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When I was a kid, I often saw my mom (Hi, JG!) reading cookbooks as if they were novels, cover-to-cover. I never understood why she wasn't bored by what I saw as lists of ingredients. Then, when she cooked, I hardly ever saw her following recipes. I would normally never read a cookbook if I could read a romance novel instead. And here's the funny part: I wrote my undergraduate honors thesis on American cookbooks, but after that research project, I would never have thought to pick one up to read out of the context of making a meal.
For years, I saw cooking as a chore I didn't have time for and didn't particularly enjoy. Our family ate every meal we could at the Dining Hall and had a lot of pasta and simple salads in the summer months when the DH wasn't available to us.
Flash forward a lot of years, and I'm finally having fun cooking. Instagram's algorithm discovered that I like watching people make vegetarian recipes, so a lot of those come into my feed. I save so many that I have cookbooks' worth in any category I might want to try: main dishes, sides, salads, soups, breakfast foods, breads, etc. During each vacation, I browse my files to find two or three days of dinner ideas and shop for a few at a time. Then, I have fun trying them out, and almost all of them have been terrific.
You might wonder if I follow the recipes to the letter. Hardly ever. My husband (Hi, CIO!) thinks it's funny that when he asks about what I've made, I usually reply with both what the recipe said to do and how I changed it. Usually, my variations (based both on what I like and on what I have in the house) come out great. Sometimes, they flop.
One time, I altered a recipe that I had successfully made before so that it would be vegan, as we were hosting a vegan guest. (Hi, MR!) The cake never became fully solid, so I called it pudding and served it anyway. The dish was the hit of the night!
Now, having read Salt Fat Acid Heat, I have a better sense of how to color outside of the lines in ways that will work. The basic principles of the text are ones that clearly apply to cooking and also, I think, to a lot of other aspects of life:
- we need balance;
- knowing how things work helps us improvise;
- following blindly isn't as good as knowing the terrain and making smart decisions about which way to go;
- science is incontrovertible;
- having too much of one thing (on a plate, in a baking dish, in life) makes everything come out wrong;
- bland is boring; and
- the more you know, the better life will be.
I've probably left off a lot of the important messages I got from this book, but I'm getting hungry again, so I'm off to make myself a snack. Please share your responses in the comments, and in case you want to see the same details for this book as I provide for my NetGalley reviews, here you go:
title: Salt Fat Acid Heat
author: Samin Rosrat
publisher: Simon and Schuster
publication date: April 25, 2017
pages: 480
peppers: 0 (on this scale), though she does talk about peppers
warnings: reading this book will make you hungry
summary: the author is a trained chef who understands and explains how to add the four titular elements of cooking so that everything you make will taste great and come out as you intended.
tropes:
- cooking at home is better for you and not as difficult as you think;
- one doesn't need to follow a recipe to make great food; and
- food is delicious and necessary.
what I liked:
- everything make sense; it's not complicated, even if I never would have thought of any of it myself;
- the illustrations are great: helpful and hysterical; and
- her writing is accessible, clear, and engaging.
what I didn’t like:
- I didn't know that I should read it with Post-it notes in hand, so I'm going to have to read it again...and maybe again after that.
- It made me hungry.
overall rating: 5 (of 5 stars)
Love this book and the Netflix series that went along with it!
I’ve tried to watch the show twice, but too much of it isn’t in English for me to be able to knit and watch…and when I can’t knit, it’s hard for me to sit still long enough to watch a show. I’ll have to try again.
I finally started the copy you sent me (thanks!)! I’m enjoying it but was wondering why you thought it was such a must-read. A lot of it reminds me of David’s kitchen-science class, which was fun if very poorly instructed.
Maybe they can get SN to teach the kitchen-science class next time!