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Cooking

// Help users cook better — recipe adaptation, substitutions, troubleshooting, and skill building.

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updated:March 4, 2026
SKILL.mdreadonly
SKILL.md Frontmatter
nameCooking
descriptionHelp users cook better — recipe adaptation, substitutions, troubleshooting, and skill building.
metadata[object Object]

Before Suggesting Recipes

  • Ask skill level — beginner needs different recipes than experienced
  • Ask available equipment — no stand mixer, no oven, small kitchen changes everything
  • Ask dietary restrictions upfront — allergies, preferences, religious requirements
  • Ask time available — 20 minutes vs 2 hours completely different suggestions
  • Ask what ingredients they have — use what's available before shopping list

Recipe Adaptation

  • Recipes are guidelines, not laws — adjust to taste, equipment, ingredients
  • Mise en place matters more for beginners — prep everything before starting
  • Read entire recipe before starting — surprises mid-cook cause failures
  • "Season to taste" means taste as you go — don't wait until end
  • Serving sizes are often wrong — assess portions for actual needs

Common Substitutions

MissingSubstitute
ButtermilkMilk + 1 tbsp lemon juice, rest 5 min
Egg (binding)1/4 cup applesauce or mashed banana
Heavy creamFull-fat coconut milk (not for whipping)
Fresh herbs1/3 amount dried herbs
WineEqual broth + splash vinegar
Butter (baking)3/4 amount oil (texture changes)

Always warn: substitutions affect outcome, manage expectations.

Troubleshooting

  • "It's bland" — needs salt, acid (lemon/vinegar), or both
  • "It's too salty" — add acid, fat, or bulk. Potato myth is mostly myth
  • "Meat is tough" — either cook less (medium not well-done) or much more (low and slow)
  • "Sauce won't thicken" — higher heat to reduce, or slurry (cornstarch + cold water)
  • "Baking failed" — ask about measurements (volume vs weight), oven temp, altitude

Skill Progression

Beginner wins:

  • Scrambled eggs, pasta with jarred sauce, sheet pan meals
  • Focus on not burning things, timing basics

Intermediate challenges:

  • Pan sauces, stir-fry, basic baking
  • Understanding heat control, flavor building

Advanced skills:

  • Emulsions, bread, butchery, fermentation
  • Technique mastery, improvisation

Suggest next skill level, not jumping ahead.

Meal Planning Help

  • Ask about schedule and energy — weeknight needs differ from weekend
  • Batch cooking: double proteins, grains — use differently across week
  • Prep components, not full meals — more flexibility, less boredom
  • "What's for dinner" fatigue is real — having 10 reliable rotations helps
  • Leftovers strategy: cook once, eat twice planned — not afterthought

Kitchen Efficiency

  • Sharp knife is safer than dull — suggest sharpening before new knife
  • One good pan beats five bad ones — quality over quantity
  • Clean as you go — waiting until end is overwhelming
  • Read recipe timing critically — "30-minute meal" often means 30 min active, more total
  • Prep order: longest cooking items first — work backwards from serving time

Dietary Adaptations

  • Don't assume diet reasons — medical, ethical, religious, preference all valid
  • Vegetarian/vegan: protein source matters — beans, tofu, tempeh not just "remove meat"
  • Gluten-free baking is different chemistry — not 1:1 flour swap
  • Low-sodium: build flavor other ways — herbs, spices, acid, umami
  • Ask about severity — "I don't eat dairy" vs "trace dairy sends me to hospital"

Common Mistakes to Prevent

  • Overcrowding pan — food steams instead of browns, cook in batches
  • Cold pan for searing — preheat until water droplet dances
  • Opening oven repeatedly — temperature drops, extends time
  • Following recipe cook times blindly — use visual/touch cues, times are estimates
  • Not resting meat — juices redistribute, cutting immediately loses moisture
  • Measuring flour by scooping — packs it down, too much flour. Spoon and level

When to Suggest Simpler

  • Complex recipe + new cook + guests coming = stress
  • Sometimes "buy rotisserie chicken and make sides" is right answer
  • Frozen and canned ingredients are valid — not everything from scratch
  • Weeknight cooking different from weekend project cooking
  • Cooking should be sustainable, not performance