The New York Times cooking No-recipe recipes No-recipe recipes /

Sam Sifton

Book - 2021

Cooking without recipes is a kitchen skill, same as cutting vegetables into dice or flipping an omelet. Sifton makes improvisational cooking easy. Each recipe uses ingredients you have on hand or could pick up on a quick trip to the store. -- adapted from back cover and page 1.

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Subjects
Genres
Cookbooks
Recipes
Published
New York : Ten Speed Press [2021]
Language
English
Corporate Author
New York Times Company
Main Author
Sam Sifton (author)
Corporate Author
New York Times Company (-)
Other Authors
David Malosh (photographer), Simon Andrews (contributor)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
242 pages : color illustrations ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781984858474
  • You don't need a recipe
  • You do need a pantry
  • Always, a party board
  • Breakfast, anytime
  • Soup, sandwich, dinner
  • The vegetable aisle
  • The staples sisters: rice and pasta
  • On the waterfront
  • Chickens and a duck
  • A number of meats
  • Dessert, please.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Sifton (See You on Sunday), food editor of the New York Times, gathers in this remarkable cookbook 100 purposefully inexact methods for creating delicious meals. Cooking without adhering to standard recipes "is a proficiency to develop, a way to improve your confidence in the kitchen," he writes, and, accordingly, the recipes are accompanied by measurement-free ingredient lists, a soupçon of insouciance ("This is a freestyle version of restaurant food"), cheerful tips, and ideas for modifications. A "bloop" of molasses goes into fried chicken marinade, while a couple "glugs" of olive oil are needed for braised kale with paprika. The making of enchiladas is eased by stacking rather than the tedious rolling of tortillas, and a savory spin on french toast uses cherry tomatoes and basil rather than cinnamon and sugar. The dishes are geared toward those with at least some familiarity with cooking (readers are told, for instance, to produce a pot of rice "as you always do" for a dried fruit and almond pilaf), and capable home cooks will appreciate how no-recipe recipes allow them to make flexible, tasty dishes without getting bogged down in details or overbearing instructions. Innovative, fun, and freeing, this outstanding offering will reenergize the creative spirits of novice and experienced home cooks alike. (Mar.)

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Weeknight Fried Rice It's always good to have some cooked rice hanging around in the refrigerator or freezer, because you can make this dinner with it anytime you like. (Chilling the rice helps separate the grains during stir-frying.) Cooked rice Frozen diced vegetables Any meat or tofu Eggs Garlic Ginger Scallions Soy sauce Sesame oil Gochujang Neutral oil Start with cooked rice, white or brown, a cup or so per person, made fresh and chilled or pulled from the freezer, where you keep some in a plastic bag against the promise of just such an exercise. Also helpful, also in the freezer: bags of diced organic vegetables you can get at the market (the mixed corn, carrots, and peas number, for instance). For the rest, assemble meat, if you eat meat, or tofu; a couple of whisked eggs; about a tablespoon each of minced garlic and ginger; and some scallions. You can make a sauce from soy sauce and sesame oil (about a 3:1 ratio) and fire it up with a teaspoon or two of gochujang. You'll need a little less than a quarter cup of sauce to cook for four. To the wok! Crank the heat, add a little oil, and toss in a handful of chopped meat or tofu. After it crisps, fish it from the pan and set on a plate. Add the garlic and ginger and a handful of chopped scallions. Stir-fry for 30 seconds or so, then add those frozen vegetables. More stir-frying. Return the meat to the wok. Stir-fry. Clear a space in the center of the wok and add the eggs, cooking them quickly to softness. Throw in the sauce, then the rice, and mix it all together until it's steaming hot. Finish with more chopped scallions. Pressure Cooker Chicken Tacos There's no one better at the midweek miracle meal than my friend and colleague Melissa Clark, who turned me on to this gem of a recipe. It's best with chicken thighs, ideally the skinless, boneless variety--though skin and bones are fine. So are breasts. So are turkey thighs, for that matter. Chicken Tomatoes Jalapeño Chile powder Cumin Paprika Tortillas Cheese Season a chicken with salt and pepper, then put it in the pressure cooker pot with some chopped tomatoes and a seeded diced jalapeño. Add a tablespoon of chile powder, a little ground cumin, some smoked paprika, and a splash of water. Set the machine to high pressure for 14 minutes, manual release, and then shred the meat back into the sauce and serve with warm tortillas, grated cheese, and whatever else you like. Excerpted from The New York Times Cooking No-Recipe Recipes: [a Cookbook] by Sam Sifton All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.