Like where can i start if im not good at cooking? how do i decide what i want to attempt to make aswell? i dont want to spend to much to begin but is there also a low cost way to start by chance?
Im keeping this brief but if you have a question for me leave a comment?
Like anything you get better with time. I would master one dish then move on to the next. Pretty soon you will have a bag of tricks. Turn down the stove top.
I am going to give you two book recommendations that I think should be done in this order: Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat and The Wok
Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat is great because it talks and about what is needed for all recipes (it’s title). It talks about food science and theory so you can understand techniques and understand what each thing in a recipe does. It does have generic recipes that you can modify as well “lessons” to walk through what you learned.
The Wok is similar but just about using a Wok. I love the wide variety of things you can make with the wok. It also gives you some sidebars about how to shop of ingredients, sauces and how to chop for the recipes. It also talks techniques with then example recipes. Read both and try them out
Start with something you really like to eat. You like it so much you can tolerate it if it’s only ok.
Start making that repetitively.
That’s what will become your ‘go to’ recipe.
After a few dozen times you’ll start to get some nuance in how you make it. You’ll understand the heat, timing and seasonings.
From there you start on a second recipe that may need a new technique.
So for instance , roast chicken.
Tasty, cheap and can be served a few different ways over a week.
I used the joy of cooking, though later began to like the American test kitchen books for their detailed explanations of each part of the dish and what goes wrong.
Honestly being forced to cook everything you eat really ups your skills.
Stay away from dishes that need special equipment. Deep Fried food are pretty hard to learn and expensive as a beginner. You can get most cooking equipment from a Salvation Army/goodwill to start.
I like cook books since you can write yourself notes in them as to what you tried and if it was a good idea. If you find a recipe online print it out and keep it.
100% of my cooking skills came from long form cooking videos on YouTube but the key to getting better is practice. Practice the dish you fucked up and keep trying until you get it right. To start, cook an egg every day, cook an egg a different way, every day. Then master the art of cooking a perfect egg any way, every day. Shouldn’t take more than 10 minutes out of your schedule with clean up.
If it were me telling me this; set baking aside for now. Focus on breakfast and dinner mains. Baking is a science that takes years to get right. Try to stay away from shorts/reels/tiks they are often click bait with no recipe or worse, fake (wasting ingredients).
Good instructors:
Basics with Babish
Ethan Chlebowski (week night spare rib)
Alton Brown
J Kenji Lopez-Alt
Food Wishes
Nick DiGiovanni
Old’s Cool Kevmo
Niche/Comedy:
Epicurious amateur vs pro series
You Suck At Cooking
Nats What I Reckon
Tasting History w/Max Miller
…and many many more. I create a bookmark location called “to cook” and file yummy looking things in there. Pick a recipe and watch the video a few times. Go grocery shopping, watch the video again, and when it’s time to cook, make sure EVERY ingredient is prepared. Veggies diced and in a bowl, spices measured and in tiny bowls, liquids weighed and in a bowl. Everything in its place or Mise en place (pronounced meez ahn plas). Watch the video again and go go good luck.
Pro-tip, unless you’re boiling water, there’s almost NO reason to set your burners to high heat at this point in your journey. Go slow at first, don’t worry about “developing a perfect crust” just yet. You’ll get there with practice.
After a few months/years, you’ll feel confident enough to improvise and start to understand short form cooking channels and how all the ingredients work together (scientifically).
Equipment you will need:
A Chef’s knife, Cutting board, 8” -12” non-stick pan with lid, Large pot with lid and steamer basket, Stainless steel sheet tray (half sheet), Stainless steel rack (to fit tray), Glass casserole tray, Wooden cooking utensils (I love chopsticks), Instant read thermometer (always cook to temp, NOT time), Lots of tiny & medium bowls, Kitchen scale.
^^go cheap at first and if you use them till they break, upgrade. Except the thermometer, spend a few bucks there. I recommend anything by ThermoPro.
Neat things to have:
Air fryer (adds oven space and great for roasting veg when the main oven is busy), Rice maker, Spice rack, Dutch oven, Cast iron pan, Full steel heavy bottom pot and pan set, Immersion blender, Vacuum sealer, Blender/food processor.
Dang, this question really got answered. Thanks for the long and informative post!
Video is not my format, so I adore budgetbytes.com for including step by step pictures along with the instructions. What does rough chop mean, to the pics. How about how thick the sauce should be after reducing same thing. I think that blog single handedly taught me cooking.
This is some A+ advice. I highly recommend listening to this
I’ll add Brain Lagerstrom as another youtuber to watch specifically because his recipes point out which shortcuts are and aren’t worth taking
Additionally my advice I give people is taste all your food all the time. You should try every seasoning you own individually to know what it tastes like, same with sauces. Taste your food while it’s cooking, go slow and adjust things. Always give a little taste before serving to know if it needs any final touches
Also you can save plating for later. If it tastes good people will overlook your presentation
YouTube!
I like both Ethan and Brian. I’m sure others will have plenty of other suggestions. Or simply search cooking for beginners. There is a ton of stuff to get you started.
what do you like to eat? what counts as “cooking” to you?
for example - you could boil pasta, add some sauce, and eat. Youve cooked a meal.
Or are you wanting, for example, to cook the whole of the sauce yourself rather than store bought?
Honesty i feel like i eat too much junk, so i should most likely eat better.
I dont feel ready to make a whole meal from scratch, some components from scratch are fine but no the whole thing. Im not quite sure what counts as cooking for me but i suppose working with food and not using a microwave to cook with.
No really what do you like to eat? Even ‘junk’ can be a starting point.
There are a couple ways to approach this. Find a couple “one pot” or “one pan” meals and try those to get a healthy balanced meal without feeling overwhelmed. Soups and stews can be great for this.
Otherwise a meal should have a protein (e.g. meat or beans), veggie(s), and a carb. Keep it simple if you want to focus on being healthy. Also instead of trying to time everything cook each element separately and reheat when you are ready to eat. I’d do something like:
- baked chicken thighs using a seasoning mix (great thing about chicken thighs of that they are tolerant to overcooking)
- roasted veggies (grab baby carrots, add enough oil so they just shine, add some salt and pepper and roast at 400F until they are just soft)
- steamed rice
Obviously this takes longer, but gaining confidence is more important than speed. Also know that even good cooks mess up occasionally and have things come out bad. These are learning opportunities, don’t get put off of trying again because of a couple failires (on that note watch Glen and Friends cooking on Youtube, he shows mistakes and has the right attitude to dealing with them)
In this case it could be incredibly simple, something as basic as buying a chicken breast, cutting it up, tossing a premixed seasoning (I like Cajun) and just baking it.
The things you’d need to learn are temperature and time. For meats you should have a probe thermometer so you can check internal temperature (especially for chicken) but after a while you get a feel for it.
After that you can use the chicken for “anything” like toss it in a salad, make a sandwich, have it with rice, etc… that’s all “cooking”
YouTube is great for videos on cooking all sorts of things
There’s nothing really wrong with a microwave either, it’s just another way to heat things. Honestly I use a microwave to make rice so I don’t burn pots lol and I buy frozen vegetables that I toss in the microwave, or just do a combo. I microwave frozen brussel sprouts to defrost them and then put them under a broiler to brown them
Soups are really forgiving. You just need a stock pot. When I’d worry about a soup I was making, a chef friend of mine used to say, “it’s a soup- you could put your butt in it and it would turn out fine!” I wouldn’t take that as advice though.
Just buy stock/broth. Some benefits are:
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super nutritious
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very easy to make a lot to eat over time
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you don’t need to do a ton of fine knife work
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water limits your cooking temp to 100C, so it’s much harder to mess it up through overcooking/burning
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easy to start simple and add complexity as you level up. It’ll still be super tasty at every stage.
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You have tons of choice! lots of simple meals.
what sort of junk food do you like? maybe try looking for a recipe for a healthier equivalent/alternative
Junk food is a pretty good place to start, you can control exactly how unhealthily you make it, what cooking equipment do you have?
Find some cooking shows (regular “stand and stir” instructional ones, not reality TV competition type ones) that interest and inspire you to make the recipe shown, then go do it.
Ideally, try to pick ones that go into the “why”/food science/technique, as opposed to just rote instructions. Alton Brown (Good Eats on TV) and Adam Ragusea (YouTube) are good examples of that.
Read recipes, watch videos, and try things out.
If it helps, this is a super easy recipe for chili to make: https://www.budgetbytes.com/basic-chili/
All you need is a big pot, a chefs knife, a plastic spatula, a can opener and a cutting board.
It stores great in your fridges freezer, so you can pack most of it into plastic containers and you’ll have lots of meals ready to go. Once you’ve got one good recipe down pat, you can focus on adding another until you have home cooked meals every day of the week.






