NoneOfUrBusiness@fedia.io 5 hours ago
Unless your local prices are seriously outrageous, most traditional cuisine from anywhere will fit that bill.
NoneOfUrBusiness@fedia.io 5 hours ago
Unless your local prices are seriously outrageous, most traditional cuisine from anywhere will fit that bill.
drre@feddit.org 3 hours ago
if you know what you’re looking for and now how to cook.
one problem i see/have with cookbooks on traditional cuisine is that a lot of the better one focus on traditional sunday roast style fancy recipes (schweinebraten mit kraut und knödeln), and while good they are not cheap. what is more difficult to find is the saisonal poor mans cuisine. except maybe cucina povera from Italy.
NoneOfUrBusiness@fedia.io 3 hours ago
Fair enough. The best way to learn traditional cuisine from somewhere is probably to have someone from there who can cook recommend recipes.
drre@feddit.org 2 hours ago
yes absolutely! but sometimes i have the impression that there is a intergenerational rupture such that the grandparents technically knew these recipes, but this knowledge did not get passed on to the parents’ generation. so depending on your age there maybe one or even two generations which just don’t know these recipes, hence the reliance on cookbooks, which involves trends, marketing, being fashionable, etc.
(also, lots of old recipes require quite some prep time and/or planning, which is why there used to be different recipes for different days of the week. e.g., Saturday was reserved for washing, with little time for meal prep, so Eintopf it is. i think what I’m getting at is that this kind of cooking is quite different to the modern idea of i can decide on the spot what’s for dinner. the old stuff just doesn’t work that way. sorry for rambling)