give you for linkage. ;) And I WILL give you tasty tofu recipes.
- June 6, 2008 at 5:47 PM
-
-
Well, needless to say, as a vegan, recipe/ingredient dealbreakers are obviously any animal products.
But other than that, I'm a pretty adventurous cook (yes, you can be an adventurous vegan cook!). I'm open to trying anything: spices, indigenous vegetables/soy products, etc.
And as for great tofu recipes, I can assure you Julie, if you've had tofu that tastes like paste, then it wasn't prepared properly.
Trust me...and I'll prove it someday!
:) - June 6, 2008 at 8:14 PM
-
-
I have a sixth sense about recipes, I used to work for a cookbook author, I read and helped test a lot of them, the room we worked in had hundreds of cookbooks, over 60 feet of them, I can spot a good one from ten paces. Bad or poorly written directions are the number one dealbreaker. The number one plus for me is unusual pairings or unique ingredients.
- June 7, 2008 at 8:32 AM
- Julie said...
-
Maureen-- I LOVE tofu I get in restaurants, I just haven't been able to duplicate it at home. I would love for you to show me how!
Vudutu-- I'm with you on poorly written directions. I've had problems with some fairly well-respected cookbook writers with accuracy, as well. I usually just correct them as I go. - June 7, 2008 at 6:02 PM
-
-
Julie, I usually do the recipe pretty much by the book the first time then tweek it. My SO takes one look and twists and pounds it into her own immediately.
I was astounded by the number of mistakes, this was a very large book, we had a copy with post-it notes sticking out all over. The cycle was interesting, work and test like mad then when an edition came out immediately start checking it again and correcting. - June 9, 2008 at 7:32 AM
- Julie said...
-
Vudutu, I sound more like your SO. If I see something that doesn't make sense in a recipe, I just change it. Terry always marvels at how I use recipes-- or, more likely than not, don't use them. Or just use them for inspiration.
- June 9, 2008 at 9:56 AM
- Amber said...
-
If a recipe call for breadcrumbs, I won't make it. My mother never cooked with them, and I honestly feel there are much better recipes out there to try. Unless you have a killer recipe that includes breadcrumbs, I think I will live without them just fine.
- June 9, 2008 at 10:56 AM
- Julie said...
-
Cin Twin, store bought bread crumbs or fresh? I have a few recipes-- like one for a traditional white gazpacho-- that call for good breadcrumbs (not the ones in the cardboard box).
- June 9, 2008 at 11:00 AM
- Jaime said...
-
If I see a recipe that uses any cream of anything soup I won't make it. That stuff grosses me out and its so much tastier to make a white sauce yourself.
- June 9, 2008 at 8:26 PM
- Julie said...
-
Jaime, I generally agree with you, though I make an exception for green bean casserole at Thanksgiving. This year, however, I intend on doing one completely from scratch (though maybe not the onions...).
- June 9, 2008 at 10:44 PM
10 comments:
I wish I had a more profound blog to give you for linkage. ;) And I WILL give you tasty tofu recipes.
Well, needless to say, as a vegan, recipe/ingredient dealbreakers are obviously any animal products.
But other than that, I'm a pretty adventurous cook (yes, you can be an adventurous vegan cook!). I'm open to trying anything: spices, indigenous vegetables/soy products, etc.
And as for great tofu recipes, I can assure you Julie, if you've had tofu that tastes like paste, then it wasn't prepared properly.
Trust me...and I'll prove it someday!
:)
I have a sixth sense about recipes, I used to work for a cookbook author, I read and helped test a lot of them, the room we worked in had hundreds of cookbooks, over 60 feet of them, I can spot a good one from ten paces. Bad or poorly written directions are the number one dealbreaker. The number one plus for me is unusual pairings or unique ingredients.
Maureen-- I LOVE tofu I get in restaurants, I just haven't been able to duplicate it at home. I would love for you to show me how!
Vudutu-- I'm with you on poorly written directions. I've had problems with some fairly well-respected cookbook writers with accuracy, as well. I usually just correct them as I go.
Julie, I usually do the recipe pretty much by the book the first time then tweek it. My SO takes one look and twists and pounds it into her own immediately.
I was astounded by the number of mistakes, this was a very large book, we had a copy with post-it notes sticking out all over. The cycle was interesting, work and test like mad then when an edition came out immediately start checking it again and correcting.
Vudutu, I sound more like your SO. If I see something that doesn't make sense in a recipe, I just change it. Terry always marvels at how I use recipes-- or, more likely than not, don't use them. Or just use them for inspiration.
If a recipe call for breadcrumbs, I won't make it. My mother never cooked with them, and I honestly feel there are much better recipes out there to try. Unless you have a killer recipe that includes breadcrumbs, I think I will live without them just fine.
Cin Twin, store bought bread crumbs or fresh? I have a few recipes-- like one for a traditional white gazpacho-- that call for good breadcrumbs (not the ones in the cardboard box).
If I see a recipe that uses any cream of anything soup I won't make it. That stuff grosses me out and its so much tastier to make a white sauce yourself.
Jaime, I generally agree with you, though I make an exception for green bean casserole at Thanksgiving. This year, however, I intend on doing one completely from scratch (though maybe not the onions...).
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