Cook without recipes, does anyone else?

SueBee

New Member
Location
Midwest
When I have foods on hand that I want to cook, soup for example, I’ll go online and get ideas, and then wing it. I find recipes overwhelming and tiring. So far, most of what I throw together turns out to be quite tasty, and not just to me. Anyone else like that?
 

I'll follow a new recipe, but may change some of the spices to suit our tastes. Baking is strictly with a recipe.

My Grandma knew her main recipes so well that she didn't use a book & they always came out the same. When she did write down a recipe, she ended up listing the main ingredients without the liquid amounts, times or temps. I've experimented with a few we liked to figure them out.

My hubby didn't understand that I cooked like my Grandma & he would complain that no one else would be able to do them. So I ended up writing them down so someone else in the family could do it.
 
Being a good home cook is like being an artist or a musician, once you become proficient in the basic techniques you can improvise and create with some degree of confidence.

I still use some recipes or read several to come up with my own version using what I have on hand.

Learn from the greats like Marion Cunningham, Jacques Pepin, Beatrice Vaughan, Edna Lewis, etc…
 
I use recipes so I can perfect them. Most of my recipe cards are full of notes (time the boiling from the first bubble) (add the cheese last) sort of things and spices are marked through and changed to more or less suit our taste. If I get a recipe from the internet I make it exactly as written the first time, but consider that the starting point.
 
I cook by heart. Most things we eat are old stand bys, new things just dont make the cut anymore! Besides either the ingredients I've always used are now different OR our tastes have changed ?
I've tried some new recipes & the ingredients are what I would use in other things. I think it's the recipes & your right, they don't make the cut. Once in a while I'll find something good & will make it again. I still like to try different things, but I find the old stand-bys are hard to beat.
 
Nothing I make is special enough to read a recipe. I use the crock pot a lot with cut up frozen vegetables and lay a piece of rotisserie chicken on top and leave on low 4 hours. Today, I opened a large can of Progresso chicken soup that had rice and carrots in it, then I steamed some broccoli and green peppers until tender, added those to it, cut up a small (left over) cooked thigh into chunks; added that - it made a bit pot to simmer on the stove until warmed. Had half that for lunch, froze the other half to thaw for later on. Spur of the moment things that can't be done wrong.

Here's a complicated recipe for you: Mix a 15.25 ounce of chocolate cake mix with 2/3 cup of water (nothing else). Use vegetable oil spray on a baking pan, shape your mixture into cookies, let bake for no more than 10 minutes on 350. These will be very soft. Add some chocolate chips if you want.

If I want fancy baked desserts, I pick them up at Walmart or the grocery store. Average price would be $8.00 to $14.00 for a cake, maybe less for a pie. I wouldn't make those because even the most economical concoctions would cost me at least half as much as the bought ones, if not the same as the bought ones, olus the work.
 
Nothing I make is special enough to read a recipe. I use the crock pot a lot with cut up frozen vegetables and lay a piece of rotisserie chicken on top and leave on low 4 hours. Today, I opened a large can of Progresso chicken soup that had rice and carrots in it, then I steamed some broccoli and green peppers until tender, added those to it, cut up a small (left over) cooked thigh into chunks; added that - it made a bit pot to simmer on the stove until warmed. Had half that for lunch, froze the other half to thaw for later on. Spur of the moment things that can't be done wrong.

Here's a complicated recipe for you: Mix a 15.25 ounce of chocolate cake mix with 2/3 cup of water (nothing else). Use vegetable oil spray on a baking pan, shape your mixture into cookies, let bake for no more than 10 minutes on 350. These will be very soft. Add some chocolate chips if you want.

If I want fancy baked desserts, I pick them up at Walmart or the grocery store. Average price would be $8.00 to $14.00 for a cake, maybe less for a pie. I wouldn't make those because even the most economical concoctions would cost me at least half as much as the bought ones, if not the same as the bought ones, olus the work.
What's holding the cake mix together to keep the cookie shape? Doesn't there have to be some egg or something to hold it together?
 


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