Diving into the deep end

Ideas for quick, satisfying weeknight dinners are always welcome. When you’ve logged in a hard day at the office, in the field, or in the house, the last thing you want to do is tackle a recipe with a laundry list of ingredients, multiple complicated steps, and the potential for dirtying every saucepan and mixing bowl you have. However, on the weekends – or whichever days you have a respite from the daily drudge – it’s a different story.

On those rare occasions when I have an uninterrupted day, I love diving into a complicated recipe. Lots of steps? No problem. Measuring twenty-seven ingredients into an assortment of bowls? Yes, please! Saveur gets me, because on their site they have a list of a baker’s dozen of their most difficult recipes. People who love complexity will get it in recipes for Duck Pâté en Croûte, Shanghai Soup Dumplings (Xiao Long Bao), and other days-long projects.

While I usually gravitate toward the baking arena with multi-component desserts or fussy French pastries, there are plenty of savory recipes that allow you to while away the hours of an afternoon as well. You can also combine the two discliplines, as the duck pâté recipe above shows. There are several good reasons to take on a complicated dish. It can provide a welcome escape and an outlet for anxiety, the finished dish can impress your friends and family, you will get a sense of accomplishment when you’re done, and you will most certainly hone your cooking skills, which will come in handy on the frantic weeknights. About the only downside (for me at least) is cleaning up the kitchen afterward.

Some of my favorite difficult recipes that I’ve tackled recently include:

What do you like to make when you have a leisurely weekend?

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2 Comments

  • Jane  on  March 6, 2020

    Leisurely weekends are few and far between but when I want to go for something more challenging, macarons are my go-to. For my annual Oscars party I make a different macarons/ice cream combination each year – this year was white chocolate ice cream sandwiched in blueberry macarons. The most complex I have ever made, with 4 different components were Jaffa Cake macarons. So much work but fun and so worth it. Darcie, you should have included cannelés in your most complex projects – the photos were amazing.

  • Ro_  on  March 9, 2020

    Where I now live, in France, there is the wonderful concept of an ‘aperitif dinatoire’, basically a dinner made of picky bits / canapés / snacky stuff. You often get this at a party or event, but I love making this type of dinner for the family at home on a Saturday when I’ve got lots of time on my hands. It lets me try lots of different recipes as well as bring out some old favourites. Sometimes I theme them and sometimes not, a few months ago I made a Mexican themed one featuring:

    Raw tuna tostadas and Roasted red tomato & chilli salsa from The Road to Mexico by Rick Stein
    Spicy Mexican samosas from Mary Berry Everyday
    Richard’s guacamole from My Family Kitchen by Sophie Thompson

    …and a few other bits and pieces. We often combine this type of dinner with a board game night 🙂

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