Do people grimace
at your food when it's your turn to cook? Do you feel hopeless in the
kitchen? Follow these steps, and next time people may grin when it's
your turn to cook!
Part 1 of 2: Expanding your options
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1
Change what you've been cooking. If all you've been
doing is opening cans and ripping over packages of instant food, it's
time to get daring and dip your fingers into food-from-scratch. Don't
worry––there are plenty of recipes which explain exactly what to do in order to create real food that tastes great.
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2
Visit your local library. Go to the cookbook section
and borrow some cookbooks that tickle your fancy. Try to stick with less
complicated recipes to begin with though––you don't want to be put off
before you've even started.
- Basics cookbooks are very good books to begin with. These books tend
to explain terminology and techniques, as well as providing samples of
simple but essential recipes. You can learn a lot from even just one
such book, and then graduate onto cookbooks that seem like favourites to
you.
- When reading a cookbook, check out how recipes are written and look
for the basic terms and methods. Also notice that particular types of
food (for example, bread, soup, meat, cake, etc.) have specific
requirements in common to many recipes within that type of food.
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3
Check out free recipes on the internet. There are
recipes everywhere on the internet, including on wikiHow. You have so
many choices that it is important to work out which sites you like and
trust instead of spending all day collecting recipes, so be discerning
in your selection. It also helps to find recipes that allow comments;
that way, you can see what others say about the recipes and what changes
or additions they suggest.
- Get to know the food bloggers. There are bound to be some you love
because they cook the sort of food you like and share interesting
anecdotes that make reading their blog worthwhile. You can usually
subscribe to such blogs to get regular updates and when you're game, you
can also share comments about your experiences of the recipes they're
suggesting.
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4
Watch cooking shows to get some more ideas. Cooking
shows are all over the TV nowadays, so it won't be hard to find one you
like. This can help you learn techniques, find food of interest to you
and maybe even get fired up about improving your cooking skills.
- Warning: Cooking shows can be addictive. Try to keep them in perspective and ration the TV viewing.
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5
Talk to other cooks. Learn what motivates and
inspires other cooks. Observe them and ask questions. This can a fun and
socially engaging way to learn more about cooking.
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Part 2 of 2: Testing your cooking
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1
Don't wait. Get started today. It doesn't matter if
it doesn't work, you're learning and you'll learn faster by doing than
by thinking about it. Expect to make mistakes and some stuff that
doesn't taste so great. And for now, don't worry how it looks––work on
how it tastes to begin with. Indeed, some people never get beyond how it
tastes, and that is just fine because everyone loves good tasting food!
- A word of advice: Don't try anything that requires expensive
ingredients, has a very long list of steps, or is notoriously difficult
at first. Give yourself a chance!
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2
Begin with affordable ingredients. That way, the errors aren't so costly and you can repeat until you get it right. And have fun in the process!
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3
Choose simple recipes for your cheap ingredients.
That way, you won't get frustrated and you won't be stuck at a hot stove
or cranky mixing bowl for more than a few minutes at a time.
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4
Keep reading and keep experimenting with your cooking.
Taste the food you make, then practice how to make it taste better. A
great cook can tell by mere taste what else needs to be added to improve
a bland or strange tasting dish and most of this comes from sheer
practice and innate decisions. On your side is the fact that you care
enough about food to give this a go, so you'll get the hang of flavoring
food in no time.
- It really helps know what kinds of flavors you like and try to get them in your dish.
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5
Fix your errors. There are basic techniques for
repairing mistakes, such as thickening or thinning a food, lessening
saltiness, and turning a failure into a completely different dish (with
nobody the wiser). That said, some mistakes can't be fixed, such as
burnt food (the taste goes all the way through). Learn when to simply
throw out something and try again and when you can completely transform
an error.
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6
Be confident. In order to be a great cook, you need
to be confident. Sometimes, being nervous can spoil your dish. Fake it
until you make it (or bake it) and something good is bound to come out!
- Some people truly believe that emotions get cooked into food. Hence,
it would be advisable not to cook when you're angry, if you follow this
belief.
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7
Find a brave friend or family member to taste test your new creations.
Ask this person to give you honest feedback and to make suggestions for
changes. Be prepared to accept constructive feedback; you can't improve
your skills without this.
About Syed Faizan Ali
Faizan is a 17 year old young guy who is blessed with the art of Blogging,He love to Blog day in and day out,He is a Website Designer and a Certified Graphics Designer.
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