The later on part started in January. I got the DVD for Christmas (thank you, Bro!), and have watched it at least six or seven times since then. The first thing I did that came from the movie: I didn't crowd the mushrooms. Yum! Instead of limp, wet fungus, I had delicious, nutty-tasting mushrooms. Double-Yum!
Like Julie Powell, my mother has a copy of Mastering The Art of French Cooking. I haven't stolen her copy yet, but it's been on my mind. Somewhere in the past I looked at it, but I like cookbooks with lots of photographs. That is, until I started getting into older cookbooks because of my character Angelica and her cookbook store, The Cookery. Then I started reading recipes from old cookbooks--for fun! (I blogged about it last summer, but I'm too lazy to go back and find it. Sorry.)
A little while ago, I decided to make chicken pot pie. I LOVE chicken pot pie, but my attempts in the past have always been . . . not satisfactory. I glanced at my pot pie cookbook (which I've had for YEARS) and noticed that some of the recipes started by making a roux.
Let me tell you, I do NOT have the patience to stir flour and oil (or butter) for any length of time. One recipe for gumbo that I made earlier this year insisted that you stir it for at LEAST an hour. Uh-uh! But I wanted this chicken pot pie to be different, so I managed to stir it for almost ten minutes before I got totally fed up.
Guess what. The pot pie was a great success, mostly due to the gravy.
Hurray!
I've never been a very good cook, and that's probably because of my lack of patience. I think I may have to try a little harder and slow down when I'm cooking.
Do you prefer to linger over cooking, or do you mostly just cook to get food on the table?