Cooking & Baking
Related: About this forumThe Joy of Cooking for One
Cooking for yourself can be even better more delicious, practical and creative than cooking for a crowd.
'Cookbook covers can be like optical illusions. Take Microwave Cooking for One, which features the author, Marie T. Smith, alone with some platters of color-saturated food. Some readers may see desolation and gloom behind her smile. Some, a dusty meme. But others see a triumphant model of practicality and self-care.
The chef Anita Lo was aware of these polarities when she wrote Solo: A Modern Cookbook for a Party of One, a book celebrating the simple act of cooking for yourself, and only yourself, that will be published by Knopf later this month. Her recipes are tailored to feed one and, in most cases, the steps are minimal and require few pots and pans. In other words, its a cookbook that speaks directly to a growing proportion of single Americans, with strategic, small-portion recipes, and tips for shopping, stocking the pantry and storing food in a single-person household.
Ms. Lo first landed on the project after a brainstorming session of funny cookbook titles with her name in it (including the rejected Lo Cal). I originally told my publishers that the cover should be me and my cat, said Ms. Lo. But they thought it was too sad. Instead, the cover is a cheerful illustration by Julia Rothman, whose line drawings fill the compact books pages.
Ms. Los book is part of a far-reaching canon of cooking for one. Nigella Lawson has written about her solitary indulgences, as have James Beard and M.F.K. Fisher. The editor Judith Jones wrote a pioneering text in the genre called The Pleasures of Cooking for One, published in 2009.
Ms. Jones took a characteristically precise approach to cooking for herself, but other cooks describe the task as a form of daily self-care. There are plenty of other benefits, too. They note how flavors and textures can often become more delicious because theyre working with such small quantities, and how little to no food can be wasted.
Though Ms. Lo read Ms. Joness book and appreciated her approach, she found the recipes from blueberry soup to blanquette de veau somewhat dated. Ms. Lo, who grew up in Michigan and ran her West Village restaurant Annisa for 17 years before it closed last year, carefully stocks her own kitchen with kimchi, tahini and dried anchovies.
A touch of any of these ingredients can change the direction of a dish. Take Ms. Los recipe for pan-roasted cauliflower, which relies on a store-bought spice mix tangy with dried mango and black salt to effortlessly turn the vegetable into a quick, South Asian-style chaat.'>>>
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/02/dining/cooking-for-one.html?
https://cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1019622-cauliflower-chaat-for-one
Cracklin Charlie
(12,904 posts)I used to do it a lot, but not so much, anymore. I like it, and can sometimes get kinda fancy.
Tonight, I am having one of my favorites for fall: Italian beef and noodle soup. Mmm.
elleng
(130,865 posts)Enjoy!
peacebuzzard
(5,170 posts)In my single household the prep of nutritious delicious dining for one is a satisfying morning routine. That way I can utilize the rest of the day for other tasks.
Going to a restaurant as a party of one has led to more wasted time and disappointments than I care to mention.
When I travel, one of my main luggage pieces is s soft sided cooler containing everything I need for meal prep for a few days.
The time spent is a great investment for wholesome, interesting meals.
I need to check out this book.