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I have a 6 month old baby. I live in west meadows, in melbourne. I want to learn how to cook, but i don't want it ti take up to much time.I don't cook much, so i need help to learn how to prepare, cook and i want to know what else comes with cooking. I want learn to cook for my baby, my husband and myself, and when i have people over.

2007-02-13 09:12:35 · 10 answers · asked by Dee 1 in Food & Drink Cooking & Recipes

10 answers

Dee, start out with easy recipes. Check out foodnetwork.com, allrecipes.com, kraftfoods.com and similar sites. They have a lot of easy to follow recipes. At most of these sites you can type in a main ingredient and a lot of recipes will come up. Find a couple of easy recipes and make them all the time until you have time to try a new one or two to add to your files. Example: Chili, beef stew, a good chicken recipe, a good pasta recipe (maybe lasagna) and one or two others. As Sandra Lee on the food channel says, "keep it easy".

And don't fret over flops - we ALL have had them. Heck, after all these years I still have them once in a while. So relax and just go for it. By the way, when at a friend's house if they make something you love - ask them for the recipe - they will be flattered.

2007-02-13 09:22:10 · answer #1 · answered by dddanse 5 · 0 0

It seems pretty intimidating to people who don't know how, but it really isn't that hard. Just check out a website like allrecipes.com and find a few recipes that look good and not very complicated. Go buy the ingredients and follow the instructions. If you find one you like, make it some more until you can make it without the recipe. You'll get more comfortable with practice, just like with anything else, soon enough you won't even need recipes. Also if you know someone else who is a good cook, tell them you'd like to learn to be a better one yourself and spend some time with them in the kitchen. They'll probably be flattered and you'd probably learn the best if you could watch someone else do it. Good luck!

2007-02-13 09:15:48 · answer #2 · answered by derelicthypotheses 2 · 0 0

Your desire will carry the day. This is not difficult. As for time, you may simply not be able to schedule the really elaborate haute cusine stuff, however because the world is full of cooking media, that is anxious to give you preparation tips and understands that you don't have much time to spend, there will easy things for you to start on. One of the things that comes with cooking is pleasure. Just like any hobby, but it also fulfills a creative and essential need in the home. It produces experience with your ingredients, knowledge of how a thing will behave in a recipe. How you and your family respond to a collection of tastes. It will give you skills in planning and budgeting. You will learn to substitute items, you will learn how to recombine your leftovers with your( kitchen essentials) to make something that is just not reheating the thing. Your food will likely be healthier and your money will go further. You will gain the experience of just what a wide world of possibility there is available to you. Make eating a pleasure not just a fueling stop. Start with the things that you and your husband like. Look up receipts on line at the library, at a book shop. Make sure that the baby gets to try everything, so encourage adventure and discourage pickyness. Most of what children turn their noses up at seems to be simply different.

I personally have not become the master of the kitchen, I make a couple of my mothers' meals for comfort food. I bake, roughly. I have my own chile and enchaladas. I like to improvise soups. I can follow along in a cookbook, I have a small selection of things I'm called on to make frequently, and I can improvise like crazy. I know how to operate a grill. My family calls me the king of brown food. Two out of three grandchildren like Grampa's food better than their mothers. Jump in, don't be anxious about it.

2007-02-13 09:59:57 · answer #3 · answered by colinchief 3 · 0 0

Dee,

Pick up various cookbooks from the library until you find one that works for you.

I started with The Frugal Gourmet Cooks American and Cooking Light Annual Cookbooks.

The ingredients are readily available in the market, the recipe steps are simple and straightforward and they do not take a lot of time.

2007-02-13 09:18:32 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

There's tons of books out there for quick and simple recipes for a baby and entertaining. I've seen a few books that are called something like meals made with 3 ingredients of 4. There's a few different versions. You can also find many sites with quick and simple recipes. I'm pretty sure the foodnetwork.com website has a whole section about quick and simple recipes.

There's many cookbooks for babies that you can use to make your own baby food and organic foods and such too.

Here's a few links you might want to check...
http://www.healthy-baby-food.com/
http://www.amazon.com/s.html/ref=pd_lpo_k2_dp_k2k_1/105-6416611-8657257?ie=UTF8&keywords=baby%20food%20cookbook&index=blended
http://www.amazon.com/Quick-Recipe-Cookbook-Whitecap-Books/dp/1552850994/sr=8-1/qid=1171405460/ref=sr_1_1/105-6416611-8657257?ie=UTF8&s=books

Good Luck on your future in cooking!

2007-02-13 09:25:12 · answer #5 · answered by Tibby228 2 · 0 0

All my existence each and every female + adult men ought to organize dinner like cooks and bake?? Courdon Blue do not have any further some thing on my fam!! I..., no longer a lot :/ ( My mom-in-regulation on the time help me to be tremendous mom, thanks to solid of "1950's" spouse, and all with one comfortable wisk of her hand- she tossed the Betty Crocker prepare dinner e book at me and suggested initiate interpreting!!!! the first aspect I made (1st time in existence EVER) Turkey (no longer a loaf-it grow to be authentic) selfmade buttermilk biscuts, mashed potatoes that my chef brother begged for reciept (29yrs all I do is kick him out of kitchen) carmeled sparkling picked eco-friendly beans, and dessert grow to be a pumkin pie from scratch!! That grew to grow to be out little troublesome slightly of to a lot milk and not in any respect trusting the reciepe. wondering cost is like $7 or so (no longer particular) besides the undeniable fact that the internet website is free. also google has app you are able to placed what food, spices, etc..., in and it is going to generate each and each and every of the diverse ghings you are able to make. very last- college friends make tremendous ginny pigs- practice on them!!! maximum ideal needs

2016-12-04 03:35:18 · answer #6 · answered by boshell 4 · 0 0

Go to www.foodtv.com and look up recipes by Rachel Ray; everything she cooks is in "30 minutes or less".

2007-02-13 09:17:36 · answer #7 · answered by Irish Eyes 4 · 0 0

you kind of need time to cook. so tell your husband to take care of the baby and get one of your best freinds to show you how. its easyier then looking off the tv or reading a book. then their is no one their to show you have to do it right

2007-02-13 09:18:34 · answer #8 · answered by andy 2 · 0 0

Open box
Cut hole in seal
Push 2 minutes
Push start
Let cool and serve

2007-02-13 09:20:55 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I love my crockpot. And there are a ton of Crockpot recipe cookbooks. Try it.

2007-02-13 09:19:44 · answer #10 · answered by deaner 1 · 0 0

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