As most of you know, I've always loved to cook. Ever since I was little, I enjoyed puttering around in the kitchen - 'macachini' - a cross of macaroni and fettucini, caramel sticky buns, apple crisp, flat loaves of bread, infinite numbers of cookies and muffins and popovers, the never-ending yellow butter cake recipe that I made so often I memorized it ... all of these were my early creations. I don't remember ever turning anything out that wasn't edible or tasty, but I know there must have been disasters (I have just blocked them out!). Luckily, I have a long-suffering family that will contentedly eat almost anything placed in front of them!
I love the satisfaction of seeing culinary creations turn out just the way
And there is never "nothing" to eat. I earned a reputation of being able to make something from nothing. I thrilled at the prospect of inventing a meal from an apparently empty kitchen! Also, having no driver's license I learned how to be very creative in the kitchen experimenting with different ingredients when I was missing the requisite ones. I called these "Food Synonyms" because they could be used often - but not always - interchangeably for each other.
But I think the best part of cooking is the pure joy of serving the food to a hungry somebody. Cooking is pointless unless there is a hungry tummy to fill and an eye to tantalize. Cooking cannot be done in a vacuum, to paraphrase an aphorism! It is my greatest joy to present a delicious dish to someone and see them savor it and enjoy the creation. I am not insulted when somebody doesn't like what I made, but I am overjoyed when they love it! And as Julia Child says, "No matter what happens in the kitchen, never apologize."
So now, here I am, with my own kitchen, a driver's license to explore for ingredients, and cupboards full of amazing new dishes from the wedding and showers. I've collected many cookbooks over the years, and with recommendations from fellow cooks I increased that collection over the last year. I've spent more time recently experimenting in the kitchen, trying new recipes, new tweaks, and new heights of cook-dom - most significantly venturing into the world of homemade ice-creams and sorbets, and artisan breads. I've never been particularly good at yeast and sourdough breads (except in the area of sticky-buns - for some reason I excelled there ... maybe it was all the self-inflicted practicing?) and so I've determined to master the art. A friend has provided me with a sourdough starter and I've been feeding it regularly, and produced one healthy batch of whole wheat sourdough breads.
But I've decided not to try to be perfect! I don't mean imperfect food - that must ONLY be perfect, of course. But I mean not setting some ridiculous standard for myself that "Every night I will produce a gourmet dinner," and "Every Monday I will bake twenty loaves of bread," and "Every week I will try at least six new recipes including one clean-eating dinner, one gluten-free recipe, one high-protein low-fat calcium-rich antioxidant-filled nutritious recipe" ...
I am just going to grab a whisk and have fun!
With love and muffins,
Mrs H
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At last count I had 48 cookbooks and a raft of well-worn magazines from various publishers. All of these cookbooks are excellent and full of delicious recipes, but some of my favorite and most-splattered cookbooks are the following (and I've found links for them all on amazon.com if you want to read reviews!):
Basic Recipes:
Cook's Illustrated The New Best Recipe: All-New Edition
Betty Crocker's Picture Cookbook
The Good Housekeeping Illustrated Cookbook
The King Arthur Flour 200th Anniversary Cookbook/Dedicated to the Pure Joy of Baking
Specialty books:
Peter Reinhart's Artisan Breads Every Day
On Rice: 60 Fast and Easy Toppings That Make the Meal
Twelve Months of Monastery Soups
The Perfect Scoop: Ice Creams, Sorbets, Granitas, and Sweet Accompaniments
Cooking Under Cover: One Pot Wonders -- A Treasury of Soups, Stews, Braises, and Casseroles
Taste of Home's limited ed. Best of Country Cookies
Where Flavor Was Born: Recipes and Culinary Travels Along the Indian Ocean Spice Route
Favorite magazines:
Clean Eating
Cook's Illustrated
Better Homes & Garden Holiday
Canning:
Ball Complete Book of Home Preserving
Ball Blue Book of Preserving
Jam It, Pickle It, Cure It: And Other Cooking Projects