Ah man, no shortcuts I guess...
Ok thanks will do!
Get a cookbook that has basic techniques in and go from there. Things like making and thickening sauces (basic white sauces can be turned into tons of things), how to braise meats, how to make a pie crust, batters, deglazing etc. I had a French one that has a bunch of basic stuff in that was the basis for a cordon bleu cooking school that was good. Lots of meals are variations on one dish so learn some classic dishes like boeuf bourginon for example (then you can play around with a bunch of different stews depending on what you like...cooked with vinegar for stiffado or with paprika for goulash, or even curry spices and yoghurt or cream etc).
Some dishes sound fancy but are actually easy to cook once you get the techniques down. Lobster bisque is really simple (learn to make a roux, and then learn how to make a brown roux) and creme brulee is really simple once you learn how to make a basic custard (creme brûlée just uses a very creamy custard but it still needs to set properly). Chocolate mousse is really simple to make as long as you learn how to fold ingredients together without removing the air from the whisked parts (egg whites). Crepes made with buckwheat flour batter are tasty and can be filled with a bunch of things. Once you learn how to cook the batter for them they are simple. All these techniques can be used for other dishes too. Stir fries are great as they are quick and easy but you use the same techniques to make something like a Pad Thai from scratch too (more ingredients and a tamarind/fish sauce base). Most soups are variations of broth types or cream types and are really easy too. Tom Yum soup from scratch is easy to do if you have a decent Asian grocery nearby for lime leaves, galangal and lemongrass but it’s just the same soup techniques but with different ingredients.
My neighbour is a chef and when I head to his house for a meal I rarely see him cook things without a thermometer for meat so get a cooking guide for meat and a decent thermometer and use that too.
Hmm...what else....decent pans help and a decent chef's knife and paring knife help. Anything added to that is a benefit. I enjoy cooking and have a kitchen filled with kitchen gadgets and a whole bunch of herbs and spices that I get from various places. I visit grocery stores and markets on vacations and bring things back too. Gadgets I’d never be without are my kitchen aid stand mixer, breville food processor and now the vitamix blender.
I have to add though that my background is as a chemist. Cooking is just like being in the lab for me. Cooking is just experiments you can eat.
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