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what is your "culinary point-of-view?" |
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TasunkaWitko
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Joined: 25 January 2010 Location: Chinook, MT Status: Offline Points: 9389 |
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Topic: what is your "culinary point-of-view?"Posted: 14 June 2010 at 16:48 |
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everyone has one - it is their compass and their main reason for their enjoyment of cooking. it might not be their only interest, as anyone can have many interests, but it will be the thing that keeps them coming back and trying new things; it might even open avenues for entirely new ways of looking at things.
for example, for some it is baking (breads?), for others it might be an adherence to a particular regional or ethnic cuisine (italian?), or even the fusion of different cuisines (tex-mex?). it might be an aspect of an ingredient (usage of herbs?) or it might even lie within the tools used to create a dish (dutch oven?) or how it is prepared (cooking with fire?).
if asked, i would have to say that my culinary point of view is the intersection of food, people and history; this is closely tied to what is known as "peasant cooking:" taking fresh, local, humble foods from the land that would have been used by the "common folk" going back into the past, finding the original way it was done and using simple, rustic and authentic ingredients in conjunction with frugal methods - rather than fuss, embellishment or frivolity - to produce something that is out of this world and full of tradition, history and flavour.
maybe it is because i am a descendant of immigrants with an interest in history; maybe it is because on our budget i have learned to make the absolute best with what little i have. i could care less what continent it is from or even what time period it is from as long as it is something that has a story behind it and is something that can most likely be produced from a close association with the source. the farther from nature or "the original" that it gets, the less interest i have in it.
examples of this in my favourite dishes can be found in my close adherence to "traditional" barbecue and barbecue methods, or in my affinity for "peasant" dishes such as holubky, carbonade flamande, borsos tokány and poulet a quarante gousses d'ail. it is the reason that i want to try trucha a la navarra and jägerpfännle.
so anyway, how about you?
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kiwi
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Joined: 16 February 2010 Status: Offline Points: 402 |
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Posted: 14 June 2010 at 17:50 |
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In a nutshell:
- use what you have / can get easily to create something that is yours - cooking is like a jigsaw puzzle with many right answers - cooking is cheaper than a shrink. - following recipes is boring. |
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kai time!
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Guests
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Posted: 15 June 2010 at 17:35 |
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Without a doubt, for me it is what I call "Ur-Recipes"... those recipes that go back to the origin of the dish, of the food, of the peoples that made them.
Ron nailed it on the head for me when he wrote about the "... fresh, local, humble foods from the land that would have been used by the "common folk" going back into the past, finding the original way it was done and using simple, rustic and authentic ingredients in conjunction with frugal methods..."
That's what delights me and spurs my interest in cooking...creating foods. Fast food, instant food, heat and eats are fine and popular, but hardly "meals"; Ur-foods are those nutritional dishes that not only fed the body but the families and societies themselves, requiring people to sit down and take time out from the day to discuss life and to enjoy the meal placed before them. THAT, is eating; the rest is feeding.
Ur-foods, like the ancient city of Ur in Mesopotamia, provide us a link onto the past and a glimpse into the basics, the stuff- proven good- that we are forgetting.
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DIYASUB
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Joined: 01 May 2010 Status: Offline Points: 180 |
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Posted: 16 June 2010 at 17:41 |
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Same answer again!
I cook the same things I grew up eating and learned to enjoy.
As to ethnic foods, yep, that's what I cook. It's not that I cant afford to step up, I'm certainly in a position to do so whenever the mood strikes me, but the style of cooking I was raised on was developed by people who immigrated to this country with nothing more than the clothes on their backs and a willingness to work. They took menial jobs until they could learn the language, but the pay was low and they had to make do with what they could afford. And make do is exactly what they did, to the point where the dishes they developed can now be found in fine restaurants around the world.
So, what it comes down to is that I enjoy eating and I enjoy being able to cook the things I like to eat. The price is right, these things are filling, and they're delicious!
Another reason I enjoy cooking is that to me being able to cook is a manifestation of my independence. Or, to put it in another way, I'm a man, a complete man. I dont need my mommy or a surrogate mommy to pick out my clothes, tie my shoes, or make my dinner. I'm not dependent upon anybody.
Last but not least, I take a certain amount of pride in my cooking and get a certain amount of pleasure out of watching guests enjoy what I bring to the table.
My apologies for this disjointed post, I've been running back and forth from the computer to the kitchen because I've been making dinner.
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soggyshooter
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Joined: 13 February 2010 Status: Offline Points: 5 |
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Posted: 19 June 2010 at 10:12 |
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I'll try anything once. My interests are broad and varied. I'll go through streaks of different types of foods. Many are old family recipes that I like and leave alone or I tweak them to my taste. sometimes I find myself in the position of trying to re-create a recipe due to the difference in ingrediants from 100 years or better ago or more than likely my Grandmother omitted an ingrediant to keep the recipe "secret" or some such thing. If it's good I'll go for it and it can be either a traditional dish or or more of a modern fusion of different tastes.
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Meat Hunter
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Joined: 11 May 2010 Location: Minnesota Status: Offline Points: 17 |
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Posted: 10 July 2010 at 11:28 |
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Although I enjoy most types of cooking, bread making an so on, I would say the one area I love the most would be preparing wild game. I get great satisfaction of having someone who says, "I've had venison before, it was the toughest, gamiest thing I ever tasted" and having them do a 180 when they see, when properly prepared, just how wonderful and flavorful it really is, whether it be deer, pheasant, dove and so on. Getting people to understand this is what people ate before the domestication of animals, free from hormones and antibiotics.
One of my biggest compliments was when I brought over some homemade pastrami for my step dad and mom, neither of them have ever hunter, let alone slaughtered and animal in a farm setting and had both of them say, "this is the best pastrami I have ever tasted, how did you do it?" I said first you need to harvest a nice deer. They said, "this is deer?, Yup. They did not believe me LOL. Mission accomplished. ![]() |
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Exploreralpha
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Joined: 12 April 2010 Location: Montana Status: Offline Points: 48 |
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Posted: 30 July 2010 at 00:21 |
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Meathunter, I certainly need to get to know you better. I would love to learn how to prepare game for the table and have even the pickiest of children dig in and scream in delight.
Aaron |
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HistoricFoodie
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Joined: 21 February 2012 Location: Kentucky Status: Offline Points: 4945 |
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Posted: 04 April 2012 at 12:44 |
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I don't know as I really have a clear-cut culinary viewpoint. My cooking and food interests are all over the lot.
In addition to other things, I'm a food historian. So the way food reflects history and cultural development is of particular interest to me. The difference between us is that I'm just as concerned with how the upper classes looked at food as did the lower classes.
Peasant food, indeed, tells us much about a people. But palace food often is a better clue to where those people stood in the world at that particular time, and how outside influences affected their culinary worldview.
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Margi Cintrano
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Joined: 03 February 2012 Location: Spain Status: Offline Points: 6362 |
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Posted: 04 April 2012 at 12:47 |
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@ Tas,
Firstly, as Ferrán Adriá once told me, My Culinary Philosophy is quite simple :
1) The fresh product & quality is quintessential
2) My home cooking is predominately Italian and Mediterranean with Italian and French culinary Techniques
3) Seared on flame, Evoo sautéed and / or oven with wine & / or Roast
4) from scratch for most part, & that is why I keep recipes simple ( or I shall go to a restaurant )
5) avoid white bleached products 99% of time
6) nothing that is picked too early and has NO aroma ! ( fruit and veggies )
7) I love pasta
8) I am basically Pescatarian, and so when I do prepare and eat meat, IT IS PHENOMENAL or I do not serve it to the Vet nor myself !
9) My Italian Adage or Table Rule is: EVERYONE IS HAPPY AT THE TABLE, OR DO NOT SIT DOWN !!!
10) oh yes, I am a cheese-aholic !
11) I am a journalist, Food, Wine and Travel Editor, thus, I like tasting products from all over the globe ... However, I eat these items out ... and experiment and play. My cuisine at home, is Mediterranean veered to Italian predominately, some Greek traditional, some Catalan and Galician Spanish traditional and Simply available catch of day, seasonal veggies and fruits and my Grandmom´s Italian specialties we had come to know and love ...
Kindest. Margi Cintrano.
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Volamos a Mediterraneo, un paraiso que conquista su gente u su cocina.
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Margi Cintrano
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Joined: 03 February 2012 Location: Spain Status: Offline Points: 6362 |
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Posted: 04 April 2012 at 13:00 |
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@ Kiwi,
The culinary arts can be very therapeutic ... a therapy ... Not as a Laboral commitment however under deadlines and tight scheduling; however, as a home gourmet with the freedom to prepare, market, design, play ... I agree with this one ... Aromas, cinammon, apple, mango, spices --- healing to olfactory ...
Happy Holidays.
Margi.
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Volamos a Mediterraneo, un paraiso que conquista su gente u su cocina.
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AK1
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Joined: 10 April 2012 Location: Ontario, Canada Status: Offline Points: 1081 |
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Posted: 01 June 2012 at 22:30 |
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I'm of the same mind as Historic Foodie. I'm all over the map. I want to try what someone ate, when they ate it, and want to know why they ate it.
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Addtotaste
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Joined: 18 May 2012 Location: Cape Town Status: Offline Points: 230 |
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Posted: 02 June 2012 at 03:09 |
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I would have to say for me it's 2 sides
I very much groc the Slowfood movement and try use free range, locally produced goods whenever I can. The other is recipe development and enhancement which really means I cannot stick to a recipe, I have to tweak it or recreate it. Put me in a kitchen with "mystery ingredients" and I will give you a 3 course meal in an hour :) (I call it Kitchen Witching)
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Check out some more recipes and reviews - www.addtotaste.co.za
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Feather
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Joined: 21 October 2012 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 221 |
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Posted: 31 October 2012 at 17:06 |
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I cook so we can enjoy our food AND no less important, that we enjoy as healthy of food as possible.
What does that mean, healthy? I keep the fiber in the food, the fresher the food the better (the gardens), the balance is many vegetables, fruit, spices/herbs, less meat, fish, poultry, and less white starches and sugars, oils-olive oil, canola oil, butter. Most of our dishes are savory, only a few sweet things. On any one day, I'll make 3 times the vegetables (including potatoes--a white starch) than I will the proteins. Even if I come across a lovely recipe for something, that says, peel or strain or run through a mill--I'll generally leave the fiber in the dish, pureeing if need be in the food processor, the stick mixer or the blender, for one purpose only, to make sure we have healthy whole foods in our diets. (for our health) Today for instance, I cooked 6 quarts of red cabbage for a sweet sour cabbage side dish, 1 and 1/2 lbs of pork and 1 and 1/2 lbs of baked tofu for making hot sour soup. 1 lb of beef round steak with 1 lb mushrooms and an elephant garlic clove, acorn squash with butter and brown sugar. We picked a few quarts of lettuce today for salads--w/other veggies, cheese, olives, pickles, croutons and homemade dressings. Tomorrow I'll make the hot sour soup with celery, mushrooms, garlic, broccoli stems, pea pods, and seasonings. After canning some sauerkraut and the sweet sour red cabbage I have potatoes, cauliflower, broccoli, and green beans to steam for a side dish we enjoy with a dill type ranch dressing. Next, I'll use the duck eggs we have for some pound cake with fruit included and one night we might scramble some chicken eggs. It might be a few days before I cook protein again. I try to keep the kitchen full of food ready to eat and lunches for those working all day. It's a balance. In addition to the above dishes, we'll have buttermilk fruit smoothies (whole fruits), breads, cheese--all these in less quantities than the main meals. |
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Luca Lazzari
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Joined: 16 October 2012 Location: Italy Status: Offline Points: 67 |
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Posted: 01 November 2012 at 03:34 |
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Love is my main culinary point of view.
What do I mean? I mean that: to cook properly, you need to love what you’re doing; to eat well you need to love eating; to feed yourself and your family in a correct and healthy way you need to love yourself and your family. Apart from metaphysical issues, I like to keep things simple. Few ingredients, fresh ingredients, simple techniques. With pasta dishes, this is easy to achieve. For fish, I like it simply grilled or baked, same for meat, plus the frying option. Risotto is another staple food of mine, and it’s not so difficult to make (even for me!). Then vegetables, pulses and fruit. I don't love dessert and pastry so much, so I cannot prepare even the simplest cake... About menu, I follow a week rota to make things easy. I must add that I had to get serious about food a couple of years ago, when I was diagnosed with gout and I needed to tackle the issue of how to organize my meals in a healthier way. At the end, it has been a wonderful journey and I learned to treat me with the respect I deserve. And I learned that cooking is a very fun thing, and a relaxing one too. Not only this, but I found a lot of nice people around the world, like here in this forum, which I would never be able to meet without the help of food and eating. Thanks for this beautiful thread |
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Margi Cintrano
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Joined: 03 February 2012 Location: Spain Status: Offline Points: 6362 |
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Posted: 01 November 2012 at 03:40 |
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Luca,
You have the quintessential point ...
I agree, as I really do not enjoy complicated recipes ... I prefer my realm, Italian, Greek and Spanish Mediterranean with fresh ingredients.
I do not enjoy preparing recipes with millions of ingredients & complicated instructions.
I prefer to stick to Nonna´s Bible and the classics of the Mediterranean. They always come out divine.
All my best,
Margi.
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Volamos a Mediterraneo, un paraiso que conquista su gente u su cocina.
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Lupinus
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Joined: 03 November 2012 Location: Upstate, SC Status: Offline Points: 35 |
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Posted: 04 November 2012 at 08:57 |
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K.I.S.S.- Keep it simple stupid.
Good ingredients, handle them well, and make them sing. That doesn't mean you can't create wonderful and complex flavors simply, that can most certainly be accomplished, but I'm going to let my ingredients shine and speak for who they are. Why use a carrot if I want to whittle away 3/4 of it? Why use a potato if I want to make it taste like something else? I'm not going to spend a half hour perfectly mincing an onion into 100% identical pieces. |
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ChrisFlanders
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Joined: 01 March 2012 Location: Flanders Status: Offline Points: 343 |
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Posted: 05 November 2012 at 06:08 |
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Cooking is my passion, so it's hard to explain rationally.
It's not an artform but sometimes it's very close and it certainly stimulates more senses than any other artform; taste, sight, feel, smell... It just all gets interesting the moment you leave the cookbooks where they are and switch to your own interpretations and get creative. But beware: the harder you try, the more fierce foodcritiques your loved ones become. But on the other hand, don't we all love their waaaws and mmmmm's when serving?
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gonefishin
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Joined: 20 September 2012 Status: Offline Points: 1778 |
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Posted: 28 October 2013 at 06:59 |
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I suppose I would describe my culinary point of view, I believe, as a meanderer. I follow a wandering path or course with no seeming direction. It may appear that I am all over the place, but each place has led me in the next direction. gosh I love food! |
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Enjoy The Food!
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MarkR
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Joined: 03 February 2011 Location: St. Pete FL Status: Offline Points: 625 |
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Posted: 28 October 2013 at 11:49 |
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That sounds about right. |
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Mark R
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gonefishin
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Posted: 28 October 2013 at 15:35 |
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LOL! ![]() |
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Enjoy The Food!
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