How would a novice cook know
#1
Power Poster
Thread Starter
Join Date: May 2008
Location: MN
Posts: 25,198
How much to add of an ingredient if the recipe says
A pinch
to taste
A glug
A handful
what is considered small, medium, or large for an onion or potato ( or whatever)
Difference between rounded and heaping measurements
A pinch
to taste
A glug
A handful
what is considered small, medium, or large for an onion or potato ( or whatever)
Difference between rounded and heaping measurements
#3
Power Poster
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Southern USA
Posts: 17,890
I think it is mostly common sense. A pinch is what is between two fingers. To taste is what you like it to taste like.
A glug is one big dollop of liquid coming out of the carton (a mouthful). A handful is whatever the size of a normal adult hand. You can tell if an onion or potato is small, go from there. A heaping teaspoon is ingredient piled as high as it can go without spilling over. A rounded teaspoon is ingredient rounded off to fit the spoon. That is how I would measure all of these.
A glug is one big dollop of liquid coming out of the carton (a mouthful). A handful is whatever the size of a normal adult hand. You can tell if an onion or potato is small, go from there. A heaping teaspoon is ingredient piled as high as it can go without spilling over. A rounded teaspoon is ingredient rounded off to fit the spoon. That is how I would measure all of these.
#4
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2018
Location: Peoria, IL -- Midwest Transplant
Posts: 7,292
For recipes and carb/calorie and all that sort of thing, if it is round-ish (like an onion or an apple) "one" is about tennis ball size. For fruit that is roughly the size of the bags of lunch fruit, maybe a little larger, but I think an "average" orange or apple from the bin is more like 10-12 oz instead of 6-8.
#6
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Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Mableton, GA
Posts: 11,687
In my dotage the only things I measure are for baking some things. I can do biscuits and pancakes with eyeballing to see if it looks like a batter or dough should. The rest I have been pretty good at just my own experience and taste. I would say less experienced folks will use "the google" until they get an idea of things
#7
Bear, I had to smile. I have one of my grandmother's hand written recipe books. How much is in a tea cup? Or 'use the silver teaspoon' measure. And 'less than usual' in a bread recipe can be quite perplexing. I remember her cooking--it was wholesome and tasty, but a culinary genius, she was not. She did make the most amazing chocolate and vanilla ice cream jelly rolls, and Long Johns! My sisters and I have tried but have never been able to replicate those two favourites.
#10
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Join Date: Jul 2013
Location: Houston, TX
Posts: 10,726
That's how my mom cooked and she couldn't figure out why I could never learn to cook from her. When I was on my own, I'd get recipes with the actual amounts. 1/4 tsp., 1 T, 1/2 c. I had no problem cooking when someone told me exactly how much to use. When you're starting out, a "bit" can seem like anything from 1/4 tsp to 1/4 c!

