Too many cooks in the kitchen? No way!
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The democratic scheme started well, but a temperature snafu that turned "toasted" pitas into roof-shingle sheets of carbon necessitated the appointment of a kitchen delegator. But that diminished neither the improvised nature of the evening nor the group's clique-free interaction.
If a traditional dinner party is Sunday at the ballet, a cooking party can be a rugby scrimmage in a monkey house. People get confused. The timing of dishes gets juggled and misjudged. Inevitably, important bits of food are spilled or tragicomically forgotten. ("Hey, weren't we supposed to use these pine nuts for something?")
But for aspiring chefs, a cooking party is a chance to improvise with friends who might have valuable tips to share. And few things are better for helping strangers connect than working together to turn out a perfect batch of Sheikh el Mahshi Banadoura (a stuffed-tomato dish).
For a cooking party, the emphasis is on process, not product. If the Shrimp Bruschetta is a bit watery (and ours was), an important lesson can be taught about scooping out pulp before slicing tomatoes. And if you've got perfectly delicious dolmas (stuffed grape leaves), your group's anguish will be dramatically lessened.
After a night of feasting, the verdict was clear: There would be no James Beard awards for culinary excellence. But the warmth of the kitchen forged common bonds in a crowd as diverse as the menu.
To paraphrase British author W. Somerset Maugham: "We ate wisely, but not too well, and talked well, but not too wisely." Guests left the evening well-fed and in good spirits - but not before doing the dishes.
Cooking-party improvisation doesn't preclude the need to plan. Before tossing aprons to guests, make sure you - and your kitchen - are ready.
Here's what you'll need:
A schedule
Make sure you have a sense of how long each recipe will take - and what resources each requires. If your stuffed tomatoes cook at 350 degrees F. and your pita toasts need to be at 400 degrees F., it's important to stagger the time they'll be in the oven - and be sure to change the temperature.
Similarly, make sure you've got sufficient cookware to handle the recipes you're working with. If you have only two large mixing bowls, and three or four recipes require them, adjust either your menu or your cookware.
Coaches
Anyone can cook; a combination of self-confidence. attentiveness, and a good recipe are all it takes to get started. That said, it helps to include a couple of competent cooks to offset your group's novices and impractical gourmets, guide the action, and teach technique on the fly.
A collective sense of humor
If your guests expect a perfect meal, they'll probably be disappointed. But if they're excited about having fun in the kitchen, experiencing new food, and learning as they go, even the most horrendously botched dish can be laughed off with aplomb.
A safety recipe - or two
People want to leave well-fed. Have a recipe or two that you're sure will go off without a hitch, while allowing your guests the excitement of trying some of the more exotic and technically difficult dishes.
A DOG
If there's a canine in the crowd, spilled food is rapidly taken care of. Our floor-cleaner was a Shar-Pei, but most breeds are perfectly suitable.
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