An Indispensable Guide To Cutting Any Recipe In Half

From the Huffington Post:

Recipes are great. They encourage us to try new spices and play with different techniques. The only problem is that sometimes they make way too much food. Sure, there are occasions when we need to make chicken dinner to feed eight people, but those times are rare. Sometimes a couple dozen cupcakes are necessary, but we only want to bake a half dozen more often than not.

3 Kitchen Commandments from Anthony Bourdain

On Lists
Iā€™m a big believer in lists, which focus the mind and serve as a reference point. When I worked in restaurant kitchens, the very first thing in the morning, Iā€™d write the dayā€™s prep lists, go through the refrigerators and see what I had and what needed to be used quickly, and take stock of what was missing. Iā€™m also a strong believer in forward motion. A less-than-great decision is better than no decision or endless dithering. Improvise, adapt, go forward. And remember that credit and blame accrue to the chef in equal proportion. If your subordinates fail, itā€™s your failure. To blame others is loathsome. That itself is failure.

On Punctuality
I devoted an entire chapter of Kitchen ConfidentialĀ to my old mentor, Bigfoot, whom I described as ā€œa bully, a yenta, a sadist and a menschā€¦the most stand-up guy I ever worked for.ā€ Bigfoot had a rule: Arrive 15 minutes early for your shift. The first time I was 14 minutes early, I was advised that the next time it happened, Iā€™d be sent home and lose the shift. And the next time after that, Iā€™d be fired. I was never late again for any job, and I instituted the same policy in my kitchens. To this day, Iā€™m pathologically early to every engagementā€”business or social. Arrival time is an expression of respect; it reveals character and discipline. Technical skills you can learn; character you either have or you donā€™t.

On Knives
Knife skills are the first thing you learn in a kitchen. Whenever I saw cooks muscling a red pepper with a dull blade, Iā€™d put them on knife-heavy prep, doing basic cuts again and again and again until they got it right. Most of the really gruesome wounds I witnessed on the job (or wrapped up before rushing a bleeding cook to the ER) came from rotary slicers or can edgesā€”not knives. I made sure my cooks had a good chefā€™s knife, a flexible fillet knife for fish, an offset serrated knife and a paring knife. Some butchering hotshots also had the super-skinny remnants of a knife theyā€™d ground down to a thin jailhouse shank and were using to scrape meat off the bone.

 

Link hereĀ to original blog post in food and wine. Thank you to Prof. Moore for sharing this great advice piece.

It’s Spring!, time to enjoy some fresh herbs in EVERYTHING!

Spring is here, but depending on where you live, it might not feel that way. No matter the temperature, one way to feel instantly seasonal is to start adding some herbs to your plate. Whether you’re growing them in a window box or picking them up at the farmers market or grocery store, herbs like mint, parsley, dill and cilantro will force spring upon you.