Addie
Chef Extraordinaire
I did.
I might have picked Julia Child but she isn't available anymore.
I will pobably meet up with her before you do and I will let her know.
I did.
I might have picked Julia Child but she isn't available anymore.
IMO modesty is not a fault. I have certainly at times accomplished things more complex than Flay's recipes but generally after a great deal of work in a specific cuisine (Thai-Chinese for example, probably my best subject area). IMO Flay almost qualifies as a unique cuisine of his own and I'm going to have to work up to it, and it will also take a lot of advance planning and ingredient acquisition. Most of the food I cook is far less complex than that.But, based on some of your posts, I think you're underrating yourself. I believe you have the skills to make anything in Flay's books. Not preplanning, as you've noted, is the biggest potential headache.
Consider this, too: For many of his ".....with Y" recipes, the "Y" can be made ahead. So, while collectively a particular recipe may take a lot of time, you can prep it with a series of steps done a day or two ahead.
I liked James Barber - "The Urban Peasant". He's the one responsible for getting me to cook anything more than hot dogs. There was this one utterly simple soup that he made on his show that I couldn't believe was any good. So I tried it.
1 can of creamed corn
1 empty can of creamed corn full of milk
1 pat of butter
1 palm of your hand full of curry
Heat. Eat. Wow!
Greg Who Cooks said:I really enjoy the prep work because it's almost like some form of mediation for me. Chop, chop, chop. Dice, dice, dice. Slice, slice, slice. Place in bowls for mise en place. I find it very calming that it is so often mindless. When you start putting heat on things there's a schedule to meet, a timetable, and if you miss a beat you could spoil the meal or at least make something flawed. The final cooking is naturally a more tense time.