Wednesday, April 15, 2009

I am not Rafael Nadal

This New York Times blog article on TV Cooking vs. Real Cooking unknowingly recognizes the mission of Food 411 for One. It's about time someone did!

Hey. Things catch fire sometimes, even in “real” kitchens. Things overcook, they undercook, they look like something the cat dragged in, they’re oversalted, underspiced, soggy when they should be crisp, dry when they should be moist . . . in restaurants, good restaurants, chefs do these over. On TV, chefs gloss these over. Rarely are you given a sense of what really goes on.

The home cook, especially the aspiring home cook, needs encouragement — not befuddlement. Show people what actually happens in the kitchen, show people that mistakes are made (”The grand thing about cooking is you can eat your mistakes” — Julia Child), show people that, just as you need not be Rafael Nadal to play tennis, you need not be Gordon Ramsay to cook a decent meal. And a decent meal — one you can proudly but humbly serve to your family and friends, and happily eat yourself — knowing that it could be better but that indeed it’s your creation, it’s wholesome, and it is in every sense good — is, or should be, the real goal of every home cook.

How you chop an onion? It doesn’t matter. At all.

Exactly! I invented not showing onion chopping.

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Grocery list mnemonic device

It's easier to remember the words to a song than what you need at the grocery store, so the latest episode of Food 411 for One teaches you what to buy. This is especially useful if your grocery list looks like this:

  • Ramen noodles
  • Bananas
  • Yogurt
  • Orange juice
  • Coffee
  • Tortillas
  • Garlic
  • Frozen chicken
  • Eggs

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Best DTV Propaganda of 2008

TV Technology has named Food 411 for One's DTV PSA one of the best pieces of digital television transition propaganda of 2008! We are proud of continuing the tradition of providing excellent technical information—cooking-related or otherwise—to our fans.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Holiday Gift Guide for Cooks, featuring Williams-Sonoma

Just in time for the Christmas shopping season, I present some cooking-related gifts that will let you spend more time with your friends, specifically the kind of friends who will invite you over for dinner or beer instead of making you help them move or listen to John Tesh CD's. Williams Sonoma has a wide range of gifts, from thoughtful and useful to silly and overpriced! Highly recommended: the slow cooker.