You're using recipes wrong (2024)

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I’ve been collecting cookbooks for (at least) 20 years,and I basically taught myself to cook amid sauce-splattered tomes. But even though I still love leafing through them for inspiration, I’ve found myself turning to them less and less for specific direction in the kitchen over the years. Why? On the Guardian website, the Australian chef Adam Liaw articulates a fundamental problem with recipes, the building blocks of cookbooks:

Recipes teach a modern style of cooking that is focused solely on eating meals, to the exclusion of kitchen craft and home economics. Making a simple dish that’s over and done with in under an hour is all well and good, but it is also a very inefficient way to cook.

In other words, most recipes invite us to think of cooking projects in terms of discrete meals: a pork roast that feeds six, a veggie pasta for four. But as Liaw notes, “No cuisine in the world could ever have been created in discrete packages.” A standard Japanese meal, for example, rests on three elements: soup, rice and pickles. “To make that from scratch three times a day would be impossible, but with good kitchen craft it’s possible to eat a full meal every time with a minimum of effort,” he writes.

But here in the United States, the single-meal recipe reigns supreme: in cookbooks, on food websites, and in the food section of newspapers. When you exit work and remember the empty fridge at home, the prospect of cooking dinner in that style can be daunting: You have to settle on a recipe, hit the grocery store, spend at least 30 minutes cooking, and other 20 to 30 minutes cleaning. Meal-kit services like Blue Apron remove the burdens of choosing a recipe and shopping for it; but they still keep you on the one-dinner-at-a-time treadmill. Considering the ever-increasing demands of work and the demands of family life, it’s no wonder that we’re spending more and more of our food dollars on meals prepared outside the home.

As Liaw notes, “No cuisine in the world could ever have been created in discrete packages.”

But imagine another, more long-viewed style of cooking. Say on Sunday, you cooked a pot of beans, roasted a whole chicken (tip: butterfly it), and whipped up a simple vinaigrette as a salad dressing and marinade. Monday’s dinner could be a quick chicken-bean soup; Tuesday could be taco night; Wednesday, these elements could be incorporated along with some quick-sautéd vegetables into a pasta; and so on. If you have nice condiments around—say, sauerkraut, or (my longtime obsession) dead-simple homemade salsa macha—these fast-assembled meals are all the more satisfying.

This mode of cooking is also thrifty: Whole chickens are much cheaper than parts, and the leftover carcass can be transformed into next week’s stock. And a pot of homemade beans costs significantly less than canned beans (which are themselves a worthy component of a quick meal). No bottled salad dressing can match the flavor and price of a homemade one, which lasts in the fridge for at least a week. Under such a regime, restaurants and takeout can be utilized sparingly, to satisfy cravings for dishes you can’t cook at home, not as an expensive crutch.

Tamar Adler’s evocative An Everlasting Meal (2012), not a cookbook but a collection of essays, captures the pleasure and rhythms of this mode of kitchen stewardship. More recently, the US cookbook market is starting to take note of the flaw Liaw identifies. In my list of the five best cookbooks of 2016, two strove to be more than just one-off recipe collections, offering a more systematic approach to putting food on the table. In Home Cooked: Essential Recipes for a New Way to Cook, Anya Fernald makes the case for “long cuts”—”time-consuming base ingredients made when time and ingredients are abundant, then preserved to be used when they are needed.” And in A New Way to Dinner: A Playbook of Recipes and Strategies for the Week Ahead, Amanda Hesser and Merrill Stubbs (of Food52 fame) structure their book around cooking just as I describe above: weekend shopping trips and cooking sprees that give rise to a week’s worth of varied and fast-prepped dinners.

Both books are excellent—but are geared to an audience of seasoned gourmets weary of the tyranny of the one-meal-focused recipe. (The “new way” of cooking they promise in their titles isn’t really new, of course, but it has been widely forgotten in our recipe-fixated food culture.) We need more, and simpler, systems-focused cookbooks, geared to people with less experience in the kitchen. Maybe some already exist—if you know of good ones, let me know in comments. And of course, there’s no need to purge your home of conventional cookbooks or stop visiting recipe websites—most one-shot recipes produce results that can be incorporated into a variety of meals for the week.

It would also help if we revived home economics classes in high schools, focusing on the skills of running a thrifty and time-efficient home kitchen. I made just such a plea back in 2013.

You're using recipes wrong (2024)

FAQs

Are you a cook if you follow recipes? ›

To simply answer this question, a chef is an individual who is trained to understand flavors, cooking techniques, create recipes from scratch with fresh ingredients, and have a high level of responsibility within a kitchen. A cook is an individual who follows established recipes to prepare food.

At what point does a recipe become your own? ›

A general rule of thumb is: if you change three or more ingredients in the recipe, and rewrite the recipe instructions in your own voice, you can consider it your own. Even so, stating that the recipe was “adapted from” or “inspired by” the original recipe is a good idea.

Why does the recipe not work sometimes? ›

The proportions are off, or the instructions omit something from the ingredient list, or the cook time is listed as being too long. Mistakes happen (we've made them in our own recipes). Not all recipes are created equal, and there are no perfect recipes. Recipes are an endless process.

What is an example of recipe modification? ›

For example, if a recipe says to use 1 cup of sugar, use ⅔ cup. This change works best in canned and frozen fruits and in making puddings and custards. In cookies and cakes, try using ½ cup sugar per cup of flour. For quick breads and muffins, use 1 tablespoon sugar per cup of flour.

Do you have to follow a recipe exactly? ›

Many recipes, such as NYT Cooking's no-recipe recipes and other quick weeknight options, are designed to be flexible, and remain a helpful option on busy days. But most professionally developed recipes are meant to be cooked exactly as written.

Do real chefs use recipes? ›

Just as most pro chefs will read the recipe all the way through at least once before cooking from it, most will also cook all the way through a recipe at least once before making substitutions.

Can you legally own a recipe? ›

Similar to ideas, facts and history, there isn't copyright protection in recipes as mere lists of ingredients. This is clearly stated by the U.S. Copyright Office.

Do professional cooks use recipes? ›

Good cooks rely on recipes—to a point. In a professional kitchen, recipes are essential to creating consistent food, so that everyone takes the same path to the same place.

What is the first thing you should do with every recipe? ›

1: READ THE RECIPE COMPLETELY BEFORE BEGINNING. The first step in following a recipe is to be sure to read through the ingredients needed as well as the instructions for what you will be doing before you ever begin mixing your batters or doughs. (This is one of the first steps in Mise En Place.)

Why does doubling a recipe not work? ›

Here are some reasons why simply doubling a recipe might not always work: Irregular scaling of ingredients. It's a truth well-known to experienced cooks that ingredients don't always scale in a linear fashion. Doubling spices, for example, could overwhelm the dish.

Does bread flour need more water? ›

Bread flour is also a “thirsty” flour, which means it absorbs more water than low protein flour. For example, if your dough feels really dry (especially in winter) and you have to add more water to loosen the texture- that's why. Same goes for adjusting the texture of your sourdough starter.

What 5 things does sugar do to a recipe? ›

Sugar's role in baking: sweetness is just the start
  • Sweetening. Ok, this one is kind of a given. ...
  • Browning. Know that golden-brown look you get at the edges of your baked goods when they're cooked just right? ...
  • Moisture Retention. Sugar has hygroscopic properties. ...
  • Tenderizing. ...
  • Stabilizing. ...
  • Fermentation.

What cuts fat in cooking? ›

Choose semi-skimmed or skimmed milk when cooking and use low-fat or reduced-fat cheese, cream and yoghurt rather than full-fat versions. Try healthier methods of cooking that use less oil, such as steaming. Trim visible fat from meat and remove skin from chicken and turkey before cooking.

What adjustments should you keep in mind when doubling a recipe? ›

When doubling, you'll need to consider adjusting ingredient amounts, the size of your ingredient preparation tools, the size or quantity of your pots, pans or baking dishes and modifications to cooking time.

Is it I like cooking or I like to cook? ›

In most cases, “Like” is one of the special few verbs which can take either the gerund or the infinitive form with no huge difference in meaning. Therefore your two examples say pretty much the same thing.

Is not every cook a chef? ›

A chef is someone who not only cooks but is also responsible for creating recipes, ordering ingredients, planning and pricing the menu, managing costs, overseeing food preparation and receiving customers' feedback. So besides cooking, a chef has to carry out responsibilities within and outside the kitchen.

What is the difference between a line cook and a cook? ›

The difference between a line cook and a cook is that "cook" is a general term and line cooks have specific stations they work within a kitchen line. You may also hear terms like short-order cook, which refers to cooks working in coffee shops preparing quick meals.

Is it I'm a good cook or cooker? ›

"Cooker" is not a word. You can say "good cook". You cannot say "good in cooking". You could also use the word "talent" which is a word used to describe something we are good at.

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