rachelmanija: (Challah)
rachelmanija ([personal profile] rachelmanija) wrote2019-03-20 01:45 pm

Make the Bread, Buy the Butter: What You Should (and Shouldn't) Cook from Scratch, by Jennifer Reese

What it says on the tin. Reese kept hearing Michael Pollan various people make complaints about how terrible it is that people buy things, especially food, instead of cooking them from scratch like they did when everyone ate potatoes and buttermilk every day in the good old days.

So she decided to see for herself if that was true, by doing head-to-head comparisons of things bought and things made - everything from bread (make unless you have a truly great bakery nearby, it's delicious and easy) to goat milk (buy, your neighbors will hate you if you keep blatting goats in your backyard) to maraschino cherries (buy, home attempts resulted in concoctions of even more hideousness and inedibility than the store-bought versions.)

She intersperses recipes (mostly pulled from an assortment of other cookbooks rather than original) with often hilarious accounts of her attempts at everything from cheesemaking to beekeeping, to cost-benefit analyses of cost, hassle, and whether the hassle is worth it. I found her voice and style charming - she's slightly hapless without being incompetent, i.e., her results probably map fairly well to mine. She's also very upfront that she's writing for the kind of person who is both interested in and capable (financially, timewise, etc) of actually doing at least some of the things she's discussing.

Though I often had completely different ideas of what's too much hassle and what's worth it, her analyses did give me a solid idea of whether I'd find trying something at home to be worthwhile. Bread, for instance, is a pretty big hassle if you have a demanding office job, and not worth it if you're not much into bread anyway. If you work from home, enjoy making it, and appreciate good bread, it's 100% worth it. But much as I love cheese, the process of making it sounds too fiddly and gross, though Reese found it mostly worthwhile. On the flip side, she thought homemade rice pudding doesn't come out any better than the store-bought version, and so is not worth it. HERESY.

Make the Bread, Buy the Butter: What You Should (and Shouldn't) Cook from Scratch to Save Time and Money

sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)

[personal profile] sholio 2019-03-20 10:01 pm (UTC)(link)
Store bought puffed wheat squares

I thought at first that you meant like shredded wheat breakfast cereal, and I was thinking "... first of all, I didn't even know making that from scratch was a thing, and second, boy does THAT not sound worth the effort." XD
recessional: a photo image of feet in sparkly red shoes (Default)

[personal profile] recessional 2019-03-20 10:05 pm (UTC)(link)

Bwaha no. Squares made from puffed wheat cereal coated in a mixture of butter, brown sugar, corn syrup and cocoa that's been lightly boiled.

sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)

[personal profile] sholio 2019-03-20 10:08 pm (UTC)(link)
LOL yeah, I figured that out when I read it a second time and noticed the mention of rice krispie squares. But I am oddly charmed by the idea of someone making their own wheat biscuit cereal from scratch. However you would even do that.
cadenzamuse: Cross-legged girl literally drawing the world around her into being (Default)

[personal profile] cadenzamuse 2019-03-21 12:22 am (UTC)(link)
Oh man, I had the same reading!
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)

[personal profile] mildred_of_midgard 2019-03-21 12:33 am (UTC)(link)
OMG, me too. "Definitely make" your own breakfast cereal??? Thank god for the rest of this thread, or I'd still be in the land of mind officially blown.

It didn't help either that I call them Rice Krispie "treats", and so the "squares" did nothing to clear it up for me.