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jaklumen
Cookbook vs. home-taught: the classical and improv in cooking. Mark Unseen   May 2 09:16 UTC 2002

Have you known people that could walk into any kitchen, take a look at 
what foodstuffs were available, and cook up something that worked?

I'm not sure how these people arrive at these skills, because I assume 
there is two approaches to cooking: learning to cook from cookbooks, 
and following recipes, or learning from someone else, such as Mom, 
Dad, or a cooking school.  The former seems to be a very classical 
approach, and the other more of an improvisational style.

I'm not sure how easy it is to move to freestyle cooking from 
cookbooks or home-taught family recipes.  I figure, after a while, you 
tend to learn what works, make some generalizations, and you have an 
idea of portion control.

I don't do any measuring when I make chicken curry and rice.  The 
recipes I looked at never had the ingredients I wanted.  I just did 
it.  Spices are easy, I guess.. for saute cooking, you just season to 
taste.

I'm sure baking is a whole other ballgame, because, well, some stuff 
you can't alter.  I think maybe there are more things that must be 
kept basic.


14 responses total.
md
response 1 of 14: Mark Unseen   May 2 12:05 UTC 2002

My wife is an excellent "freestyle" cook in all the WASPy cuisine areas 
she grew up with.  She'll open the fridge or the cupboard, do some 
quick mental calculations, then grab a bunch of stuff and start 
cooking.  When she wants to make a seafood risotto, though, she has to 
refer to her recipe.  But even then, she'll improvise: she'll splash 
some cognac into the pan, or chop up some shallots.  To a much lesser 
degree, I'm the same way with Italian food.  The recipe is useful for 
the order you do things: at what point do you start sauteeing the 
garlic, etc.  

When we compare notes, we agree that the dishes we make freestyle seem, 
at least to us, too simple and obvious to be called "recipes," even 
though to an onlooker they might seem quite involved.  

Also, we agree that a big part of cooking freestyle is faith or courage 
or whatever.  If your instinct tells you to rub olive oil all over the 
salmon steaks before you throw them on the grill, do it.  Then throw 
them on the grill, then cook them until you think it's time to take 
them off.  Just do it.  That can be the hardest part, especially with 
something you haven't done before.
keesan
response 2 of 14: Mark Unseen   May 2 14:47 UTC 2002

We never cook with recipes except the first time making something like bread,
where the proportions are important as is the timing.  I frequently go to
friends' houses and cook up whatever seems to need cooking first, into a
stir-fry or soup or stew.  Fry the onions first and add the greens last, etc.
Any bean (presoaked) or grain can be cooked similarly but millet needs more
water than rice.  I throw in whatever spice looks interesting in stir fries,
and sometimes herbs in the stew or soup.  (Don't fry oregano).
glenda
response 3 of 14: Mark Unseen   May 2 16:12 UTC 2002

I do both, except that I almost never follow a recipe "to the letter", I use
it more as a guide.  I follow recipes more closely for baked goods.

Cooking is an art form, baking is a science, therefore I take more exact
measurements for baking.  If you wonder too much the chemical reaction may
not work right.
slynne
response 4 of 14: Mark Unseen   May 2 17:51 UTC 2002

I often cook "freestyle". My only regular dinner guest often says that 
he wishes I would use a recipe. He usually says this while he is in the 
kitchen fixing my latest disaster. He is a good enough cook that he can 
not only cook without a recipe, he can almost always fix what I have 
messed up. 

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