Recipe: Difference between revisions

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imported>Hayford Peirce
(there, my dear Cobber, is that satisfactory?)
imported>Hayford Peirce
(Okay, Guys and Gals, I've taken the bull by the horns, so to speak, converted it into Hamburger, and begun to fill out the long-threatened Recipe article -- no one else has done so....)
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Recipes can be very simple—"place all ingredients in a large bowl, stir, and serve"— or extremely complex, running to many pages of text and including other subrecipes that must first be incorporated into the principle one in order to complete it.
Recipes can be very simple—"place all ingredients in a large bowl, stir, and serve"— or extremely complex, running to many pages of text and including other subrecipes that must first be incorporated into the principle one in order to complete it.


A detailed index is available at [[CZ:Recipes]].
Recipes will be indexed below in two separate ways:
 
# Alphabetically by the name of the individual recipe, with copious listings of alternative names. No recipes are stand-alone articles; every recipe will be found within the context of an article about that recipe. In some articles, more than one recipe will be given for the same listing.
# Within a separate grouping of ethnic, regional, and geographical cuisines, once again listed alphabetically with various levels of sublistings.
 
Many recipes, therefore, will be found twice: first under its own name, and secondly within the appropriate ethnic or geographical group.  An example is '''Bolognese sauce''', which will be listed first under the '''B'''s and then under '''Italian cuisine'''.
 
====Ethnic cuisines====
* '''Asian'''
**[[Chinese cuisine]]
***[[Chinese cuisine/Catalogs]]
****[[Almond Pressed Duck]]
** South Asian
*** North Indian
*** South Indian
** South-East Asian
* '''African'''
* '''European'''
**[[Belgian cuisine]]
***[[Belgian cuisine/Catalogs]]
**British
**[[French cuisine]]
***[[French cuisine/Catalogs]]
****[[Lyonnaise potatoes]]
****[[Tartiflette]]—recipe included
**[[Italian cuisine]]
***[[Italian cuisine/Catalogs]]
****[[Bolognese sauce]]—recipe included
****[[Vitello tonnato]]
** Mediterranean
* '''Middle Eastern'''
* '''North American'''
**[[American cuisine]]
***[[American cuisine/Catalogs]]
****African-American
****Asian-American
****"Continental"
****General
*****[[Hamburger]]
****Southern
****Tex-Mex
**[[Canadian cuisine]]
***[[Canadian cuisine/Catalogs]]
* '''South American'''
* '''Pacific'''

Revision as of 17:31, 15 March 2008

This article is a stub and thus not approved.
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A recipe (or sometimes receipt in Commonwealth countries) is a set of instructions for cooking a specific dish. It is generally but not always found in a written format, frequently as one of a collection of many such in book form. Many recipes, however, are handed down orally, especially through families. Some recipes, particularly for exotic cocktails, are closely guarded secrets, kept by their creators.

A recipe typically lists the ingredients needed to prepare a dish and their proportions, gives the cooking time, and, less often, the total preparation time. It also generally indicates how many people the recipe will serve and tells the cook of any specialised utensils that are needed.

Recipes can be very simple—"place all ingredients in a large bowl, stir, and serve"— or extremely complex, running to many pages of text and including other subrecipes that must first be incorporated into the principle one in order to complete it.

Recipes will be indexed below in two separate ways:

  1. Alphabetically by the name of the individual recipe, with copious listings of alternative names. No recipes are stand-alone articles; every recipe will be found within the context of an article about that recipe. In some articles, more than one recipe will be given for the same listing.
  2. Within a separate grouping of ethnic, regional, and geographical cuisines, once again listed alphabetically with various levels of sublistings.

Many recipes, therefore, will be found twice: first under its own name, and secondly within the appropriate ethnic or geographical group. An example is Bolognese sauce, which will be listed first under the Bs and then under Italian cuisine.

Ethnic cuisines