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simont

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Thu 2004-08-26 09:27
Well, that mostly worked

I recently persuaded my mum to provide me with her recipe for fish pie, which I have fond memories of eating in huge quantity through the later parts of my childhood and which tends to be the first meal that springs to my mind whenever I think ‘you know, I haven't eaten any fish in quite a while’. She gave me lots of detail on the ingredients, methods of preparation and so forth; I managed to fill up an entire sheet of A4 with my illegible scrawls. The one thing she omitted was any hint of quantities in the recipe.

As a result, when I tested the recipe on [livejournal.com profile] elise last night, it was slightly short of fish (the Sainsbury's fishmonger insisted that if I was cooking for two then I didn't need more than that much, and on reflection I think he was simply wrong) and extremely overendowed with cheese sauce. Still, that didn't make it inedible by a long chalk, and I'm sure I can do somewhat better next time, so yum anyway.

Cooking still seems to be something with a direct line to my ego. Doing it badly tends to make me feel utterly worthless for the rest of the day, but doing it successfully is a big boost and makes me feel really good about myself. And inviting someone round when I'm cooking a recipe that I've never tried before and know I don't have all the details of – well, that's just scary. I don't think I managed to finish feeling nervous until we'd almost finished eating it.

I can only hope that at some point I'll stop feeling that way about cooking. I used to feel the same way about driving when I first got a car, and I got over that after a while. So there's hope of recovery.

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[identity profile] valkyriekaren.livejournal.comThu 2004-08-26 01:29
Mmm. Fish pie is good. I should make fish pie soon. Unfortunately it's prohibited by my diet at the moment - I can't have much dairy, or protein and carbs together in quantity.
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[identity profile] feanelwa.livejournal.comThu 2004-08-26 01:41
Sainsbury's try and sell anybody not the size of a stick a third less food than they actually need for the job. Say you're cooking for three. This also appears to apply to height - taking Andrew with me I get given a smaller fish than if I go on my own, every time. They are very odd there.
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[personal profile] simontThu 2004-08-26 01:46
Next time I think I'll just quote a weight (since, having noted the weight of the fish I was given, I now have one data point) and not attempt to involve the fishmonger's brain at all. That sounds a lot safer to me :-)
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[identity profile] valkyriekaren.livejournal.comThu 2004-08-26 02:00
Or, go to the proper fishmongers on the market, where they will actually give you good advice about what fish to choose, and you'll get better quality stuff too.
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[identity profile] ex-lark-asc.livejournal.comThu 2004-08-26 02:22
Heh, as ever I'm happy to provide a low-stress recipe test facility :)
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[identity profile] squirmelia.livejournal.comThu 2004-08-26 03:00
I tried a vegetarian imitation fish type substance the other day, but I am unsure that even amazing fish pie recipes would improve it sufficiently.
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[identity profile] mtbc100.livejournal.comThu 2004-08-26 04:34
At least, I'd hope that cookery failures are easy to laugh over afterward than driving failures.
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