I think I must be a slow food prepper. I find that I rarely meet the estimated prep times given in recipes.
Are you usually faster, slower, or about on the mark when an estimated preparation time is given in a recipe? Just curious about this, especially when many of you (not me - we are going out) are likely doing more food prep than usual leading up to Thanksgiving.
I really don’t look much at the prep time unless it involves like a fermentation or refrigeration time point.
I review the recipe and then based on the steps decide how long it will probably take me - and if I’m willing to go take that amount of time for the product!
I also find it amusing when the recipe tells you how many servings it’s making. Rarely is that realistic. I have a recipe for beef fajitas that calls for 3/4 pound beef and alleges it serves eight. In what universe??
My sister (who can whip up a fabulous meal for 12 with an hours notice) says it’s all in the pre-prep.
She’s got ziplock bags of sliced onions, cubed carrots, mushrooms in her freezer- arranged like books on a shelf so you just quickly pull out the one you need. She’s got loaves of home made bread, cookies, pounded chicken breasts. Always a few bags of stew which defrost quickly in a bath of water and then get reheated.
She would rather devote an entire Sunday to making two months worth of meals then stress if she hits traffic on the way home from work. Then when you get home it’s rice into the rice cooker or boiling up the pasta, a quick salad and you’re done.
I wish I were that organized. So sure- if we all had the mushrooms and onions sliced and ready to go into the pot the recipe prep times would be accurate. But if you’re first washing the mud off the mushrooms when you start- I find I’m already behind!
I wasn’t thinking about that but, yeah, that’s me, too. Our fridge is stocked with pre-cut/washed/diced/cubed/sliced/bagged, etc. I process all produce as soon as I take it out of the grocery bags, and I pull a week’s worth of recipes in advance so I’m never without a pre-prepped ingredient for that week. Because we split our year between two places and each fridge must be empty before we leave, we manage our food to the week or two, so I’m extremely organized with both food inventory and food prep. I also stock the freezers with pre-made dishes for easy meals when scratch cooking isn’t feasible. Because we’re retired and cooking is our hobby, neither DH nor I care much how little or how much time a recipe takes.
This is also why I find the chop box indispensable.
Recipe prep times always underestimate the time it takes for key steps (slicing/chopping, searing/browning when you can’t overcrowd the pan and need to do it in batches, etc.). For online recipes, if the cooking or prep time is really off, people often say so in the comments.
This is why I enjoy the mise en place challenges in Top Chef. Not every great chef can handle the speed. Always the most time consuming part of cooking for me. Not only do I need to gather/prep the ingredients, but also all the measuring implements! Then it essentially becomes an assembly process.
I’m always slower. I re-read so many times as I’m preparing because I’m afraid of leaving something out because I have left things out. I don’t cook much and this is both the reason I’m slower and the cause of why I’m slower. I’d much rather be crafting!
My kitchen is currently in a dumpster in front of the house and we have ordered an induction stove. My concern is that my established prep routines are all going out the window because of the reported faster heating times available. I could count on getting a lot done waiting for a pot of water to boil, for example, but apparently that’s not as much of a thing. I guess I’ll let you know closer to Christmas.
Almost always, slower. My mom thinks that one should just double the prep time. But some of the folks here prove that there are folks who have their mise en place ready for recipes. My family is more along the lines of peel then slice the carrots, etc., rather than taking out our pre-sliced carrots for the meal.
I will say that if I use frozen veggies instead of fresh ones, that it will speed up the process (aka, the carrots or other items are already sliced).