The Right Way to Write a Recipe

This article first appeared on www.koshercook.com on 12 June 2011.

Also by Norene Gilletz – How to Write and Publish a Cookbook

A well-written recipe is one that can be reproduced successfully by others.

Before starting, set up a style sheet for consistency and accuracy. No matter what wording or punctuation you decide to use or how you decide to identify ingredients or equipment, be consistent. Use the same style for all recipes that appear together in the same cookbook, article or blog.

Here are some simple guidelines:

  • Know your target audience. Recipes for teens or beginning cooks require more explanation than recipes for experienced home cooks.
  • Include a headnote to capture the reader’s interest. Your description should sound so scrumptious or the story behind the recipe is so fascinating that the reader will want to head straight into the kitchen and start cooking!
  • List ingredients in order of use. Indicate if they are chopped, minced, melted, thawed, drained, room temperature, etc.
  • Don’t use brand names in the recipe title, ingredient list or method unless it is necessary for clarification. Instead, indicate a package size and generic term for the brand name.
  • Include accurate package sizes. Provide the pan sizes needed for each recipe.
  • Measurements should be as precise as possible. If writing for an international audience, include metric measurements.
  • If using unusual or hard-to-find ingredients, offer suggestions on where to purchase them.
  • If the oven needs to be preheated, indicate it at the beginning of the recipe. However, if making a dish that requires marinating for several hours, indicate that the oven should be preheated shortly before cooking.
  • Don’t assume that the reader understands culinary terms or knows how to execute them. If your reader has limited cooking experience, they might not know the meaning of basic cooking terms such as sauté (cook and stir).
  • The steps should flow in a chronological order. If you’ve listed the sauce last, consider if it should actually be prepared first so that it can simmer while the cook is preparing the rest of the dish.
  • Make sure there are no “dangling” ingredients. For example, if the instructions say to prepare an ingredient and then set it aside (e.g., drain juice, reserving 1/2 cup), make sure to tell the cook to add the reserved ingredient to the recipe at the appropriate time.
  • Instructions should be very clear, making a visual image for the reader.
  • Indicate which tools and pieces of equipment are needed to prepare a recipe.
  • Write whether a recipe needs to be covered or not during cooking/baking.
  • Cooking/baking times should be accurate and should also indicate a test for doneness.
  • Indicate if a dish can be made ahead of time and if it can be frozen and/or reheated.
  • Indicate the number of servings.
  • Always test your recipes thoroughly. A recipe that doesn’t work is the fastest way to destroy an author’s credibility!

The recipe below illustrates many of the points I’ve mentioned. Write on!

GARLIC-ROASTED CARROTS

Source: Norene’s Healthy Kitchen: Eat Your Way to Good Health
by Norene Gilletz (Whitecap Books)

These are absolutely addictive! Roasting brings out the natural sweetness of carrots.

1 large onion, sliced
2 lb (1 kg) carrots, peeled and cut in 2-inch lengths
3 to 4 cloves garlic (about 3 to 4 tsp minced)
2 to 3 Tbsp olive oil
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper

1. Preheat the oven to 375°F. Spray a 9- × 13-inch glass baking dish with cooking spray.

2. Place the onion, carrots, and garlic in the prepared baking dish. Drizzle with olive oil and sprinkle with salt and pepper to taste; mix well. For best results, the carrots should be in a single layer in the dish.

3. Roast, uncovered, for 45 to 60 minutes or until golden and tender, stirring the carrots occasionally. Serve hot or at room temperature.

Yield: 6 servings. Keeps for up to 2 days in the refrigerator; reheats well.

Don’t freeze.

Ordinary Ingredients, Extraordinary Meals

BOOK REVIEW by NORENE GILLETZ
[article first appeared in the Canadian Jewish News]

Buy on Amazon

Leah Schapira, author of Fresh & Easy Kosher Cooking (Artscroll), has an energetic passion for creating scrumptious, uncomplicated dishes for the kosher cook, using ordinary ingredients to create extraordinary meals. You’ll find more than 170 creative recipes for every day or for special occasions that are sure to tantalize your taste buds. There are fabulous, full-colour photos throughout the cookbook that will inspire the reader to stop reading and get in the kitchen to start cooking!

Read more “Ordinary Ingredients, Extraordinary Meals”

Creative kosher baking – so where’s the milk?

Book Review by Norene Gilletz
[first appeared on www.cjnews.com, Friday, 21 January 2011]

If you’re always searching for delicious pareve recipes, your search is over. The Kosher Baker: Over 160 Dairy-Free Recipes from Traditional to Trendy by Paula Shoyer (Brandeis University Press) contains a huge selection of amazing pareve recipes for every day or any special occasion.

Before long, the pages of your copy of The Kosher Baker will be batter-splattered, and chocolate-imprinted fingerprints will point the pathway to your favourite recipes!

Read more “Creative kosher baking – so where’s the milk?”

Kid-Friendly Passover Dishes That Are Too Good To Pass-Over!

First appeared on Jewish Action

Each family has its favorite “tried and true” recipes that it absolutely has to include as part of the Seder menu. Tradition, tradition! But preparing family-style meals during Pesach often becomes a challenge, especially when preparing for young children.

I hope these easy Passover dishes, adapted from my cookbooks The Food Processor Bible (Vancouver, Canada, 2000) and Healthy Helpings (Vancouver, Canada, 2008), will evoke new taste memories and become part of future Passover traditions for your family. A food processor will definitely help speed up preparation. Enjoy!

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Get ready for healthy homemade bread

First appeared on The CJN, Wednesday, 6 January 2010

When I saw the title Healthy Bread in Five Minutes a Day, I was intrigued. Healthy eating is at the top of the list of most people’s New Year’s resolutions, but January also brings long, cold nights, a desire to hibernate and a craving for carb-loaded comfort foods such as bread and chocolate.

Healthy Bread in Five Minutes a Day: 100 New Recipes Featuring Whole Grains, Fruits, Vegetables and Gluten-Free Ingredients (Thomas Dunne Books), was co-authored by Jeff Hertzberg, M.D. and pastry chef Zoë François. Their first bread-baking book, Artisan Breads in Five Minutes a Day, has sold over 200,000 copies, with rave reviews.

Read more “Get ready for healthy homemade bread”