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Anyway, there seems only a remote chance of 'replicating' many/most recipes on this site, to recreate what the author had in mind. As for replicating what goes on in a BIR, well that's something else...
As chewytikka rightly points out, their ability to use this measurement system is born out of expediency, convenience and years of practice of cooking dishes that they know the right quantities to use by instinct. A chef's spoon for them is merely a cooking implement they use to cook the dish and 'spoon' ingredients into it. The measurement of those ingredients is being done by eye and experience. God only knows why home cooks would want to adopt this system with all the variables it involves over and above merely trying to emulate a professional cook but without the ability or experience to go with it.
This is just part of this 'monkey sees monkey does' cooking philosophy that seems to pervade here that I so object to.
I'm getting a bit pissed off with this phrase being banded about in the way that it is. The "monkey sees, monkey does" method is how we learn, grow, develop, progress. It is what makes us human, primate even. Why do you insist on using this term as though it is some kind of inferior approach on things? It is a logical approach to things, where else would you start?
I'm getting a bit pissed off with this phrase being banded about in the way that it is. The "monkey sees, monkey does" method is how we learn, grow, develop, progress. It is what makes us human, primate even. Why do you insist on using this term as though it is some kind of inferior approach on things? It is a logical approach to things, where else would you start?You say that that method pervades here? How do you know that it does, based on a few members accounts of how they have said that they do things, from time to time? I boil my onions whole in a base, Why? because I saw Chewytikka do it, monkey sees, monkey does? no, not at all. This monkey did it because he saw another monkey do it, but more importantly, this monkey wanted to know why the other monkey did it that way. Now this monkey thinks he knows why, and is glad he saw the other monkey do it first. Many thanks Chewymonkey ;D So as you see, you have to start with the method that you so object to, to gain further understanding, especially, if the knowledge is not readily on offer from the ever elusive BIR's and TA's.Spicey, did you not join this forum in the hope of finding the ultimate curry recipe? If so, then are you not just as guilty of hoping to use the "monkey sees, monkey does" approach? Or did you join knowing that the recipes, methods, techniques and level of experience would not be upto your high standards?Ray
wonder who's gonna be first to post a curried monkey vindaloo or a monkey bhuna
I don't have a chef's spoon. I don't have an aluminium frying pan apparently identical to those used in BIRs. I don't have an 8kW blast furnace, or even a gas hob. But I can still cook a Chicken Madras and a Pulao rice that are the equal of most BIRs and better than some. What am I doing wrong ?Puzzled of Chainhurst.