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Preppers' Corner
Want to Learn: Home Cooking and Meal Prep
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<blockquote data-quote="Firpo" data-source="post: 4190250" data-attributes="member: 45550"><p>When I was a young lad my grandmother bought me a copy of The Fannie Farmer Cookbook: Celebrating the 100th Anniversary of America's Great Classic Cookbook <a href="https://a.co/d/iyfu2pg" target="_blank">Amazon.com</a></p><p>and it’s been a great cookbook. Cooking “most” things really isn’t all that difficult and I’d suggest picking one meal you really like from a restaurant or maybe something Granny made as a kid. Now find a few recipes for that complete meal and make it. Once you learn that meal pick another one. Learning to cook is all about building a repertoire you can draw from and as that list grows so will your understanding of cooking. Now you can certainly go to a culinary school and learn the science behind it all but that sure isn’t necessary for making a good meal.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Firpo, post: 4190250, member: 45550"] When I was a young lad my grandmother bought me a copy of The Fannie Farmer Cookbook: Celebrating the 100th Anniversary of America's Great Classic Cookbook [URL="https://a.co/d/iyfu2pg"]Amazon.com[/URL] and it’s been a great cookbook. Cooking “most” things really isn’t all that difficult and I’d suggest picking one meal you really like from a restaurant or maybe something Granny made as a kid. Now find a few recipes for that complete meal and make it. Once you learn that meal pick another one. Learning to cook is all about building a repertoire you can draw from and as that list grows so will your understanding of cooking. Now you can certainly go to a culinary school and learn the science behind it all but that sure isn’t necessary for making a good meal. [/QUOTE]
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