Tuesday, June 11, 2013

How to Read a Recipe

During the summer I had a chance to go down to Disney World and while there stopped in at a Cuban restaurant and had the most delicious deep-fried stuffed mashed potatoes. I had never been exposed to Cuban food specifically and decided there that I would learn this recipe and master it.

It has been about six months since my trip and I have tried this recipe on my own three times now and am really getting the hang of it. Each time they come out better than the last, and I am slowly creating my own recipe from the ones that I initially found.

So for you, the new cook... I think it's important that you see how this process works and how a more experienced cook looks at a recipe and learns how to cook something completely new. Becoming comfortable with this process is as important as learning techniques in the kitchen!




So after a week or two after getting back from my trip it came about that I was going to be spending a Saturday all by myself at home, and I wanted something to do with myself.

To someone completely inexperienced in the kitchen cooking looks like a lot of work, but to me it's a nice way to spend a day at home relaxing, working on my computer, and having a few drinks. So, as it were, I found myself having no idea how to make the recipe I wanted to cook and staring at the Google screen you see above.

I had no idea which one of these recipes were the best, or the most authentic, or the most like the ones I had on my vacation! After a little clicking around this is what I was confronted with:


http://www.tasteofcuba.com/cuban-papas-rellenas.html

http://www.thecandidappetite.com/2012/08/03/cuban-potato-balls-papas-rellenas/

http://icuban.com/food/papas.html


Three different recipes! Three different ingredient sets! Three different styles!

"I like different parts of each one! I don't want to make their recipes, I want to make the one I remember eating! The one I ate definitely had olives... but two of these recipes do not. Does that mean I should ignore them and focus only on the one that does? Wait... what's this? One of them has capers and raisins? The ones I ate definitely didn't have capers or raisins, but that sounds good..."

So right here, this is lesson number one: When you look at a recipe the first thing you do is look at the ingredients. Look up a couple different recipes and see how they differ... what do you think sounds better?

Next, you want to look at techniques. One of these recipes called for mixing egg yolks into the mashed potatoes. I've never tried that before. It sounded interesting.

Another recipe called for adding a splash of the brine from the olives to the meat.

And so on... find a few recipes that you like and compare them. See how they're different and pick the method that you desire. Unknowingly what you are doing here is making yourself familiar with the technique that you will be using. If you're going to use olives, do they get added before or after you add the onions? If Recipe #1 has olives but not onions, and Recipe #2 has onions but no olives, and if you want to incorporate both olives and onions then what are you going to do? Answer: Read the recipes, see how the onions are cooked, see how the olives are cooked, and then pick make up your mind! The worst case is that you're wrong and you learn something and improve it the next time around.

Once you know the ingredients and have a game plan for the technique the rest is easy! This is what I was left with after looking at the different recipes:





With that I was ready to go grocery shopping and get ready to start cooking!

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