Some of us who enjoy cooking are always looking for new cookbook recipes to increase our repertoire of dishes. The avid cook is always up for a new dish to wow the family with something a little exotic, but which won't be viewed as 'weird'. Simply using a different seasoning for a pot roast can change the entire complexion of this old standby.
If you're an enthusiastic and creative cook, chances are good that you have a goodly number of cookbooks on your bookshelf. Cookbook collecting can become somewhat compulsive, with so many cookbooks and cookbook recipes, you couldn't possibly try them all in a lifetime. However, you may turn to reading them all for the sheer entertainment value.
The problem is that some cookbook recipes are quite easy to follow, while others are somewhat snobbish, assuming that everyone knows how to brown butter, skillfully filet a fish, saute mushrooms or deglaze a pan. Your attempt to 'brown the butter' may result in a burned mess in the pan, spewing clouds of smoke into the air. Fillet a fish? Hmmm. You give it a shot and end up with a fish with much of the meat on the bones! Saute mushrooms? Hey, I can do that! You put a cup and a half of mushrooms in the frying pan, only to end up with a panful of steamed mushrooms without a hint of browning. Now, when the cookbook recipe directs you to deglaze the pan, you know by now, it's time to call Mom! Hopefully, she'll know, because you're halfway through the recipe, with the remaining ingredients waiting for you to proceed.
What you really need, to navigate any and all cookbook recipes with ease, is a cook's glossary of terms and techniques. As this sort of information doesn't change, look in used book shops. There are some exhaustive tomes, encyclopedic books that give detailed, illustrated instructions on just about every task you might want to do with food, from curling butter to making radish flowers and, yes, deglazing a pan, the proper technique for sauting mushrooms and filleting a fish. This type of book isn't a big seller, so you should be able to pick one up at a reasonable price.
While these books don't usually contain many recipes, they are jam packed with every cooking technique you'll run across in a lifetime of cooking. They also usually contain chapters on formal table settings, pairing and serving wines, using seasonings, metric conversions, measuring versus weighing ingredients, pastry tricks and a host of other valuable cook's information you'll not find in a standard cookbook.
A reference book of cooking terms and techniques is an invaluable resource for any cook. Never again will you be befuddled when cookbook recipes throw in a technique you've never heard. BTW, these books are fun to read as well.
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