Cooking For Comfort: One pot recipes you can make

Cooking For Comfort

How can you get more flavor in your cooking?

I talk on my podcast about developing flavor in our meals.  Restaurant chefs seem to make the same dishes seem just a bit more flavorful.  They aren’t using deep secrets, just letting flavors develop.

My cookbook, Cooking For Comfort, shares many of the basic tips that chefs use to build layers of flavor.

Buy a signed and personalized copy of my cookbook.  Use the PayPal link below to make your purchase, add your shipping address and name.  I’ll cover the shipping.

 

Here is the Kindle version of my cookbook, Cooking For Comfort: One pot meals you can make.

It is a collection of easy to read and follow recipes with procedures to help you improve your cooking skills to build flavor.  Flavor is one of the main reasons we love eating.  By taking the basic skills from these recipes and branching out to more foods, you’ll start to develop deeper flavors in the rest of your cooking.

Cooking For Comfort: One pot meals you can make in Kindle or paperback.

Cooking For Comfort is a lot of soup recipes.  Soup cooking is a good way to learn to build flavors. The high heat of sauteeing brings out flavors.  But, like everything, the how is important.  There is a time and procedure for adding the next ingredients.

Need a Kindle for yourself or as a gift? Click the banner below.

Kids can learn to cook, too.

Getting kids in the kitchen builds their confidence that they can cook.  Cooking, following recipes, also builds the skills of following directions, precision in measuring, the order of operations, organization-chefs call that mise en place, patience and delayed gratification, and cleaning up.

Soup cooking starts with building flavor by cooking the vegetables and meat in the same pan.  Those layers of flavor in the pan are yummy on the tongue.  The same skills of browning to make soups have deeper flavor apply to making better tasting pasta dishes or even vegetarian dishes.

It’s not just soups

Good cooking skills include roasting and braising.  Cooking For Comfort has some roasting dishes, chicken and turkey, as well as a meatloaf.  For pork rib fans, there is an excellent recipe for ribs.  Talk about comfort food.

Each recipe indicates if it is suitable for vegetarians, vegans, or meatatarian.

Many of the carnivore-meatatarian-dishes can omit the protein or add seitan or tofu.  Flavor building principles apply as well in vegetarian or vegan cooking.

Download the introduction

The introduction to Cooking For Comfort offers a good introduction to what you can expect from this cookbook.

Download the PDF Introduction.

Here’s the link to the paperback.  The Kindle version is also on the same page.

Fan photos
Acorn squash recipe.
Roasted potatoes and bacon
Red beans and rice with sausage
Cowboy Fireplace (Crockpot) Beef Dinner
Amped up serving of that Cowboy dinner.
My sister, a happy reader
Ribs from Tasting Anarchy.
Beef Stroganoff as produced from Cooking for Comfort
Kimmy’s Beef Stroganoff
Roasted red bell pepper soup. Kim says it’s great cold, too.

 

Living Bread by Daniel Leader

When baking is a lifestyle

You write baking books

Preorder through Amazon. This is an affiliate link.
It’s just flour

Baking scares cooks silly.  Highly skilled cooks, people at the stove making dinner to order, have turned to babbling babes at the request to make bread.

When I was a young cook, watching skilled cooks bulk at baking meant baking was hard.

Flour, water, salt, and yeast, and sometimes not commercial yeast, is bread baking.  From those three or four ingredients comes hundreds of variations. What could go wrong?

Cooking seemed, therefore, easier and I focused on that.  By the way, cooking is hard.  Just so you know.  Anyone can throw food in a pan.  It takes a lot more than that to make a great dinner.

Baking can’t be bullied

Baking was thrust upon me.  A challenge to be overcome was all I needed to start.  Jack was a Certified Master Chef and decided that we, he, chef Todd, and I were going to dive into the deep end of baking.  To navigate those waters was Bread Alone, by Daniel Leader.Bread Alone pages I’ve used that book more than a bit, as you can see.

What’s the secret?

As questions go, after the one about I just ate something; what as it?, asking cooks what is their specialty or what’s the secret is likely to get a sigh, rolled eyes and a snappy answer.

The big secret is there is no secret.  The other secret is that the secret is hard work, attention to detail and repetition.  That’s not what the curious want in an answer.  The secret is do it a hundred times then a hundred more.  When you have that level of skill and knowledge in your hands, that’s when competence comes in.  How do bakers like Leader make it look so easy?  Practice, practice, practice.

C’mon, really, what’s the secret

When we push past the idea that there is a one-sized-fits-all answer to how baking works (there isn’t), patience is the secret.  Why did so many cooks bulk at baking?  They’re in too much of a hurry.  Line cooking is fast fast fast and baking cares not one whit about that.

Yeast goes as it goes.  You can alter its environment and change that pace, but not without altering the finished product.

Puff pastry and Danish and croissant need to be cold.  If you deny them that, they will make you pay in poor quality products, amazing frustration and maybe wasted time and ingredients.

All these processes are time tested and unalterable.

Mostly.

Not everyone can do this

Every once in a while someone comes along to change how we see things.  In Leader’s new book, scheduled for October, 2019, the preview page reads like a thriller: Vegan brioche and chocolate sourdough babka.  Those aren’t a Who-Done-It? but a How’d-You-Do-That? and the suspense is amazing.

Leader is a professional baker.  But, he writes for the home baker.  I had to convert those recipes, so many alterations and adjustments for Florida, from 2 loaves to 20.

Oh, and the real secret….take notes and leave them as bookmarks in the book.  What was the weather and temperature and what did you have to change for that day?  I promise, after 2 different kinds of bread, you’ll never remember.  But, a quick reminder brings you right back.  That’s how you build knowledge in your fingers.

Living Bread

Leader’s new book is due out in October, and you can preorder it here through this Amazon link.  When you purchase through this link, I earn a commission at no cost to you.