Is there anything more annoying than spending time and money on a recipe that falls short, or doesnโt brown right, or takes hours instead of minutes, or doesnโt look anywhere close to the freaking picture? Never again! Herewith eight questions to ask before you decide to make a new recipe for the family.
Is there a recipe buried within your recipe?ย If a recipe calls for an ingredient that in and of itself requires its own recipe on another page in the book โ back away from the cookbook. This drives me crazy. Itโs a technique commonly found in restaurant cookbooks โ not to be confused with restaurant chefโs cook-at-home cookbooks โ where they think nothing of calling for blood orange vinaigrette โ(see page 220)โ and homemade veal stock โ(see page 130)โ in the same ingredient list. The only time this is acceptable is if sufficient warning has been given in the recipe note or if there is a substitution option that doesnโt make you feel like some kind of failure for not having homemade parsley pesto on hand.
Did a robot write it or did a real person?ย Do you know what a recipe headnote is? Itโs the industry term for the little introduction that precedes your recipe. You know, the kind that says โI love this dish. Itโs a great thing to make ahead for entertaining, because it just tastes better on Day 2.โ Now that? Thatโs a good headnote. Itโs helpful, itโs specific. You get the feeling that the recipe writer has done it before and knows what sheโs talking about. (That very instruction is in the Smitten Kitchen Cookbook, preceding her Balsamic-and Beer-Braised Short Rib.) But how about this one: โSo delicious that everyone in your family will be begging for seconds.โ Barf. Is this a cookbook or is it fiction? The person who wrote that is either a) Siri or b) someone who has never cooked for a kid who, this week, has decided to eat mashed potatoes and nothing but mashed potatoes.
Does it have a cutesy name?ย Like โLast-Minute Lasagnaโ or โQuickie Quesadillas?โ These kinds of recipes might be perfectly fine, but I find it just too embarrassing to answer โCurry in a Hurryโ when a family member asks me whatโs for dinner. I donโt have any more scientific explanation than that. (Exception: Lazy Bolognese on page 98 of myย book. Why an exception? Because I am a complete hypocrite.)
Does the timing seem right?ย Somewhere along the line โ Iโm tawlkinโ to you Rachael Ray โ 30 minutes became the barometer for the hallowed โquick and easy meal.โ As a result, it seems that everyone wants to deliver recipes that come in under the half-hour wire. And if they donโt? Eh? Letโs just say it anyway! This seems to happen all the time. How to avoid: Read the recipe all the way through โ if the writer tells you that a soup which involves chopping a half dozen chopped vegetables takes five minutes prep time, you should think twice about trusting that recipe writer. (And if it happens again, I give you full on permission to un-follow him or her on instagram.)
Is the ingredient list longer than the recipe?ย Thatโs not a good sign. Save for the weekend, or when your kids are older โ or hand to your butler and private chef to arrange themselves.
Are there too few ingredients?ย This sounds like a strange question to ask. Is there such a thing as a recipe thatโs too easy? Not that often โ but when a recipe calls for only two or three ingredients, you should probably make sure each one of those ingredients is pulling its weight if itโs going to turn out well. The other night I found myself explaining how to make polenta to my friend Naria. Itโs so easy, you just whisk cornmeal into chicken broth and add some fat at the end like cheese. Itโs a three-ingredient side dish (one that is excellent with those short ribs I might add) and itโs perfectly serviceable if you make it with cornmeal, chicken broth, and cheese. But if you take care to use homemade stock, authentic Parmigiano-Reggiano, and cornmeal from your local Italian market, itโs going to be more than serviceable, itโs going to be memorable, which means that most likely it will make it onto your table again. And thatโs the mark of a success here.
Is the recipe handwritten?ย Itโs gonna work.
Is the recipe handwritten by a family member?ย Recipe Gold. No further screening required.
PS: Recipe cards shown in photo are from Andyโsย grandmotherโs collection, courtesy of our Uncle Doug & Uncle Earl.
Love this cute quick list, also, I like to re-write recipes before I try them. It totally saved me when I was making stuffing for the first time on thanksgiving. First time recipe on a holiday may not be recommended, but it all worked out! (and I wouldโve missed a crucial step if I hadnโt re-organized those darn instructions).
And this post is the reason I love DALS! Thank you.
I love to cook and if Iโm planning to use a recipe (unless itโs measuring baking ingredients) I usually approach it as an idea or inspiration and it most often results in fabulous dishes. ๐
This is helpful. Yesterday I made this soup in my slow cooker: http://crockpot365.blogspot.com/2013/03/slow-cooker-hearty-lima-bean-soup.html
The flavors were great, but the lima beans never softened fully and I unfortunately didnโt realize it until after I used my immersion blender.
I soaked the beans overnight in cold water so Iโm not sure what the problem was. They were Goya beans from my supermarket and they were cheap. Maybe they were just old.
oh you forgot is it torn out from the newspaper and almost completely faded? also recipe gold:)
http://semiweeklyeats.blogspot.com/2014/01/so-much-to-say.html
I love this article! Such a good read and I completely agree. Anything hand-written by grandma is gold.
-Katharine
Livingโs as Easy as 312
โWhy an exception? Because I am a complete hypocrite.โ I love this. This is real life. ๐
And yes about the embarrassing names for a dish. If the food is good, it doesnโt need a cutesy name. I feel like this is something else that Rachel Ray does. I love her meals but I rename them in my house.
In the same way, no matter how much I want to eat a Rooty Tooty Fresh and Fruity from IHOP, I canโt bring myself to say it out loud to my server. So Iโve never tried it.
The world (ok, my world) simply does not have enough hand-written-by-a-family-member recipes. I hope to continue to remedy that! Loved this post so, so much.
i almost always add 10-15 minutes to any recipeโs prep-time, including DALS. maybe iโm just slow, but i feel like all published recipes are way too optimistic on how long it takes to round up ingredients and chop/slice/measure. iโll even re-write the actual time in the recipe book so that i wonโt be surprised.
Also, was it written by the nice ladies in the companyโs recipe development department, i.e. the Hersheyโs Perfect Chocolate Cake or the Bakersโ One Bowl Brownies. Thatโs a recipe thatโs been tested a million times!
Disregard in cases involving condensed soup or cake mix โฆ
I partially disagree on the ingredient list to recipe instructions ratio, I find that adding a pile of herbs and spices to just about anything I cook (not bake) will vastly improve the overall flavor. A half-teaspoon of this or that (or both) and a quarter-teaspoon of that other thing will eliminate the need for excess salt and give your end result a deeper, more delicious flavor. And each of those spices and herbs takes a line in the ingredient list. Ya know?
xox
I agree, this post is the reason I love and follow DALS! So practical and makes you smile!
โLazy Bologneseโ is clever if I do say so myself. Cheers!
I have been burned by the โ5 minutes prepโ so many times. I donโt know who can mince 4 bell peppers, 2 onions, and a leek, and peel 8 potatoes in 5 minutes โ it takes me that long just to WASH the veggies.
Oh hey jillybean! Nice to see you again. Thought youโd like that one. ๐
{P.S. to everyone else: jillybean is the one who crowned my formerly-known-as-turkey-meat-sauce โlazy bolgoneseโ}
But Jenny, you must give yourself a โbyeโ for Lazy Bolognese because it rhymes so beautifully!
@ 6 for cute/bad names: We have an AMAZING recipe for โstir-fried beef in spicy peanut sauceโ. The sauce also has cocoa powder in it which gives it a nice rich colour.
Unfortunately that makes it look like โpoo stewโ as the kids now call it. Adults LOVE it, kids hate it.
Iโm not one to gush, but I love this post. And maybe now that youโve made polenta sound more appealing (using quality ingredients), Iโll give it a try.
Despite the name, poo stew sounds delicious. Any chance youโd share the recipe here?
My grandmother has so many written up recipe! Those are so precious now a days, and I love the authenticity and the time it took to write up recipies you truly cared about.
{Teffyโs Perks} X
Jenny, I hate to admit it, but Iโve been following your blog for two years at least and Iโve never made one of your recipes. I have a lot of excuses why, including multiple allergies, a toddler, and no access to Trader Joesโฆ However I want to say that I keep reading because Iโve learned more about cooking from reading both the recipes and commentaries like this than from any other source (save perhaps Julia Child and Robert Farrar Capon). So thank you! ๐
i just found your site. i think i love you. youโre amazing.
You have to watch out for some of those hand-written recipes. The ones in the photo above are from my mother, whose handwriting was described as โperfect for writing treaties: beautiful to look at, but impossible to readโ. There are ingredients in some of her old recipes that I still wonder about.
btw, if my memory from many decades ago serves me, that recipe in the front for Halibut was really good
The only recipes I really trust these days are recipes from blogs I trust (like this one) and recipes on sites where users can post reviews (like food network.com). Aside from the fact that reviewers can give thumbs up or thumbs down, many of them offer other helpful tidbits, like โthis made way too much,โ or โthe thyme made it taste weird so Iโd leave it out next time.โ
I was recently burned by the Balaboosta cookbook when I made a recipe that was an epic FAIL. I think there mustโve been a typo because the salt level was off the charts and made it completely inedible. As I was putting in the salt, I thought it seemed like way too much, but I triple checked the recipe and followed it exactly. I shouldโve trusted my instincts and used a lot less, but it was there! in print! in a cookbook! Big bummer because I spent a lot of time and money on that recipe.
Anyway โ mistakes happen, but it made me deepen my appreciation for recipes that other people have already tried, liked, and commented on.
Great breakdown of how to read a recipe and determine if it will work. I love the picture, too!
This thing about the cutesy name is (though I hate that Iโm defending it) is that sometimes, as is the case with Lazy Bolognese, itโs actually a guide/tool for how to properly pronounce the foodโs name.
โLazyโ gives clues because you realize that they should (sort of) rhyme, and probably helps a new/inexperienced cook feel a little more comfortable jumping in and trying the recipe. (โBowl-OG-neese? Too weird!โ).