Help! Im a cooking dummy!
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- TrailerParkJawa
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Help! Im a cooking dummy!
Ive never learned to cook and now it is time to learn. Anybody have some suggestions on easy recipies or where to start?
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Get a girlfriend. Then she can cook for you.
Seriously though, go to a book store and just start looking through them and find one that covers the easy stuff to make. Just the basics. And the internet probably has a lot of cooking websites that should help.
You can try foodtv.com. It's the Food Network's website and has websites and other tricks and stuff. Also lists their shows if you get the channel.
Seriously though, go to a book store and just start looking through them and find one that covers the easy stuff to make. Just the basics. And the internet probably has a lot of cooking websites that should help.
You can try foodtv.com. It's the Food Network's website and has websites and other tricks and stuff. Also lists their shows if you get the channel.
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NO 1 tip of them all.
Make SURE everything you use in the kitchen is CLEAN!
Hands, knives, fryers, oven.
Food poisoning is not fun.
Be careful if you have bird (chicken).
To make sure different cutting board (don't know the translation sorry) and knifes for birds and any other food especially vegetables!
Make SURE everything you use in the kitchen is CLEAN!
Hands, knives, fryers, oven.
Food poisoning is not fun.
Be careful if you have bird (chicken).
To make sure different cutting board (don't know the translation sorry) and knifes for birds and any other food especially vegetables!
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"Either God wants to abolish evil, and cannot; or he can, but does not want to. ... If he wants to, but cannot, he is impotent. If he can, but does not want to, he is wicked. ... If, as they say, God can abolish evil, and God really wants to do it, why is there evil in the world?" -Epicurus
Fear is the mother of all gods.
Nature does all things spontaneously, by herself, without the meddling of the gods. -Lucretius
Yeah, Betty Crocker has a little cooking primer--how to measure, what to measure with, how to convert, rules for cooking different things, what kind of equipment to use, and stuff like that. I got one but rather than make myself a nice pot roast or something, I went on this huge cookie-and-brownie-making binge. Heck, I was a bachelor.
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Re: Help! Im a cooking dummy!
How have you managed to survive this long without being able to cook?TrailerParkJawa wrote:Ive never learned to cook and now it is time to learn. Anybody have some suggestions on easy recipies or where to start?
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Re: Help! Im a cooking dummy!
I eat out a lot. Before buying my house in Fremont, I lived at home where my dad did most of the cooking. Also, my friends are all good cooks, so my skills or lack of, have never been needed.neoolong wrote:How have you managed to survive this long without being able to cook?TrailerParkJawa wrote:Ive never learned to cook and now it is time to learn. Anybody have some suggestions on easy recipies or where to start?
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If you know NOTHING, I wouldn't know how to start.
Don't stress measurements unless you're baking. Taste things constantly throughout the cooking process and adjust your seasonings. Add a little first, you can always add more later.
Let your pans get hot before putting your food in them. People ruin more food by letting something steam gradually in a cold skillet.
Don't be afraid! Cooking ain't brain surgery. The more you cook, the more you learn.
And remember, Roast Chicken is an easy way to impress, and it's the easiest thing in the world
Roast Chicken:
Preheat oven to 500 degrees
Wash chicken under runing water. Pat dry with paper towels. Remember to remove the giblets inside!
Season inside and out with salt and pepper.
Take a few tiny sprigs of thyme, crush them in your palm with your thumb,and add to a little melted butter or margerine. Daub chicken with this on the outside.
Put chicken in hot oven for ten-fifteen minutes. Keep an eye on it, wait till the skin just begins to brown, turn the heat down to 325 degrees and let 'er go for about 45 minutes to an hour. Chicken's done when you stab the thigh at it's thickest point and the juices run CLEAR.
If you want, you can throw a little wine, beer, or chicken broth into your pan. When the thing's done, spoon off some of the fat, bring it to a boil on the stove, and thicken it with a teaspoon of cornstarch mixed in a couple ounces of water. Voila, you got sauce.
Don't stress measurements unless you're baking. Taste things constantly throughout the cooking process and adjust your seasonings. Add a little first, you can always add more later.
Let your pans get hot before putting your food in them. People ruin more food by letting something steam gradually in a cold skillet.
Don't be afraid! Cooking ain't brain surgery. The more you cook, the more you learn.
And remember, Roast Chicken is an easy way to impress, and it's the easiest thing in the world
Roast Chicken:
Preheat oven to 500 degrees
Wash chicken under runing water. Pat dry with paper towels. Remember to remove the giblets inside!
Season inside and out with salt and pepper.
Take a few tiny sprigs of thyme, crush them in your palm with your thumb,and add to a little melted butter or margerine. Daub chicken with this on the outside.
Put chicken in hot oven for ten-fifteen minutes. Keep an eye on it, wait till the skin just begins to brown, turn the heat down to 325 degrees and let 'er go for about 45 minutes to an hour. Chicken's done when you stab the thigh at it's thickest point and the juices run CLEAR.
If you want, you can throw a little wine, beer, or chicken broth into your pan. When the thing's done, spoon off some of the fat, bring it to a boil on the stove, and thicken it with a teaspoon of cornstarch mixed in a couple ounces of water. Voila, you got sauce.
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There might be something in the recipe exchange thread we had a while back.
http://bbs.stardestroyer.net/viewtopic.php?t=5114
http://bbs.stardestroyer.net/viewtopic.php?t=5114
Last edited by Raxmei on 2003-01-29 07:05pm, edited 1 time in total.
I prepared Explosive Runes today.
- TrailerParkJawa
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Cooking for Dummies
If you can find a copy of 'Homesteading In The City', perhaps at a library, get it. Aimed at impoverished young people leaving home and having to cook for themselves for the first time. It assumes you know how to boil water and that's about it, and emphasizes cheap, healthy recipies that won't leave you malnourished. As a bonus, it also includes little vignettes about life in the big city (like meeting nuts and drunks on the subway).
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"The Joy of Cooking" is a great all-around reference cookbook. Still, the Betty Croker cookbook has a lot of nice tips in it...
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- Dahak
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Pasta is quite easy for starters. Especally tomatoe sauces.
Although I now know one person who even managed to ruin *that*...
Although I now know one person who even managed to ruin *that*...
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hey, cooking is easy.
in the beginning you take stuff that you´d like to eat at the moment and chop it into small pices.
before that you´ve already taken a pan, put oil in it and got it heated up. then you´ve turned the flame down to half power.
then you take the onions you´ve chopped and put them into the heated oil and let them fry for a while.
after that you add all the other solid stuff and let it fry for a while.
dont forget stirring occasionally.
then you take the liquid stuff and put it in.
try every once in a while and add what ever spices you feel like until it tastes good.
that´s it.
after a while of practice you´ll get to know new spices by yourself.
cooking is nothing you have to learn, it´s something you have to do.
in the beginning you take stuff that you´d like to eat at the moment and chop it into small pices.
before that you´ve already taken a pan, put oil in it and got it heated up. then you´ve turned the flame down to half power.
then you take the onions you´ve chopped and put them into the heated oil and let them fry for a while.
after that you add all the other solid stuff and let it fry for a while.
dont forget stirring occasionally.
then you take the liquid stuff and put it in.
try every once in a while and add what ever spices you feel like until it tastes good.
that´s it.
after a while of practice you´ll get to know new spices by yourself.
cooking is nothing you have to learn, it´s something you have to do.
- Dahak
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Salm, such cooking experiments have a nasty tendency to go horribly wrong...
Especially if you're a cooking n00b...
Especially if you're a cooking n00b...
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ach was, what can go wrong with frying stuff? the only thing i can think of is burning the whole shit but that´s part of the learning process and unless you´re a really poor sucker from zimbabwe you´ll survive the whole matter without being financially ruined.Dahak wrote:Salm, such cooking experiments have a nasty tendency to go horribly wrong...
Especially if you're a cooking n00b...
if you follow the steps above and stirr occassionally you´re safe.
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For instance, taking the wrong spices, or too much of those (ever ate something with too much nutmeg?) or mix something which isn't meant to?salm wrote:ach was, what can go wrong with frying stuff? the only thing i can think of is burning the whole shit but that´s part of the learning process and unless you´re a really poor sucker from zimbabwe you´ll survive the whole matter without being financially ruined.Dahak wrote:Salm, such cooking experiments have a nasty tendency to go horribly wrong...
Especially if you're a cooking n00b...
if you follow the steps above and stirr occassionally you´re safe.
A friend of mine tried a tomatoe sauce. He didn't know what amount a "clove of garlic" was. So he chopped a whole firring bulb of that stuff...
When n00b's cook, I tend to stay away from the results...
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Human dignity shall be inviolable. To respect and protect it shall be the duty of all state authority.
Actually, frying stuff can get dangerous if you aren't careful. Hot oil and open flame aren't exactly the safest things in the world.salm wrote:ach was, what can go wrong with frying stuff? the only thing i can think of is burning the whole shit but that´s part of the learning process and unless you´re a really poor sucker from zimbabwe you´ll survive the whole matter without being financially ruined.Dahak wrote:Salm, such cooking experiments have a nasty tendency to go horribly wrong...
Especially if you're a cooking n00b...
if you follow the steps above and stirr occassionally you´re safe.
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Easy way to start is to take a rice or noodle mix and then add meat and/or vegetables. About one pound of meat will work with the mixes I get in the US.
Cut frozen vegetables are your friend. They require no prep time, and many are most of the way if not fully cooked. I normally just dump them into a dressed up mix dish after everything else is done cooking and let them defrost in the dish.
Easy Recipe
1 box Mac and cheese
1 can tuna
frozen peas
Make Mac & Cheese as directions on the box. Put in Tuna and peas an amount of peas to your taste. Let peas and Tuna warm from heat in noodles, or if you prefer warmer food, let it warm on the stove.
Cut frozen vegetables are your friend. They require no prep time, and many are most of the way if not fully cooked. I normally just dump them into a dressed up mix dish after everything else is done cooking and let them defrost in the dish.
Easy Recipe
1 box Mac and cheese
1 can tuna
frozen peas
Make Mac & Cheese as directions on the box. Put in Tuna and peas an amount of peas to your taste. Let peas and Tuna warm from heat in noodles, or if you prefer warmer food, let it warm on the stove.
salm, that is EXACTLY how I cook.
It's my recipe for chili, for curry, for traditional fry up brekkie, for pasta sauce.
That's the recipe.
I get by on £10 a week on food with that recipe.
It's my recipe for chili, for curry, for traditional fry up brekkie, for pasta sauce.
That's the recipe.
I get by on £10 a week on food with that recipe.
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lol,Dahak wrote:For instance, taking the wrong spices, or too much of those (ever ate something with too much nutmeg?) or mix something which isn't meant to?salm wrote:ach was, what can go wrong with frying stuff? the only thing i can think of is burning the whole shit but that´s part of the learning process and unless you´re a really poor sucker from zimbabwe you´ll survive the whole matter without being financially ruined.Dahak wrote:Salm, such cooking experiments have a nasty tendency to go horribly wrong...
Especially if you're a cooking n00b...
if you follow the steps above and stirr occassionally you´re safe.
A friend of mine tried a tomatoe sauce. He didn't know what amount a "clove of garlic" was. So he chopped a whole firring bulb of that stuff...
When n00b's cook, I tend to stay away from the results...
actually there´s no such thing as too much garlic.
and as i said: when you put in the spices dont put too much in at once and taste it ocasionally.
well maybe i didnt say that but i meant it.
yeah, it works for everything and it usually turns out to be quite delicious.innerbrat wrote:salm, that is EXACTLY how I cook.
It's my recipe for chili, for curry, for traditional fry up brekkie, for pasta sauce.
That's the recipe.
I get by on £10 a week on food with that recipe.
cooking doesnt require that much knowledge - besides for the advanced cooks (like me ) knowledge about spices - it requires the ability to listen to your stomache and tast buds. your stomache and tast buds yell: we want tuna! give them tuna.
that´s it. there´s really no need for fancy shmanzy, bocuse yaddayadda.