I do not know how to cook
And I have been scared to learn, so I am determined to do so at some point in this next week.
So far, I have:
PS. Have not yet touched the stove.
So far, I have:
- cut carrots (it looks easy! I did not realize it was possible to do it horrendously badly! But I did it anyway! (both the cutting and the horrendously badly!) )
- cut chicken into chunks (across the grain. or the, the, whatever you call the texture. I think I scared people with my knife. BUT. I did it anyway ahaha )
- mixed chicken in the thing you coat it in before cooking (in this case, dab of rice wine, black pepper, sesame oil, soy paste. Then some corn starch afterwards, to keep it tender, I think (sesame oil on my hands smells so very good) )
- rejoiced over not yet wrecking dinner \o/
PS. Have not yet touched the stove.
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*\o/*
(lol, threading fail, haha)
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I will gladly give you advice and encouragement on cooking. Heh, I find I need all the advice and encouragement on coding that I can get! ;)
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*bookmarks, and starts hunting for ingredients in pantry*
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I will post whatever I make up tomorrow.
It shall be either boring, or horribly fun. Ahhahaha.
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On the other hand, it can be fun once you start to get the basics down.
But chopping is a lot harder than they make it look! All those cooking shows with perfectly julienned veggies sitting around in bowls and they never actually show you how to get them that way.
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I nearly universally cut veggies in my hand. You can press the blade into your thumb without cutting the skin as long as it presses straight down and there's no horizontal movement. With a bit of practice, it's very possible to get uniform chunks of just about everything. Meats are easier to do on a cutting board though.
Uhh... Yeah. Sorry. Hi. Foodie.
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<3 Let me know if you have any questions, hun.
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And then there are days when you just want minions to bring you a pizza. That's okay, too.
Don't be afraid of screwing up. Don't be afraid of wasting ingredients. Like yarn, most of the time it's a hell of a lot cheaper than therapy and at the end of it, you've got something tangible to point at and say "I made that."
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Something like Oxo Good Grips V-Blade Mandoline Slicer
is certainly an option. OXO, as a rule, produces high quality products that aren't going to break after 3 uses. That being said, going with something like this Norpro Mandolin Slicer
Actually, the above is a pretty damn good strategy for trying out ANY new kitchen gadget. Get a cheap one, see if you will use it, spend appropriately for your next one.
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Carrots are surprisingly awkward to cut, IME. But it really, really helps to have a good knife & to keep it SHARP.
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Oh man, yes. I had someone show me, and correct me several times, and I still kept going "*blank look* diagonal how?"
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I'm a bit scared of cutting anything against flesh. The only time I've seen someone do it, ended badly -- we were on a camping trip, and this girl basically used her thigh as a chopping board. Knife + carrot + force = not pretty.
Cut itself was messy, but not very serious, but the image stuck (especially since I was at a young impressionable age).
Also, also, foodie <3
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(Thank you for the suggestion <3)
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<3
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(Which is to say, <3)
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Have you managed to make bread yet? I'll teach you the easiest way to do that if you want.
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(Hmm, not sure how possible it is, though. We don't have an oven. We have a turbo-broiler and a toaster-oven, but no proper oven)
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