I have failed multiple times while cooking this semester. It
might not sound like a big deal, but I do think of myself as pretty good at
cooking so when I mess up a dish or improperly cook something it resonates with
me as being a failure. The two times that stick out for me when I failed at cooking
was when I messed up a soup and when I did not cook potatoes fully.
The soup was going to be a cheesy and creamy soup with diced
chicken, onion, carrot, and pasta. I had everything done by scratch and ready
for the milk and cheese to go in. My first mistake was getting low moisture
cheese which is harder to make melt. So, I added in the milk and then finally
the cheese. The second mistake I made was having the temperature too high
causing the already hard to melt cheese to start clumping. The fats had been
boiled out of the cheese which then made the cheese into a rubbery sticky consistency.
All these mistakes turned into a failure that I learned from.
The potatoe situation was a different failure this semester.
Firstly, I had chopped the potatoes into a dice so that they would be easier and
quicker to cook. However, I made a rookie mistake and tried to put way too much
of the potatoes in the pan with onions and chopped bacon. I thought the bacon
would cook down while the potatoes were cooking, and the onions would caramelize
while all at the same time. Next mistake was putting paprika as one of the
spices on it all making the not cooked potatoes have color. Which if you know how
to cook things, you know that color means cooking. So, the combination of darkening
the potatoes with paprika and the over filling of the pan made most of the
potatoes not fully cooked by the time the main part of the dinner was done
being made.
I have learned to not get low moisture cheese for soups, or
if you do use it you need the right temperature and enough acidic elements in
the soup to keep the cheese from clumping. I have also learned to not fill the
pan up with a lot of something and the color should be a dark brown for potatoes not just slightly brown from spices.
I think failure is the only way we learn because if we never
failed then we would go on with our day doing things that we never knew fully
about. I think I handle failure emotionally and behaviorally in the sense that
I become persistent in trying to fix a failure and do not like when people tell
me to let a failure go because I want to learn how to fix it and better myself and
change. I don’t think I am more likely to take a risk because of this class but
I do feel like I can understand those risks better now that I have learned
about changing and evolving one self or a product.
Hey Zac, you did a great job on this post! I also love to cook and I can relate to cooking failures! With something like cooking, failing is super helpful because you will definitely remember what you did wrong while cooking the next time around. I liked your post because you made it super detailed and described the exact failures you had while trying out recipes. Another reason I really liked your post was because it was different than the others: most people wrote about school but it was great to hear another kind of failure! Great post!
ReplyDelete