this post was submitted on 05 Oct 2024
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A howdy hello to everyone,

Getting older has made me realize the deficits in my cooking skills. I was a very picky eater growing up, and started to widen my palate so that I wouldn’t be condemned to eating some form of bread with cheese for my entire life. I love fruits and vegetables, so there’s no problem here. Grains are a bit difficult because of their texture.

I am completely dogshit at cooking. Whenever I try a new recipe, I either burn or undercook the food, resulting in about an hour wasted of poor planning.

This may involve walking back and forth around the kitchen getting ingredients as needed, forgetting to do a step, or forgetting an ingredient that is sitting on the counter away from me.

My motor skills are sometimes clumsy with cutting, so oftentimes the vegetables and fruit are cut too thick, or not to the point where the recipe expects them. When I made aloo gobi, my cauliflower was too large, the potatoes were undercooked, and the other veggies were just a pile of slop. Sometimes other dishes will not be entirely cooked and other parts will be burnt.

Oftentimes I might hate the taste of what I’ve made, so ultimately I will act to not eat anything because I don’t want to waste money cooking then going out. I have been working out and live a much more active lifestyle compared to how sedentary I was in university. Walking around 10 hours a day has made me truly realize the feeling of hunger. An emotion I normally never felt due to stomach problems and perpetual nausea.

I am very good at cooking breakfast foods, but do not want to eat French toast or Pancakes every single day. I’d like to add a broader spectrum to my breakfasts as well, as it is a quite small subset. I tried learning the cookiebookie latex package to write a cookbook as I went, but I gave up on trying to get it working. Formatting documents is an entirely different post.

This is turning into a rant, but for those of you whose special interests are cooking and who have found a spectrum of foods that are nutritious and filling, what advice would you have for me? What cookware do you recommend? Is there a set of recipes you think would be good to introduce cooking techniques? My end goal would be to cook with mostly anything I have on hand to turn it into something delicious and nutritious. Protein rich meals, vitamins, minerals, calories, etc.

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[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Most of the issues I had with cooking are a result of how recipes are. Recipe says dice a thing? How small? A teaspoon of something? The hell does that mean? I can fit a ton of stuff in there if I mash it down. Salt to taste? Forget about it. Pretty soon I'm operating in panic mode and maybe the recipe turns out but I'm too stressed out to enjoy it.

Enter Sohla's cookbook, which explains everything. It's part cookbook, part autobiography, and part reference manual. Her youtube videos are tremendous fun, too.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 month ago (2 children)

A teaspoon of something?

...a teaspoon is literally a defined measurement of volume tho https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teaspoon

For cooking purposes and dosing of medicine, a teaspoonful is defined as 5 mL (0.18 imp fl oz; 0.17 US fl oz), and standard measuring spoons are used.[3]

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Volume is only useful for things that are non-compressible (i.e. fluid). What if you're measuring flour? Usually, the measurements are given for sifted flour, but that's not something you would know unless you're experienced in the kitchen. And even if you do sift your flour, there's still going to be a lot of variation depending on how much things get compressed again as you're scooping it out.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago

Only thing I've ever needed to worry about being compressed is brown sugar

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago

I'm mostly talking about dry ingredients, which I can mash down, level off, leave heaping....