Striking the balance between vagueness and detail in cookbooks
August 17, 2024 by DarcieAs someone who does a lot of baking, I prefer my recipes to be precise. Don’t tell me to use ‘half an onion’, instead please give me a measurement (ideally weight, in grams). Restaurant critic Jay Rayner is the opposite: he prefers instructions like ‘a glug of this’ or ‘a splash of that’. However, recently he had to become a “more precise version” of himself because, as he explains, he is writing a cookbook and needs to have recipes that provide enough detail for the intended audience.
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Since one of Rayner’s favorite cookbooks is Sam Sifton’s No Recipe Recipes, which has literally no measurements in it, shifting gears to make recipes that had quantifiable measurements was a challenge for Rayner. His cookbook Nights Out at Home (set for release in September in the UK) contains recipes inspired by favorite dishes he enjoyed during 25 years of restaurant reviewing. In most cases he has recreated these recipes without input from the chefs, cooking by intuition until he achieved the result he desired.
Once he did that he had to make the recipes more precise. He turned to Fuchsia Dunlop and other authors for inspiration in striking a balance between vagueness and detail. When he finally landed on the right combination, he came to a conclusion that likened recipe writing to short story writing: “They need a beginning, a middle and an end. They need a strong narrative arc. But most importantly the reader needs to feel they are at the heart of the action. They need to feel empowered.”
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