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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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On Sun, 06 Feb 2005 17:35:53 -0500, Dave Smith
> wrote: >jem wrote: > >> Sorry, it actually was a feeble attempt at humor. As a single guy for >> most of my adult life I can appreciate the difficulty of cooking for >> one. My solution was always "embrace leftovers". > >Leftovers? Yech. Not necessarily. I'm a single woman, and I batch cook on weekends. Soups and stews designed to be freezable all go into the freezer for consumption at later dates. Stir-frys hold quite nicely for consumption during the week over noodles or rice. Risottos make fantastic lunches along with a green salad, as do fritattas, lasange, and any pasta sauce over pasta. That would be embracing leftovers deliberately, yeah, and I always have something ready for friends who drop by. >Ok, there are some leftover things things that are good. I like roasted >chicken and beef cold or reheated, especially in gravy. I have made up some >sort of curries for left over lamb. I have no use for leftover pork. Some >things are even better as leftovers than the first time round, like good >stews. My old coworker was a bachelor and he cooked more roasts than my wife >and I do. He roast for himself every sunday night, and then he has leftovers >more most of the rest of the week. Sound cooking policy. Do that myself with a chicken. Cook once, hot dinner one night, lovely chicken and tomato sandwiches the rest of the week. So, in answer to the original poster's question, no, I can't think of a cookbook specifically designed for a single guy with minimal cooking experience. _However_ a good basic cookbook that explains why you want to do things a certain way, food handling guidelines and some flavour combinations will do you wonders. What food types are you interested in? If you are eating a vegetarian diet, you're going to need more nutritional information that one with meat. Eat lots of veggies, that's a given, and you'll want something with good recipes for that. I'm partial to Deborah Madison's "Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone" in that department. Her recipes are nutritionally balanced, use fats in an appropriate manner (not too little, and not too much) and have variation suggestions. I'm currently drooling after "Cookwise", as my former room-mate's copy was a goldmine about why some recipes work and why others don't. The Fanny Farmer Cookbook or Joy of Cooking should be in everyone's kitchen, as they both explainbasic principles, have "know you ingredients" sections and have lots of basic recipes that allow you to deal with anything from beans to deer to kolhrabi. Add in another recipe book with an emphasis on quick and easy combinations, preferably one with an emphasis on heartsmart cooking and you should be set up nicely. It's a lot of work to cook for one person in ratio to the results. That's why batch cooking is so useful. |
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