Myles pfp
Myles
@myles-cooks
When chefs exchange recipes, it usually looks something like: - sear short ribs - deglaze pan with red wine, reduce - add in beef broth, tomato paste, garlic and onion - braise until tender No measurements, no heat levels, no cook times, no specific equipment given. Chefs understand that all of those things vary substantially, and the specifics should be based on the preferences and instincts of the person doing the cooking. Great chefs cook based on taste, touch, sight, sound, and feel....not instructions in a recipe. This might sound intimidating if you're used to following recipes, but if you learn some solid fundamentals and focus on techniques, it's actually a much better way to cook. Less stressful, more enjoyable, and much more creative. 80/20 Cooking teaches this approach.
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Madison Sommer pfp
Madison Sommer
@madisonsommer.eth
Took me a while to figure it out but once I really started cooking I stopped truly following recipes. If it's something that's new to me I will look at a few recipe variations then go with what I think is best. It just takes time, like anything. Cooking and food is so personal
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Daniel Sinclair pfp
Daniel Sinclair
@danielsinclair
Watching the POV videos from Kenji and others is super informative on those little details that never translate to a recipe, and definitely helps in learning new and better technique.
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downshift.thief pfp
downshift.thief
@downshift.eth
/microsub tip: 1590 $DEGEN
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