You're using recipes wrong (2024)

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I’ve been collecting cookbooks for (at least) 20 years,and I basically taught myself to cook amid sauce-splattered tomes. But even though I still love leafing through them for inspiration, I’ve found myself turning to them less and less for specific direction in the kitchen over the years. Why? On the Guardian website, the Australian chef Adam Liaw articulates a fundamental problem with recipes, the building blocks of cookbooks:

Recipes teach a modern style of cooking that is focused solely on eating meals, to the exclusion of kitchen craft and home economics. Making a simple dish that’s over and done with in under an hour is all well and good, but it is also a very inefficient way to cook.

In other words, most recipes invite us to think of cooking projects in terms of discrete meals: a pork roast that feeds six, a veggie pasta for four. But as Liaw notes, “No cuisine in the world could ever have been created in discrete packages.” A standard Japanese meal, for example, rests on three elements: soup, rice and pickles. “To make that from scratch three times a day would be impossible, but with good kitchen craft it’s possible to eat a full meal every time with a minimum of effort,” he writes.

But here in the United States, the single-meal recipe reigns supreme: in cookbooks, on food websites, and in the food section of newspapers. When you exit work and remember the empty fridge at home, the prospect of cooking dinner in that style can be daunting: You have to settle on a recipe, hit the grocery store, spend at least 30 minutes cooking, and other 20 to 30 minutes cleaning. Meal-kit services like Blue Apron remove the burdens of choosing a recipe and shopping for it; but they still keep you on the one-dinner-at-a-time treadmill. Considering the ever-increasing demands of work and the demands of family life, it’s no wonder that we’re spending more and more of our food dollars on meals prepared outside the home.

As Liaw notes, “No cuisine in the world could ever have been created in discrete packages.”

But imagine another, more long-viewed style of cooking. Say on Sunday, you cooked a pot of beans, roasted a whole chicken (tip: butterfly it), and whipped up a simple vinaigrette as a salad dressing and marinade. Monday’s dinner could be a quick chicken-bean soup; Tuesday could be taco night; Wednesday, these elements could be incorporated along with some quick-sautéd vegetables into a pasta; and so on. If you have nice condiments around—say, sauerkraut, or (my longtime obsession) dead-simple homemade salsa macha—these fast-assembled meals are all the more satisfying.

This mode of cooking is also thrifty: Whole chickens are much cheaper than parts, and the leftover carcass can be transformed into next week’s stock. And a pot of homemade beans costs significantly less than canned beans (which are themselves a worthy component of a quick meal). No bottled salad dressing can match the flavor and price of a homemade one, which lasts in the fridge for at least a week. Under such a regime, restaurants and takeout can be utilized sparingly, to satisfy cravings for dishes you can’t cook at home, not as an expensive crutch.

Tamar Adler’s evocative An Everlasting Meal (2012), not a cookbook but a collection of essays, captures the pleasure and rhythms of this mode of kitchen stewardship. More recently, the US cookbook market is starting to take note of the flaw Liaw identifies. In my list of the five best cookbooks of 2016, two strove to be more than just one-off recipe collections, offering a more systematic approach to putting food on the table. In Home Cooked: Essential Recipes for a New Way to Cook, Anya Fernald makes the case for “long cuts”—”time-consuming base ingredients made when time and ingredients are abundant, then preserved to be used when they are needed.” And in A New Way to Dinner: A Playbook of Recipes and Strategies for the Week Ahead, Amanda Hesser and Merrill Stubbs (of Food52 fame) structure their book around cooking just as I describe above: weekend shopping trips and cooking sprees that give rise to a week’s worth of varied and fast-prepped dinners.

Both books are excellent—but are geared to an audience of seasoned gourmets weary of the tyranny of the one-meal-focused recipe. (The “new way” of cooking they promise in their titles isn’t really new, of course, but it has been widely forgotten in our recipe-fixated food culture.) We need more, and simpler, systems-focused cookbooks, geared to people with less experience in the kitchen. Maybe some already exist—if you know of good ones, let me know in comments. And of course, there’s no need to purge your home of conventional cookbooks or stop visiting recipe websites—most one-shot recipes produce results that can be incorporated into a variety of meals for the week.

It would also help if we revived home economics classes in high schools, focusing on the skills of running a thrifty and time-efficient home kitchen. I made just such a plea back in 2013.

You're using recipes wrong (2024)

FAQs

Is it illegal to use someone else's recipe? ›

Even if the description of the recipe is sufficiently creative and copyrightable, the copyright will not cover the recipe's ingredient list, the underlying process for making the dish, or the resulting dish itself, which are all facts. It will only protect the expression of those facts.

How much do you have to change in a recipe to avoid copyright? ›

The general rule [...] is that three major [emphasis added] changes are required to make a recipe "yours." However, even if you make such changes, it is a professional courtesy to acknowledge the source of or inspiration for the recipe.

Are you a cook if you use recipes? ›

To simply answer this question, a chef is an individual who is trained to understand flavors, cooking techniques, create recipes from scratch with fresh ingredients, and have a high level of responsibility within a kitchen. A cook is an individual who follows established recipes to prepare food.

Do real chefs use recipes? ›

Just as most pro chefs will read the recipe all the way through at least once before cooking from it, most will also cook all the way through a recipe at least once before making substitutions.

Can restaurants use other people's recipes? ›

The courts don't necessarily consider food intellectual property. The U.S. government refuses to issue copyrights to recipes, which it describes as “a mere listing of ingredients or contents, or a simple set of directions.” Some restaurants have argued their recipes are trade secrets.

Is it OK to copy a recipe? ›

A: While the dish itself and its basic cooking steps may not be copyrightable, if you present the recipe with original, expressive content (like a detailed backstory, unique illustrations, or personal anecdotes), those elements might be protected under copyright law.

At what point does a recipe become yours? ›

A general rule of thumb is: if you change three or more ingredients in the recipe, and rewrite the recipe instructions in your own voice, you can consider it your own. Even so, stating that the recipe was “adapted from” or “inspired by” the original recipe is a good idea.

Can I make a cookbook with other people's recipes? ›

Instead, an author wishing to use another person's cookbook recipes in their cookbook has four options: securing written permission from the original author, adapting the recipe, creating a similar recipe using the recipe as inspiration, and completely reworking the dish into a new recipe.

Why aren't recipes copyrightable? ›

Likewise, recipes are considered "ideas" because they are simply a set of instructions for creating something. Ideas are also ineligible for copyright or trademark protection under U.S. law.

Can you post other people's recipes on your blog? ›

All you have to do to share a recipe properly is to make sure that: The original site/blog/blogger/url gets a credit link that goes to the original recipe. You have permission to use their photo (if you are using it) You send people to the original recipe site for directions.

Why does someone use a recipe? ›

To guide us through the process of preparing a specific dish, recipes provide a structured set of instructions. They outline the required ingredients, measurements, cooking techniques, and steps in a standardized manner. They ensure a dish can be consistently prepared, allowing people to replicate the same results.

Is Gordon Ramsay a cook or a chef? ›

Gordon James Ramsay OBE (/ˈræmzi/; born8 November 1966) is a British celebrity chef, restaurateur, television presenter, and writer. His restaurant group, Gordon Ramsay Restaurants, was founded in 1997 and has been awarded 17 Michelin stars overall and currently holds eight.

How much money does a chef make working at the White House for the president? ›

As of Apr 30, 2024, the average hourly pay for a White House Chef in the United States is $24.63 an hour.

Does Gordon Ramsay teach people how do you cook? ›

LEARN HOW TO COOK WITH GORDON RAMSAY

Take your cooking skills to the next level with Chef Ramsay's most comprehensive cooking classes ever. Join Gordon in his home kitchen for two of the most in-depth and exclusive online video lessons, with lifetime access to each class.

Can you share other people's recipes? ›

Share only the ingredient list if you must copy something. This is the ONLY part of a recipe you are legally allowed to copy and paste. It is the only part of a recipe that is not protected under copyright law. The blogger you are sharing from may not particularly appreciate that you did it, but legally, it's allowed.

Can you use someone else's product as an ingredient? ›

Using someone else's branded product as an ingredient of your own or integrating it in some way will usually not be a problem, at least not under trademark law.

Are recipes considered intellectual property? ›

In conclusion, recipes cannot be patented, but they can be protected under copyright or trade secret law. Copyright protection applies to the expression of the recipe, while trade secret protection applies to the confidential information that the owner takes steps to keep secret.

Can you use other peoples recipes to sell? ›

IF you are talking about selling the recipe in a book, no you cannot. If you are talking about preparing food for sale using someone else's recipe, well, that is common place, and perfectly legal.

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