Noggel wrote:
I doubt exactly what I'm looking for even exists, in part because I'd expect the preferred ratio of practical doing vs 'book learning' would vary widely from person to person. Some people probably don't even want a mix at all, either preferring to do it all on their own by taking and/or modifying recipes as is or by totally ignoring any written word and going on with what experience they already have.
It's probably a rare position to be in to begin with. I'm a bit of an academic who likes to understand things, but cooking is very much a practical thing where the learning is almost subconscious. Without having someone awesome at cooking to show me different ways to do a certain thing, the best I have been doing is sort of reverse engineering based on recipes I've found and tried. This one textbook has some of that information in parts... the soup chapter is actually really helpful here, whereas the beef chapter is kinda not. So I suppose it varies even then. :p
This is exactly the way I've learned. I'm pretty much entirely self taught. I'll get a craving for *something* and find a recipe. If there's a procedure in the recipe I don't recognize (temper in the egg, cut in the shortening... etc) I'll look up the procedure on line, there's youtube videos for just about *everything*.
I learn by doing. Observing. Tasting. That's another thing. Taste *everything* you're cooking. Soups, sauces... *everything*. Don't be afraid to experiment. Taste spices, use your nose. Every once in a while, branch out and try something really different.
Try an Elk Tenderloin with spinach salad with raspberry chutney and crumbled raspberry parmesan