Mine probably isn’t that secret these days, but almost every sauce I add nutritional yeast to. Curry, chilli, bolognese, it just makes them all better.

  • frickineh
    574 months ago
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    Couldn’t tell you. Every time I make something really good that’s worth repeating, the recipe is immediately wiped from my mind forever. It’s like some monkey’s paw curse that I can only make the thing the most delicious way once.

    Also, butter.

    • Breezy
      74 months ago
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      I have the same issue with seasonings. I can never remember how much of what i used to make a perfect dish. With all the smart things being made, what we need are smart seasoning containers, just think after a long cooking you sit down to eat and can pull up an app to see you used 2 grams of this 5 grams of that. You mark the dish then next time you’re cooking you pull up the app and it reminds you on how much to use.

        • Breezy
          24 months ago
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          4 months ago
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          Im to dumb and lazy too do that. Hence why smart containers would be nice.

      • SUPAVILLAIN
        24 months ago
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        4 months ago
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        Never measure. Just throw. You know you’ve seasoned it enough when the spirits of your ancestors step in.

    • Agent641
      44 months ago
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      I still pine for that ham bone soup I drunk-made after Christmas that one times.

    • IninewCrowEnglish
      34 months ago
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      The other secret ingredient is time

      Often I’ll make something and it doesn’t quite taste that great immediately after making it especially tomato based recipes

      Then when you let it sit for a day it tastes a whole lot better the next day.

      • frickineh
        34 months ago
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        True. A lot of sauces are the best in leftovers, but every time, I’m like, “no, this doesn’t taste right, it’s not good, mom taste it and help me, and then she’s like, “yeah dummy, it’s been on the stove for 5 minutes, give it some time. I’m not patient.

      • ryathal
        24 months ago
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        Tomatoes are shy and take time to work into a dish. That’s why I like to have my sauce simmering before I start the water when making pasta.

        • John_McMurray
          14 months ago
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          Bolognese, i’ll have that simmering for 2-3 hours before i even think about starting the spaghetti,

    • ClockworkOtterOP
      24 months ago
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      I get the same. I make something that everyone says is delicious and I genuinely have no idea how much of what went in. I guess it just comes with knowing the basics well enough.

    • John_McMurray
      14 months ago
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      either that, or it only tastes so good the first time, even if your recreate it exactly.

    • BlackPenguins
      14 months ago
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      That’s why I’m designing a recipe app where I can keep notes etc for everything I make.

    • Kindness
      14 months ago
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      the recipe is immediately wiped from my mind forever

      You guys are getting recipes? Jk.

      Smell, taste, and timing are the keys to great food. Take a whiff and add what’s missing.

      Methodical testing is for sharing results after you have a solid grasp of what tastes good.