Thanks Satie. And nope, I haven't touched alcohol in almost 30 years. Can't stand the flavor or what it does to my poor body. My typing erros are an inborn talent.
As for my cookware, and cooking tools, as I said, my SS is Reverware, you know, the 20 - 30 dollar pots and pans. My cast iron is a mixture of heritage stuff (Wagner Ware) that I inherited when my mother died, along with more that I received when my Dad passed on, and some Lodge cast iron that was given to me by someone who just didnt' want or appreciate cast iron. When I'd first gotten maried (28 years back) like most newly weds, I knew nothing about how to judge quality and purchased the K-Mart specials. They worked, but were lacking in quality and usefullness. Still, it took time and research to eventually know what constituted quality. Along with my current cookware, which by the way does and admirable job with each piece costing 30 bucs or less (except for my very large SS lasanga/roaster, and my egg-poaching pan), I have one very good quality 10" chef's knife which I use for almost everything, three Chicago cutlery knives that work for the rest of my cutting chores, and one pair of kitchen shears. Oh, and my Atlas flat-bottome wok is a wonderful thing.
I would say that my entire cookeware assemblage would cost less than 250 bucks toatal. Of course, the prep tools are extremely important. You should have a good ballon whisk that has a comfortable handle and many wire loops, a flat whisk, a ball-whisk (straight tines with metalic balls on the end, very stiff), and a couple of smaleer whisks for wroking in small containers (useful for hand blending condiments such as home-made tartar sauce, shrimp cocktail sauce, etc.
Your most important tool is your head. As I stated, if you know the limitations of your tools and cookware, you can be creative and still make it work well for you, as with the previously mentioned aluminum camping kit.
As for trying out different cookware, that's what girlfreinds and their parents are for
. You just volunteer to show off your cullinary expertise at their home, cook dinner for them, using their cookware of course. And if you are single, There are few things you can do, besides being truly honest and caring, that will impress your would-be partner more than cooking her, and her family a great meal.
Remember, technique is far more important that having the perfect pot. Shiny pots are a wonderful thing if you're concerned with showing off pots. Me, I'd rather show off my food creations.
A freind for another site I used to visit had a tag line at the end of his posts that said it well, and I paraphrase as accurately as my memory will allow; "It is far more important what goes into the pot, than is the pot."
Seeeeeya; Goodweed of the North