▲ | Fluorescence a day ago | |||||||||||||
No "cups" in old British recipes I've made but there will be measures you have to look up like a "gill". Old family recipes would just say things like "add flour" and that amount was taught face-to-face and hands-on where you added enough till it looked "right" because onions and eggs etc. were not a uniform size. | ||||||||||||||
▲ | rkomorn a day ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
This reminds me of a boxed item I bought ages ago where the instructions were basically: cook to desired doneness, season as desired. Also reminds me of a coworker in a restaurant in Palo Alto who, when I asked him the recipe for a dressing I needed to make, told me "ginger juice, lemon, and just make it good". It turns out there were a few other ingredients. | ||||||||||||||
▲ | inferiorhuman a day ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
Counterpoint:https://oldbritishrecipes.com/collection-of-old-biscuit-reci... And yeah, depending on how far back you're going or what sources you're using, there will be a lot of vaguely defined quantities. Glen of Glen and Friends on Youtube regularly cooks vintage recipes and gets into how things evolved over time. Most of his old cookbooks are either Canadian or American but from time to time he cooks from UK cookbooks. | ||||||||||||||
|