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| Whats for dinner Ideas of what to make for dinner tonight |
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I remember the recipes by heart that I make most often.
Mama's Marinara, ricotta grocchi, salisbury steak, eggrolls, meatballs, roasted chicken, buttermilk fried chicken, garlic pasta and asian fried noodles are a few I can think of right off hand Oh yeah...cornbread and french bread. |
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If we're talking actual recipes, I would have to say none.
If we're talking dishes, then there's a long list of them. The point being that "recipe" connotes a precise list of ingredients, amounts, and directions. I rarely cook that way at all. And when I'm just cooking I don't make any dish the same way twice becuase I'm following a known procedure, but not a recipe per se. |
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Yeah, as Brook implies, that's a hard one. I seldom cook from recipes... because I rarely cook things that have to adhere to strict formulas, so I just have the routine of the procedure "down" and I just do it the same way every time. (On a super-easy-to-understand scale... a PB&J, or cheese n' crackers... Some might NEED a recipe to make a PB&J, but most of us do not, 'cause once you've made one a time or two, you're basically set for life, and don't have to open the cookbook anymore...)
Baking is different, because one really can't just start throwing hand-fulls of flour and sugar together and expect to have a good, consistent product result. My last few kitchen positions I worked a lot of night-baker positions. I proll'y have about 100 fairly detailed specific recipes in my head for bread, rolls, cookies/biscotti/brownies & bars, donuts/fritters/muffins/danish, biscuits, pie crust/cobbler-crust, fruit-crisp crumb-top, etc. Not because I'm GOD but because I had the MUNDANE chore of baking these items monotonously every single night for years! Those items I only did once a week or less- I had them written down in a notebook that I kept in my work-station in the bakery at camp. Also kept them all in a file on the computer. At home, when I try new recipes from a book or mag- sometimes I'll rip the page from the mag and carry at my hip in the kitchen... cookbooks, to avoid getting the pages messy in the kitchen, I usually hen-scratch them down an a yellow sticky-note and stick to the cupboard-door that I'm working in front of at the counter. In other commercial kitchens I've cooked in, most restaurants, hotels, etc have masters of all recipes in a 3-ring binder and sometimes posted under protective plastic in all work-stations so all cooks have easy at-a-glance-access to them when in a hurry on busy nights... For instance, all restaurant menu item recipes were posted on the main cook's line, all salad dressings were posted on the wall behind the 50-gallon Hobart mixer, etc. Last edited by chubbyalaskagriz; 08-02-2008 at 07:38 AM. |