Knowing what I know about KZbin comments sections, this was a very brave video to make.
@DrRiq3 жыл бұрын
Yo yoooo wadup it's our boi VOXAY JOHNNAY
@taptiotrevizo94153 жыл бұрын
Experience ah.
@nishadgore62853 жыл бұрын
Don't popular KZbinrs have a tick next their names. I thought that was a fan channel 😂
@MyBoomStick13 жыл бұрын
@@nishadgore6285 isn’t that Instagram you’re thinking of
@MyBoomStick13 жыл бұрын
Love this guys geography videos, they’re the BEST
@CharlieG4073 жыл бұрын
Praise this man for giving grad students so many ideas for papers
@felixfourcolor3 жыл бұрын
He was a professor. It's in his nature.
@turtle21683 жыл бұрын
I know right
@dudebro12493 жыл бұрын
@@felixfourcolor seriously? I thought he was a journalist
@awesomeguy32113 жыл бұрын
@@dudebro1249 journalism prof
@Silkious3 жыл бұрын
@@dudebro1249 bro the mans done everything 😭 when i saw him on the mariah carey christmas video i wasn’t even surprised
@TimFSpears2 жыл бұрын
My favorite solution for not dirtying dishes when I weigh is to use negative weights. If you want to add 30g of butter, for example, place your butter dish on the scale; zero the scale, then remove butter until it shows -30g.
@MooSaidChicken11 ай бұрын
Here in the states our butter comes in sticks, with tbsp marked on them. So if we need to add 2tbps, you just cut to that line. One stick is a half cup. I like this way, but its also what I'm used to. Living in Europe for some months made this difficult for me haha.
@MrAwawe4 ай бұрын
@@MooSaidChicken European butter is marked the same way but in grams, which works the same since that's what our recipes use.
@DanielSultana22 күн бұрын
@@MooSaidChicken Some butters have 25g lines on the wrapper, not all though. If it were up to me I'd buy which ever has the lines, but sometimes I'd be cooking for a lactose intolerant person, and thus have to use lactose free butter
@yahyashaikh71513 жыл бұрын
Well I use a universal system of measurements known as " That looks about right ".
@WarMomPT3 жыл бұрын
don't forget the specific unit of TLAR: 'a squeeze'
@consoleking96703 жыл бұрын
Personally I’m a fan of the “it’s probably close enough” system but to each their own I suppose
@danielliao2653 жыл бұрын
And as the French say:"le glug"
@yahyashaikh71513 жыл бұрын
@@consoleking9670 lmao. Imagine me using that in front of my mom.
@noneimportant59513 жыл бұрын
Acha shaikh sahab 😂
@username110113 жыл бұрын
"marketed as jewelers scales regardless of what it is used to measure" drug dealers: he means us! adam measuring brownie skin: i meant me
@olegsagaydak18983 жыл бұрын
But what is the street value of a quid of brownie skin?
@arielshatz68763 жыл бұрын
@@olegsagaydak1898 1 great british pound
@tcmr57753 жыл бұрын
lmaoooo
@olegsagaydak18983 жыл бұрын
@@arielshatz6876 Not really that great tbh
@mariov50353 жыл бұрын
Lol
@SRagy3 жыл бұрын
"You totally can measure out 100ml of flour, even though nobody does that" Some Nordic countries would beg to differ with their decilitre cups.
@lazergurka-smerlin65613 жыл бұрын
I was actually here sitting like: "Hey, I sometimes measure out my flour with dl, what is this?" then I see this comment
@jakobrosenqvist46913 жыл бұрын
I do that all the time.
@S7rul2 жыл бұрын
Livets in Sweden and mostly measure by volume and I'm not alone moste recepies have most of thier measurements in volume. When measuring flour i use a 2 liter jug with dl markings and since when baking the amount of flour that is needed vary it is mostly precise enough.
@TheJollyGotthardt2 жыл бұрын
Had the same thiought as a Dane, but hadn't realized that it's a Nordic thig specifically
@ArchmageIlmryn2 жыл бұрын
Yeah deciliters (and to a lesser extent, hectograms) are a very nordic thing for some reason. Deciliter cups are very convenient though.
@f.1353 жыл бұрын
Life lesson: season the weighing scale, not the measuring jug
@calebbabcock56873 жыл бұрын
First good one I've seen in a while
@kuberan9273 жыл бұрын
I came to the comment section for this!
@HourRomanticist3 жыл бұрын
Don't forget the white wine.
@thepromaker94913 жыл бұрын
A centuries lesson
@jakojenhh50023 жыл бұрын
This was funny 2 years ago.
@comprehensiblehorrors3 жыл бұрын
I grew up in a household where the measurement "a cup" meant pick a cup from the cupboard and pray
@vaazig3 жыл бұрын
Are you Spanish? 🤣 A cup of this, a pinch of that, a dab of vinegar, a little bit of cheese. My grandmother never cooked a dish exactly the same.
@unoriginalusername44163 жыл бұрын
Luckily that's not as innacurate as it sounds. Most coffee mugs or tea cups hold 8 ounces, or one cup, and most taller glasses are basically right at 2 cups.
@masansr3 жыл бұрын
@@unoriginalusername4416 How many grams is an "ounce", though?
@snepNL3 жыл бұрын
@@masansr hey google. What is.....
@merlinemrys213 жыл бұрын
@@masansr 28.33 g approx
@mikorinnoa39593 жыл бұрын
the cup measurement particularly annoys me when it comes to measuring sticky things like honey and molasses. For me, it's much easier to squeeze/pour them into the mixture directly and I just put a scale under the mixing bowl. This aside, I guess it's just me, I'd like to play safe when cooking cause I don't have the sense of "glug"🤣
@elizar.70373 жыл бұрын
An adjustable measuring cup is great for sticky stuff, if you do a lot of baking! I bought one years ago and now I use it for honey, molasses, yogurt, oil, applesauce, pretty much any ingredient that's not dry, and it's a much tidier experience.
@fran6b3 жыл бұрын
You can mesure honey, molasses, etc, in a oiled cup, or even better, in a graduated cup already but partly filled with a liquid. It works like a charm!
@mikorinnoa39593 жыл бұрын
@@elizar.7037 Just googled the adjustable measuring cup and it looks great! Definitely saving a lot of time of googling how heavy are the honey and other sticky things for the cup measurement recipe😆
@sigrunella13 жыл бұрын
I agree that using cups while measuring sticky things is especially annoying. I find measuring butter in teaspoons and tablespoons very troublesome. The butter packages in my country come in 500 or 250 gr bricks and have a gram scale printed on them so you just easily cut of the desired amount of grams. Sticking butter evenly into measuring spoons makes no sense to me. When using US recipes I always have to convert sticks/spoons of butter to grams to be able to follow it. But volume is fine for measuring dry and non-sticky liquids.
@LoserBroProductions3 жыл бұрын
Mucho texto
@galier23 жыл бұрын
I only use real metric. I measure flour in mole and temperature in Kelvin.
@ParaspriteHugger3 жыл бұрын
You would be off, as "mole" is in the kitchen only a viable measure of sauce.
@anthonywoodward20273 жыл бұрын
@@ParaspriteHugger you can have a mol of anything, its a unit of measure similar to a dozen; that is to say it is a count. OP, great comment, as a chemistry major, it certainly got a laugh out of me :)
@ParaspriteHugger3 жыл бұрын
@@anthonywoodward2027 but I don't know the average molar weight of my flour! For sugar it would be easy enough, but polysaccharides?
@woltews3 жыл бұрын
flour is going to be a nightmayor or oil or yeast or eggs or milk .............now salt and water would be ok ( oh wait my tap water is chlorinated check that still bad )
@somerandomguy843 жыл бұрын
That's SI lol
@greenefieldmann30143 жыл бұрын
"...scales that are often marketed as 'jeweler's scales,' regardless of what substances people actually weigh on them..." That explains all of Adam's brownie recipes lately.
@ParaspriteHugger3 жыл бұрын
People around me call my fine balance a "dealer's scale".
@songsoep23963 жыл бұрын
Cocahina
@DannyBokma3 жыл бұрын
In the Netherlands we use our cocaine scales.
@dixiewhiskey32733 жыл бұрын
😂🤣
@andrewburdge51393 жыл бұрын
Lets leave the likes on this comment at 420
@jaymo99193 жыл бұрын
I find using mass in grams to be imprecise, switched to nanograms and never looked back.
@walterbrunswick3 жыл бұрын
decided to skip milligrams altogether huh bold of you
@PresidentFunnyValentine3 жыл бұрын
Rookie move. I threatened companies to package the ingredients I need as it is required. Boy that talk with Nestlé sure was a gun one
@aleph67073 жыл бұрын
Weak af, I only use eV to measure stuff
@zackkertzman77093 жыл бұрын
Gonna need about 10^35 eV worth of flour for this recipe, assuming we're in an inertial reference frame...
@PacesIII3 жыл бұрын
I've been using picograms as far back as I remember. Sometimes I even find it necessary to cut flour particles into just the right pieces just to keep the precision.
@Jackmjedi3 жыл бұрын
Anyone else seeing some weird flickering on some of the scenes and transitions? Edit: also some glitching around 11:20
@TheVercci3 жыл бұрын
Last video I asked if it was the ad website fucking up. This time it's really obvious.
@knight90153 жыл бұрын
You are not alone. It is in the video
@IngloriousBastard13373 жыл бұрын
It's just the simulation slowly crackling and glitching because It has to simulate too many people sitting in their underwear at home due to the new Covid-19 Seasonal Expansion. It should have only lasted 2-3 Months but as usual there were many griefers and trolls so it got kinda extended. Nothing to worry about tho, we are working on several bug fixes so the system wont overload and glitch. Sincerely yours -Pfizer-BioNTech
@micheldumas54363 жыл бұрын
It's an Arg
@TriglycerideBeware3 жыл бұрын
3:45 was the first place I noticed it. There are some single-frame cuts to previous shots
@Seritias3 жыл бұрын
Even as a metric user, I'm mostly fine with recipes that use volume measurements, but the only one I actually hate is a "stick of butter". Since a butter doesn't come in sticks here, it's super hard to convert - a stick is a volume measurement, but if I need cold butter, I can't just melt it down to measure the volume.
@gabyrivera89263 жыл бұрын
Omg yes, via exposure i know how to make it work but grams is so much better with sticky substances, butter and easily compressible dry ingredients
@southsouthsouthside3 жыл бұрын
a US stick is 113gr and that's half a cup, had to look it up because imperial is dumb as shit
@Orynae3 жыл бұрын
"a stick of butter" works great in the US because it's a standard size, even tablespoons of butter are easy because they're marked on the package. Then I moved to Europe and had to look up weight conversions to make my recipes work with foreign butter packages... Cause yeah, you can't just pour the cold butter in a measuring cup. Every time: google, how much does this much butter weigh? Ok, now google, how much is that in grams? I still have my cups-and-spoons measuring tools, so the rest of the recipe doesn't need translation, but it just doesn't work with butter XD
@ninjacell29993 жыл бұрын
"tablespoons of butter" is even worse
@hattree3 жыл бұрын
A stick of butter is 1/2 cup, 4 oz by weight or volume, or if you must have it 113g.
@lynmasters6673 жыл бұрын
I'm an Australian and the cup thing drives me nuts. A cup of broccoli depends on how small I cut the trees. One health guru talks of cups of leafy greens. How tightly packed make a whole lot of difference. It really depends on what you are weighing.
@derekfurst6233 Жыл бұрын
But you can't be wrong when measuring stuff like this. Amounts are the most necessary for mixtures, liquid, powdered solids. Just put as much broccoli as you want to eat...
@dzinypinydoroviny Жыл бұрын
Similarly I was taken aback by "three quarters of a cup of diced onion". Like, yeah, let me grab my jar of diced onions and measure out three quarters of a cup.
@thepastarat Жыл бұрын
@@dzinypinydoroviny Jar of diced onions?? Just cut up fresh however much you want in the dish. It's easy enough to visualize three quarters of a cup, so use that as reference and adjust to your taste.
@MooSaidChicken11 ай бұрын
This is what he is referring to towards the end when talking about robotic thinking, and being too precise. Will a half cup in either direction ruin the dish? How much broccoli do YOU want in your dish? I see where you're coming from in a counting calories or dietary perspective though.
@ouravantgarde7 ай бұрын
youre proving adam right about robotic thinking. if a recipe says a cup of broccoli, its just giving an idea of what the broccoli to non-broccoli ratio is: *the person making the recipe didnt know either, thats the point* just use as much broccoli as you want, learn to cook
@sillybilly47103 жыл бұрын
Idk, I find measuring by weight in baking much faster than using measurements as flour compacts differently and I don’t need to perfectly level each cup of flour.
@lilbatz3 жыл бұрын
Baking is so so much easier weighing. I get more consistent results, and less waste weighing out the ingredients. I'm glad KZbinrs are starting to out more recipes with weight measurements.
@Tannhauser423 жыл бұрын
This. As soon as I got a kitchen scale, saw that the flour bag said 1/4 cup = 30g, I was sold on weighing my flour instead of using cups to measure it.
@zuthalsoraniz67643 жыл бұрын
Also, to get correct ratios, if you bake anything using eggs, you kinda have to scale the other ingredient amounts to the amount of eggs - "two eggs" might be anywhere from 100 to 140 grams or so of egg, depending on their size (and no, I am not going to go out and buy a specific size of egg specifically for a recipe), and measuring out 226 g of flour is just as easy as measuring out 240 g of flour, while measuring 1.88 cups of flour is a lot harder than measuring out 2 cups of flour.
@itsyaboiguzma23253 жыл бұрын
My grandma always measured everything by weight and i pick up that habit to, it never occured to me why she did that until i asked her what she did for a living when she was my age. She was the proud owner of a bakery, and she always measured things by weight because that way the bread always came the way she wanted, and when account minor differences on a comercial level between what you get in volume and what you get in grams, differences add up quickly. These days i do things by weight mostly out force of habit.
@Warlock8ZERO3 жыл бұрын
Volume basically means you need to know the ingredients you're working with and can't judge it by unknown factors, what kind of flour, how dense is it, etc. With weight, it doesn't matter how much air is in the flour because air weighs nothing on a scale, it will always be the same amount.
@mellie41742 жыл бұрын
Yes!!!!
@rafaelviola79242 жыл бұрын
That's only partially right. Flour also takes in water from the air when it's humid, so it won't always be the exact same amount.
@99temporal2 жыл бұрын
Trapped air does interfere with measurements (it's very little, though)
@Jonathan-A.C.2 жыл бұрын
There are more factors to that though, and with volume, it’s still easier to just constantly add more to whatever based on how the food is doing
@misterkite2 жыл бұрын
Move to a place like Arizona with 5% humidity and discover that your recipes now call for too much flour if you measure it by weight.
@MichaelCarrPilot3 жыл бұрын
0:29 missed opportunity to say “5, maybe 6, depending on how you measure it.”
@yahyashaikh71513 жыл бұрын
Damn boi
@physicalzeppelin23263 жыл бұрын
Awaiting the Ethan Chlebowski rebuttal in about a week or two from now. “Why I measure with weight and not by volume”
@vladg123 жыл бұрын
I personally need one single argument, which Adam has pointed out - different product treatment (like a finer grind vs a coarser grind) can completely throw off volumetric measurement. Weight stays the same (though if I'm ever in space I'll have to remember to bring a measuring cup). Though this is more of a "philosophical" stance since I eyeball the fuck out of my food. And if I do measure, I generally don't care about a few grams one way or another. I like having the option of high precision even if I rarely use it. Huh.. I guess I get the gun owner argument now...
@user-he1ce9fs3l3 жыл бұрын
Ethan has made a video on cooking with scales.
@spicemasterii67753 жыл бұрын
Hahaha Ethan likes to ride coat tails IMO so sounds about right.
@bilelsouid3 жыл бұрын
He would be absolutely right.
@DrRiq3 жыл бұрын
ETHAN WE SEE YOU READIN THIS HERE -- YOOO YOUR CHICKEN KARAHI RECIPE WAS STRAIGHT FIRE
@jiminibimini3 жыл бұрын
When adding to a mixing bowl, you don't need to remove the bowl. Get some scales that go below zero. Zero the flour on the scales and then measure what comes out. If your scales don't go below zero, place on scales and do a bit of subtraction.
@Pickle-oh2 жыл бұрын
holy shit thats actually kind of brilliant it might take a few seconds longer as you gotta wait for the scale to settle on a weight every time you put your flour container back on, but its such an elegant solution nonetheless
@whisperpone2 жыл бұрын
that's also called taking the tare weight, just in case you wanted a term for what this process is, and it's invaluable in the sciences since you can't even be sure that the top of the scale weighs the same on a given day for smaller measurements
@alexchernikov62762 жыл бұрын
boom, cup and spoon enjoyers roasted
@finneh61453 жыл бұрын
For me it's simple. I eyeball when cooking and weigh when baking. In baking, small differences can have a huge impact and you can't adjust as you go. And yes, I am one of those people who bought a "jewelers scale" for their yeast etc.
@sentjojo3 жыл бұрын
I feel confident when cooking because I don't think being precise is important. I struggle with baking because precision is important
@mcbrodz16633 жыл бұрын
The amount of yeast doesn’t need to be precise. If you add too much of something just add more stuff
@kindlin3 жыл бұрын
@@sentjojo I cook most things quite well (tho I can still mess up meats if I don't pay attension), but baking, gehdadaheer.
@kindlin3 жыл бұрын
@@SimonWoodburyForget Based on your comments just now, it doesn't really matter how much years you put in. "they barely save any time at all" for a difference of "10 to 20x more yeast". You also say that it's extremely important. Anyways, I don't bake, and when I do bake, it's some box thing that's hard to mess up.
@rocketchips21643 жыл бұрын
Switching to weight to make bread has vastly improved my bread in quality and consistency between bakes
@galartsi3 жыл бұрын
Regarding the "dirty dishes" reasoning: You can weigh the whole container, with everything in it, and take out as much as you need. Scales shows negative numbers as well. So even if the mixer is on, you can use a spoon to tage out the flour and add as you need... no dirty dishes.
@thisisit67583 жыл бұрын
Meanwhile when you use cups and tablespoons youve got a load of new dishes. Yeah adam's argument is just bad in this video imo.
@gabrielmarciu693 жыл бұрын
+
@matthewzaloudek3 жыл бұрын
@@thisisit6758 Did you watch the whole thing? He points out that he just uses one cup and one spoon if he can when he cooks and if he needs something like half a cup, he just fills the cup halfway. There is a great video by Internet Shaquille called "how to measure ingredients by eye" that goes over some good ways to do this if you're bad at eyeballing. I don't see in what world a cup and spoon is "loads of dishes" and I would certainly rather wash a cup in spoon than a large mixing bowl, but both would take all of 20 seconds so who even cares?
@jakubzbroda3 жыл бұрын
Typical Adam. He has strong opinion on something and then tries to find a theory that goes along well with it.
@whatisthisayoutubechannel3 жыл бұрын
@@thisisit6758 Tbh most of Adam's arguments about how home methods are totally fine and better than professional methods are straight garbage, like how "you don't need knife skills" because it won't save you that much time (practicing knife skills wastes no time either since you can do it whenever you cook, and saving a few minutes every day most definitely adds up over the long run, not to mention it makes cooking for a large party a lot more tolerable), or yelling at people for wanting their macarons to look nice (if I'm making macarons, it's *because* I want to eat something pretty you dumbass). I call it his "anti-snob" series. Their sole purpose is to let the viewers feel better about themselves, reassure them they don't have to change the way they've always done things and psychologically strike back at imaginary snobs who look down at them.
@CriticalDepth3 жыл бұрын
I swear, some days Adam just wakes up and is like "I want to watch the KZbin world burn."
@Default783343 жыл бұрын
The other thing about baking recipes and weight is whether or not the recipe writer assumes their audience will be using a mixer or hand kneading. For hand-kneaded recipes, the amount of flour is typically too small because of the assumption that you will put the dough on a floured surface to knead and will incorporate more flour into the dough in the process. Edit: If you ever want to have a fun time, check out recipes on the Chinese sites like Xinshipu, Meishij, or Xiachufang. Half of the ingredients have the quantity listed as "appropriate amount" (适量), so you'll see recipes that go something like: Pork: 500g Soy sauce: 1 spoonful Shaoxing wine: Appropriate Amount Sugar: Appropriate Amount Garlic: Appropriate Amount Ginger: Appropriate Amount Salt: Appropriate Amount White Pepper: Appropriate Amount Green Onion: Appropriate Amount
@riccardoorlando22623 жыл бұрын
In Italy we do the same. We use grams, but it's always multiples of 100 grams, and all condiments and small-amount ingredients are listed as q.b. which stands for "quanto basta", or literally "however much is enough". In fact, we rarely use the word "gram" when cooking, instead using "etto" or "etti" which is one hectogram, or 100grams.
@chuckclare43063 жыл бұрын
Lol that must be a pain if you can’t cook
@riccardoorlando22623 жыл бұрын
@@chuckclare4306 TBH, it really resonates with Adam's comment about forcing you to develop a taste. Following the recipe is guaranteed to give something edible, but if you'd like it tasty, you've gotta improvise with spices. It actually made me use significantly less salt and oil in seasonings.
@chuckclare43063 жыл бұрын
@@riccardoorlando2262 yeah I tend to not use measurements either and go off taste and what I like, but for beginners it can be really confusing
@jorionedwards3 жыл бұрын
Sounds like how I usually cook. Like who actually measures spices?
@Ruxinator3 жыл бұрын
"I like myself. I know myself... I fear the unknown." is going to be a great out-of-context clip.
@rin_etoware_29893 жыл бұрын
Adam Ragusea clip or H.P. Lovecraft quote?
@DrRiq3 жыл бұрын
it's poetry regardless of context
@Juhpol3 жыл бұрын
It is quite common for recipes to have volume measurements in Finland too, and at least some other European countries. The unit most commonly used is not ml, but dl.
@qwertyTRiG2 жыл бұрын
Whereas I'd guess that most people in Ireland have no idea what a dl is. Funny how different countries can be.
@EebstertheGreat2 жыл бұрын
@@qwertyTRiG Some European countries also measure volumes of beverages in cl instead of ml, which also surprised me. But I guess with metric, it's all sort of the same.
@ParaspriteHugger3 жыл бұрын
The problem with "to taste" is that it is both used with stuff that I can't taste at the current step (e.g. pancake batter) or for food that I never ate before, got curious about, try for the first time and have no clue how the end result is supposed to taste like (e.g. pancakes, yes, I am European and your pancake 101 was the very first pancake I ever tasted). As you have a spoon and a cup, I have two balances in my kitchen: one that goes up to 15 kg with a resolution of 5 g, and one that goes to 1 kg with a resolution of 0,05 g (which is admittedly not something most people around here have). When it comes to the issue of getting many bowls dirty: I usually just do a reverse weighing: put the container on the balance, zero it and scoop out stuff until the balance shows the right amount as a negative.
@krankarvolund77713 жыл бұрын
I personally love to taste pancake batter (or rather crepe batter, I never made pancakes XD), but I'm probably weird ^^ But I agree that seasoning meat by taste especially steacks is hard ^^
@klte13 жыл бұрын
@@krankarvolund7771 Yum yum, raw flour and eggs.
@ParaspriteHugger3 жыл бұрын
@@krankarvolund7771 with the eggs from backyard chicken in my neighborhood that'd be too much of a salmonella risk to me.
@krankarvolund77713 жыл бұрын
@@klte1 Yeah ^^ Well, I won't eat the whole thing, but a little to taste is good ^^
@boldizsarballay77153 жыл бұрын
@@ParaspriteHugger how else would you know if its salty enough?
@tux0beliver3 жыл бұрын
With a scale, I only need to measure within whatever container I have handy (with the tare weight written on the things I use). I don't feel like cleaning my little cups and spoons when I change between measuring different solids and liquids
@whatisthisayoutubechannel3 жыл бұрын
Yep. Wiping down a measuring spoon every time I need a different spice is painful, but with a scale I can simply dump everything into the same bowl and watch the weight. With very few exceptions (like measuring rice or water), using a scale is more convenient, more accurate and just all around better. The whole "there is no objectively correct way to cook things" argument is just hilariously bad - sure, you **can** cook a steak in a microwave if you want to and it'll be edible, but I'm not going to pretend it's as good as using a grill in order to prove I'm not "elitist" or whatever.
@AelwynMr3 жыл бұрын
Yeah. Italian here. I cook many recipes from American people, and I was bored having to convert everything from volume to weight everytime. So I bought a set of measuring cups and spoons and, let me tell you, it's much less convenient than a modern scale, with all the washing!
@thothrax56213 жыл бұрын
That's a valid point, but it's disregarding a large part of his thesis, you don't NEED to be so precise that a little extra yeast left over in your spoon is going to mean that your going to miscalculate your sugar. Don't wash your tools in between, either just go with the flow, have a towel to quickly wipe it down, or do your measuring in an order that means the "dirtiest" ingredient (like honey or something that actually leaves behind a serious residue) goes in last. You can even just have one set of tools for dry ingredients and one for wet so that you can avoid any cross contamination.
@nemi-ru53183 жыл бұрын
@@thothrax5621 that is less convenient than dumping everything in one container on a scale. The mental gymnastics to figure out an order alone...
@crystalwolcott47443 жыл бұрын
you dont have to clean the cup and spoon before you measure the next item most of the time. lol.
@Respectable_Username3 жыл бұрын
On point 5 (I think), the problem with this is that it takes a level of experience to know what something _should_ look like. As somebody who was never really taught how to cook and yet now has to feed myself, I am going to tend to cook according to the recipe because the verbiage means nothing to me. (I still cook by volume though, but that's again an inexperience thing and buying a pyrex cup was easier than buying a scale)
@user-ug5xr2gb6j2 жыл бұрын
You definitely learn it. My grandfather had some basic cooking skills when he was out on his own, but he really learned after he and my grandmother got married because he was a teacher so he got off work much earlier than she did. He picked up some cookbooks and learned some techniques while following instructions. I, and my mom and aunt, remember him cooking from scratch and eyeballing most of our lives.
@AdamBuker2 жыл бұрын
@Apsoy Pike You also need to add 20, yes 20, eggs to that outfit.
@kingcharlie5909 Жыл бұрын
Exactly! Recipes with weights very much needed for someone who's not experienced with cooking, since they don't know how things should look like if cooking done right. Experienced cooks doesn't need to be precise for that matter, they can just go on until they see desired result. And that's why weight is better: cups, tablespoons and such tend to be quite different in volume, if you don't have special measuring scoops like Adam. I have two different tea spoons, and one is two times bigger than the second.
@nicholasgraves3149 Жыл бұрын
When cooking at home, the difference in a cup of flour and whatever an equivalent weight of flour should is going to be negligible. When cooking for scale, or when creating recipes that need to be replicated the exact same way by 15 different chefs at your establishment so the customer always gets the thing they are expecting, then being incredibly precise makes a lot more sense. I often measure by weight if it is easy to do. Place the big mixing bowl on the scale, zero it, and just hit zero again after adding each ingredient in. I also measure by volume when it is easy to do. Sauce in a hot pan on the stove needs a tablespoon of sugar? It is way easier to just scoop that in by volume than to try to meticulously measure however many grams of sugar that is supposed to be, and the difference between the tablespoon and the weighed sugar is going to be imperceptible.
@bosstowndynamics54884 ай бұрын
@@kingcharlie5909 "if you don't have special measuring scoops like Adam" those aren't special scoops, those are incredibly basic measuring spoons and cups. A modern kitchen scale is very cheap, but it's still a lot more expensive than a cheap set of measuring cups and spoons, and as Adam said you can do everything with just one of each (and I say this as someone who uses weight based measures more than volume based measures)
@ronanmcintyre3 жыл бұрын
If you're weighing things as they go into the bowl/pot, you don't have to clean the scales; if you weigh with volume, you do have to clean a measuring cup/spoon/whatever. As long as the scales is easily accessible in the kitchen, I'm gonna pick it every time (or eyeballing with certain ingredients if I'm sure of what I'm doing) But good arguments, I don't wanna yuck anyone's yum
@chestersnap3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I do way less clean up since switching to weighing even if I'm using something to spoon out ingredients. I only use my dishwasher once or twice a week so if I think I'll need a measuring cup or spoon again then I have to hand wash it. Spoons used to just spoon out ingredients into a scale can just be tossed into the dishwasher, though. And if you plan it right you can use the same spoon for just about every ingredient
@rhekman3 жыл бұрын
That's not universal. There are plenty of times when I can measure a three teaspoons of baking powder, then don't need to wash the spoon for a 2 teaspoons of vanilla extract. Then other times where I measure out 6 oz of meat on a scale, then need to wash meat residue and juice off the scale before the next ingredient.
@Ross5163 жыл бұрын
Depending on what you're using, 'cleaning' can just be giving a quick wipe with a paper towel tho
@feenyxblue3 жыл бұрын
You've... never accidentally dumped too much of an ingredient in your bowl???
@woodonfire74063 жыл бұрын
@@feenyxblue if you can used two bowls, one for measuring and the other for putting all the ingredients after measuring with the scale, then it is not possible to fuck it up
@cedricl82153 жыл бұрын
hi adam. i live in northern europé, and while you can get dry yeasts here, everyone uses, and every recipe calls for fresh yeast. maybe it would be interesting to do a video comparing dry yeast, active dry yeast and fresh yeast?
@TheCrathes3 жыл бұрын
Wait. Where in northern Europe? I'm from Norway, and recipes with fresh yeast are few and far between here.
@krankarvolund77713 жыл бұрын
And also explain what is the difference, I have no idea at all XD
@cedricl82153 жыл бұрын
@@TheCrathes Sweden, it's all fresh here.
@awaitingconfirmation84063 жыл бұрын
Weird, in my country both forms of yeast are used but I did notice the elderly mostly use fresh yeast. Personally I like the dry stuff better because is more convenient and stays good for quite a long time. I'm also from Europe
@TheCrathes3 жыл бұрын
@@cedricl8215 Interesting, wonder why it's so different
@thomasgortemaker3 жыл бұрын
I totally agree with point 5,although I am from Europe. I've always been very precise with the things I do, and especially when I started cooking, I hated it, I didn't do it to precisely the right second or gram etc. It was when I started to let loose all those little details I started to be more fluent when cooking, fixing problems or creating new ideas on the spot. Because I've been letting go of the precise measurements I've really started to enjoy myself when cooking, it has become one of my favourite things to do as a hobby.
@The_Gallowglass2 жыл бұрын
Leave precision to rocket science. ( :
@ownedpilot43243 жыл бұрын
Chinese moms and Boris would tell you: food tastes best when you have no idea how much ingredient you had put in.
@felipedias57703 жыл бұрын
And Boris, love it.
@chaoticgood89963 жыл бұрын
Cheeki Breeki
@ShinningCrys3 жыл бұрын
its always something that sounds like "just put how much you think is right" ".... but mom, now much is right?"
@marcow2463 жыл бұрын
As boris would say "Just remember to add bay leaf, or maybe two?"
@cookiecraze13103 жыл бұрын
*hardbass plays in the distance*
@nitramczi3 жыл бұрын
I am from metric world and I appretiate this video. It goes through whats good, why its good and the biases we came to terms with. Good one Adam! Also I gotta mention that from the time I watch you I started to keep bottle of cooking white wine in the fridge. It has been working great.
@justinhalsall40773 жыл бұрын
“Do what feels right” only works if you can build on your previous experiences.
@krombopulos_michael3 жыл бұрын
Exactly. I can do this now after I feel like I'm confident enough that I'd call myself an intermediate cook, but if you have no frame of reference then you don't know what "feels" right.
@JoeTaber3 жыл бұрын
Give yourself space to experiment.
@TheJJluv1233 жыл бұрын
While your statement is true, I have never been able to get good bread by following the exact recipe. The only way to learn bread baking is by doing it until you learn what feels right.
@jon98283 жыл бұрын
Correct! Do it wrong however many times with something that won't kill you if done incorrectly. That way you can learn what the correct execution is.
@antiantipoda3 жыл бұрын
Failing is also an experience! I have cooked my share of inedible things while learning and sometimes even after cooking for a few decades. Failure is a teachable moment, it teaches you what not to do.
@UnwittingSweater3 жыл бұрын
I was born into the volume... Moulded by it.
@DrRiq3 жыл бұрын
hehehe
@metalfury423 жыл бұрын
Are you a liquid
@memetheater_3 жыл бұрын
underrated comment
@waaahl3 жыл бұрын
"I didn't see metric until I was already a man, by then it was nothing to me but blinding!”
@WithinMonster3 жыл бұрын
As a french person : Most of home cooks here don't use a kitchen scale that much, Measuring glass that mesure "weight" of several different ingredients are a much more common occurence. Cooking by weight is usually restricted to baking or for cooking enthousiast. (Recipes are mostly writen in grams tho. But a lot of people measure thoses grams by volume.)
@jadielessa98583 жыл бұрын
Same here in Brasil
@pedroff_13 жыл бұрын
Similarly, in Brazil, most of the time I see people using volume, although generally using the cups + spoons system. Weight measurements usually only come as additional information, but many recipes lack it
@southsouthsouthside3 жыл бұрын
That's almost everywhere. Adam is on crack if he thinks people take out their scales to measeure how much grams of onions they want to use
@ryanhollist39503 жыл бұрын
What completely sold me on using weight over volume is the simplicity of ratios, especially when baking. I don't have to look up a recipe for a basic cake, basic short bread, or even macarons anymore to make sure I'm remembering the amounts of each ingredient properly.
@matthewparker92763 жыл бұрын
That's fair enough, I find the same thing with volume, the ratios are just simpler to remember.
@commenter59013 жыл бұрын
I have never used weight (whenever I get a recipe that has weight, I google it to find out what the volume is because I don't have a kitchen scale). But I only use measurements the first time I make a recipe. After that, I just take my flour and pour it straight into the bowl so it fills the approximate amount that I need it, I add milk or water till it feels right, I salt it according to what seems would work for the amount of food. All I need is the general list of ingredients (I do lots of substitutions because of food allergies so my dishes end up nothing like the original anyway.) But if I'm watching a cooking video and they are only using weight, I will ignore what they are saying and just watch what they are doing so I can see what that amount of the ingredient looks like. I'm sure that, if you exclusively use weight, you can soon see how much something weighs just by looking at it and you don't actually have to use a scale, but I'm not going to buy a scale just so I can learn that technique. Besides, I have hyperosmia (a very good sense of smell) and if my husband has a dish that he loves, I can usually just smell it and replicate it, even if I can't eat it.
@mordekaihorowitz2 жыл бұрын
The same argument can be made for volume; ratios aren't exclusive to weight.
@ryanhollist39502 жыл бұрын
The kinds of ratios I'm talking about is if you go by weight, a basic cake recipe is equal parts egg, butter, sugar, and flour. Want a basic short bread cookie? 3 parts flour, 2 parts butter, 1 part sugar. Some other things are a little more complex, but still drastically more simple if going by weight rather than volume. If you go by volume the ratios are all over the place.
@SirDragonClaw3 жыл бұрын
Great video, but I would like to add that cheap glass-topped scales are on amazon for less than $25 which lets you place your hot pan directly on it and they also display 0.1-gram increments with surprisingly decent accuracy. The only downside to this newer wave of scales is that they tend to only weigh up to 3-4kg, instead of the 5-10kg of other kitchen scales.
@Great_Olaf53 жыл бұрын
Which is great. I'm just not willing to drop $25 on something I'll use somewhere on the order of two or three times a year.
@lenab52662 жыл бұрын
@@Great_Olaf5 Well, if you start cooking and baking mostly by weight and not by volume you will use this scale very often. For me it would be quite useless to buy a set of measuring cups unless i would start cooking recepies based on them.
@Great_Olaf52 жыл бұрын
@@lenab5266 And I can recognize that, however that situation is not my own.
@EebstertheGreat2 жыл бұрын
When I have bought cheap food scales (less than about $35-40), they are horribly inaccurate with small weights. Like, if I don't calibrate it for a few weeks, suddenly I'll stick a clean nickel on there and it will tell me it weighs 5.4 g or 4.7 g or whatever. Like, really really bad. Maybe I just haven't found the good cheap ones.
@reidprichard2 жыл бұрын
@Apsoy Pike "weighing" as in "the max weight they can measure"
@ginnipig3 жыл бұрын
Give me everything in grams and I'll be happy. I got a good, 5kg 0.1g ±0.3g, scale and I'll never let it go. I use it for cooking, baking, fitness powders (those little scops are garbage), calorie counting when on deficit, ect.
@dananskidolf3 жыл бұрын
Yeah those scoops are stupid. "24 carefully levelled scoops of powder..." Screw that, my blender has a built in weighing scale.
@Beenisweenis3 жыл бұрын
@@dananskidolf why would you use 24 spoons. At that point you use a cup.
@dananskidolf3 жыл бұрын
@@Beenisweenis Certainly it would've made sense for them to include a bigger scoop, but I suppose this was as big as can comfortably go down into the tin. I don't know why the tins are so small.. Maybe it's so you don't avalanche too much while pouring it..
@Abar_ID3 жыл бұрын
it's fun to watch multiple cooking channel like Adam, Ethan, Andrew (Babish), chef John and Kenji. The conflict between all of them give me liberty to take what from who, there is no objectively right way to cook but there are subjective ways to cook. All of these channels give me knowledge on one thing in multiple prospective. I can use the one i like the most and i can keep the one i like the least just in case i need them later.
@kevinpenfold11163 жыл бұрын
Would someone mind making a compilation video of “every thesis idea Adam has ever given?” Thanks!
@NishithThakkar3 жыл бұрын
A playlist would be better as it keeps the revenue stream to the Original Creator.
@kevinpenfold11163 жыл бұрын
@@NishithThakkar that would kind of defeat the point though. That’s like saying sports center shouldn’t show the highlights they should just re-air the game. The point is that he has said “if you’re a student looking for a thesis” a lot, so it would be funny to see all of them together in one compilation video. It would not, however, be funny to watch 67 consecutive minutes of Adam videos in which he happens to mentions that once. Maybe you aren’t familiar with compilation videos? There is a good one about Adam but he is being terrible at cooking, you should check it out.
@jakeb67033 жыл бұрын
personally I measure how much coffee I drink by BPM
@jonjohns81453 жыл бұрын
[Heart]Beats Per Minute? Blood Pressure Medication? 😆
@maxsmith81963 жыл бұрын
Underrated post
@katrijndekeersmaecker19042 жыл бұрын
As a European used to measuring by weight, I bought myself a set of measuring cups and spoons some years ago to make American recipes I found online, and have generally found it about as convenient. I did get very frustrated by one recipe a few weeks ago though, because it included the directions to use one cup of mashed banana, without even an estimation as to how many bananas that might take. How do you even measure that? Mash the banana in the cup? Mash a bunch of bananas and scoop? That would be so much easyer to weigh. The same goes for a cup of diced vegetables of any sort, but I thought the banana took the cake.
@xanthik62053 жыл бұрын
I'm from Europe, Finland to be exact, all our recipes say "1dl flour, 2dl sugar" etc. we dont use grams except for butter (our butter packages have lines showing how much is how many grams so its easy to cut the butter and melt exact amount)
@yahyashaikh71513 жыл бұрын
Bruh I once bought some cream that was imported from france and then I saw this dl thing on it . Back than I didnt know what it was bcuz I didnt know the short form for decilitre. Sheesh was I stressed .
@Pat1100-z7u3 жыл бұрын
Same in Sweden
@batistajericho42813 жыл бұрын
The same from Sweden, all Nordic countries have the same measure when baking or cooking food. Sometimes we use weight but often only when volumes is not possible.
@holokyttaja54763 жыл бұрын
@@yahyashaikh7151 Stressed? That is the most bizarre thing to be stressed about
@galier23 жыл бұрын
Yeah, in France we use all the factor prefixe (except da deca), l, dl, cl, ml and hl (as said no dal). m, dm, cm, mm, km, dam (damn it, we use decametre in construction). kg g mg (ok, i've never seen hg, dag, dg and cg).
@hussainattai46383 жыл бұрын
Adam: “Most of these people who believe that there is one objectively superior culture just happen to be born into that culture” Weebs: “This is where you’re wrong kiddo”
@SyxxPunk3 жыл бұрын
Teaboos and Westaboos also fall under that.
@titan25403 жыл бұрын
a true weeb is happy they dont live in japan
@matthewzaloudek3 жыл бұрын
Japanese culture seems so neat and so fucked up at the same time.
@anything89533 жыл бұрын
Nothing personal kid...
@cloudkitt2 ай бұрын
😂
@HKKetoRecipes3 жыл бұрын
Thin ice buddy, thin ice. But love ya either way!
@ludwig40293 жыл бұрын
noice a comment from a verified user
@JBergmansson3 жыл бұрын
In Sweden, recipes for home cooks absolutely tell you flour measurements in volume, mainly dl. Thats dl = decilitre = 100 ml.
@jaylindelycke67273 жыл бұрын
I rewrite my recipes to pure ml instead of the Swedish traditional scoops dl (100 ml), tsk (5 ml), msk (15 ml), kryddmått (1 ml). I find it easier to multiply or divide the batch and also to eyeball measurements with other scoops ie using half-ish a dl for 45 ml. It also guards against misreading tsk as msk and getting very spicy meatballs! And to the point of the video: it's much quicker to scoop than to weigh!
@man44373 жыл бұрын
Yeah Finland too. Which makes sense
@JBergmansson3 жыл бұрын
@@jaylindelycke6727 I get you! But I also really like recipes that I can make with only a dl measure.
@uroborous16603 жыл бұрын
Same in Denmark
@espenschjelderup4263 жыл бұрын
Same here in Norway.
@blookarakal44173 жыл бұрын
Adam, I want to add that in Europe, small quantities and liquids are usually measured in volume, but we are talking about tea or table spoon sized. Nobody measures in cups.
@zorileyj.7963 жыл бұрын
Right! Thats true
@GoogelyeyesSaysHej3 жыл бұрын
We use dl measurements here in sweden! All measurement kits have spice spoon, teaspoon, table spoon, 0.5 dl and dl
@LevisL953 жыл бұрын
Yeah, it seems to vary depending on country. The measurement kits GoogelyeyesSaysHej mentioned are very common in Finland too and many recipes use deciliters for flour etc. And you can get some bigger metal measurement cups that are 2,5 or 5 dl, but they are so big, that I'd use them mainly for liquids.
@GreenBlueWalkthrough3 жыл бұрын
I mean you use Liters the standard family sized soda bottle how is that difernt then cups?
@MrH2O19983 жыл бұрын
"Volume can be more accurate than weight sometimes but inaccuracy can make you think for yourself".
@erikgranqvist36803 жыл бұрын
More flour: when baking, exactly how much flour you need in a dough will depend somewhat of how dry the flour is. And that, in turn, can depend on how long it has been sitting on the shelf, how the mill has treated the grain, the moisture content in the ambient air etcetera etcetera.
@fredjones56983 жыл бұрын
bread is so complicated, except it isnt at the same time. It makes you wonder how the lay person could bake bread every day on the north American frontier (i understand people in other places bake bread obviously, but this is the only kinda culture i am 100% on).
@mikezimmermann893 жыл бұрын
@@fredjones5698 I wouldn’t say bread is complicated, but it DOES require that you pay attention and maybe take notes. If you do it enough, even that becomes second nature as all of your senses start to participate and you learn what ‘feels’ right.
@Parazeta3 жыл бұрын
What’s so frustrating for Europeans cooking US recipes is that a lot of us don’t own those measuring cups/spoons. So what I always have to do is to convert recipes to weights just to find out that nobody on the internet can tell me how much half a teaspoon of instant yeast weighs. That’s why it’s much appreciated when content creators include weights (measured by themselves, not just converted)
@nonyobussiness34403 жыл бұрын
Buy them on Amazon
@cyan.63993 жыл бұрын
i cant put my finger on how but the above reply feels like a dick move
@LaggyLuke3 жыл бұрын
@@cyan.6399 it's because I already have my kitchen full with perfectly fine bowls etc not gonna replace my stuff
@andrewpackham82363 жыл бұрын
If you have a measuring jug you can mark the cups on the side with a sharpie: for one cup you would put a mark at 237ml
@AndyTheWatchdog3 жыл бұрын
I get this 😅 the most reliable sites I've found are mass sellers of the product in question and scientific sites like EngineeringClick's article on milk density or FAO/INFOODS Density Database version 2.0 or in cases like salt and white sugar that can weight differently between companies- looking at the back of the package :P Good luck mate! ^-^
@lauriethomasmd37603 жыл бұрын
Flour has so much variability because of the air in it. I think flour measurement would be more consistent by weight than volume. The reason we used to be told to sift flour before measuring it was to try to make its ratio of flour to air more consistent. You take the air out of the equation if you measure flour by weight. The same logic applies to why we are told to measure “packed” brown sugar. We pack it to push the excess air out. Measuring by weight eliminates the air.
@katrijndekeersmaecker19042 жыл бұрын
European recepes that give measurements by weight actually tend to tell you to sift the flour too. I don't usually bother, but it's supposed to prevent clumps and make mixing things consistently easyer.
@mprobins Жыл бұрын
@@katrijndekeersmaecker1904, sifting also removes contaminates from the flour. This obviously depends on the quality of flour you are using (which has improved substantially over time).
@mrgallbladder3 жыл бұрын
All of this comes down to one factor, which is called "depends on what you're cooking"
@wesleywalker47093 жыл бұрын
Most cooking (not baking) is more 'art' and doesn't need exact measurements. Baking, on the other hand, is more chemistry and therefore needs more exact measurements for repeatability.
@Lem0nwtf3 жыл бұрын
@@wesleywalker4709 Baking also depends on the humidity of the air, your oven, your flour, your salt, and a million other factors that you have to compensate for with touch feel and taste. So as long as it's in the general ball park with larger measurements, it will work out the exact same with volume or weight.
@broutefoin3 жыл бұрын
@@wesleywalker4709 i measure everything by weight and dont use recipes because calorie tracking becomes practically useless if you go by volume.
@TooSmalley3 жыл бұрын
I worked in a commercial prepared food processor. Everything was done by weight with scales that had to be checked regularly, I now measure most things by weight. I’ve seen the light measuring by weight is the way to go.
@randomnobody6603 жыл бұрын
The "saving dishes" thing is the exact opposite of my experience. When I tried to cook some egg tarts for example, I looked up a recipe of cups and tsps. The recipe called for, among other things, water, milk, butter, flour, and cream. All measured in some fraction of a cup. Water is fine because it flows from the pipes and I can use a "dirtied" cup for that. How am I to handle the rest thou? I only had 1 set of measuring devices, so in the end I had to repeatedly wash and dry my cups and spoons to make all the measurements. It's either that or pour from the container into the measuring device and risk spilling a whole bunch, which I decided was not worth while and also nullified the only potential advantage of "need something to scoop with anyways". The tarts turned out great, and so the second time I made those tarts I took note of how much things weight. The third time I simply prepared 2 bowls (one for the crust and other for the filling) and chucked ingredients in, zero the scale, repeat. It was much easier.
@crackpotfox3 жыл бұрын
Start with the dry stuff. If you have to, wipe it out with a cloth (I typically have a cloth I keep with me for general wiping of things). The wet stuff you will pour into the measuring cup, so it’s ok if it mixes. The milk, cream, and water are all going in the same place, so just leave the residue. Hell, you could use a larger cup and just add all the ingredients to the cup as you go.
@randomnobody6603 жыл бұрын
@@crackpotfox For stuff going to the same place, I could just put the cup on a scale and do the same thing with the upside of zeroing the scale rather than adding in my head for each ingredient. For the dry stuff I suppose you could just wipe with a cloth, but I don't like washing fabric bc it's work and if you don't do it well there's this smell I personally really despise. Instead I just pour from smaller bags and larger ones I leave a normal spoon in. As I type this out I realize I can just leave a measuring spoon in each bag instead but I suppose that'll cost a few more dollars. I guess my personally inconvenience is partially cause by me buying a scale rather than a measuring cup that can hold multiple things (instead I only have a set of measuring spoons that goes up to 1 cup), but on balance I still think the scale is more convenient.
@MaunoKoivistoOfficial3 жыл бұрын
Adam, it's actually super common for millions of Europeans to measure out "100 ml" of flour instead of weighing it. We just call it "1 dl" of flour, because the metric system is cool that way.
@mynoxx013 жыл бұрын
Im living in a small middle europe country and I dont know a single person what uses volume to measure baking ingredients.
@ahumanperson16383 жыл бұрын
@@mynoxx01 I live in a pretty large country and we do it tbh
@krankarvolund77713 жыл бұрын
Honestly, I've never saw "one dl of flour" ^^' Even my measure-glass who is obviously measuring volumes is gradued in weight XD
@vladg123 жыл бұрын
I swear, it is so weird reading how many european countries make proper use of the metric system. Around here you won't see a deca or hexa nothing. We have grams and kilograms. Milliliters and Liters. What, can't count past 100?? What do you need all them complicated divisions for? /s (don't ask about meters and centimeters). As for mass vs volume.. I just checked an old 70s cookbook I have in the house; same page, one recipe called for 500ml of oil, the next called for 1/4 kg. So.. consistency is for suckers?
@jonniboif163 жыл бұрын
We just keep adding stuff until our ancestors nudge our hand gently and tell us "that's enough, child"
@prestonang82163 жыл бұрын
Me, an Asian: *cooks* My entire bloodline: That is enough soy sauce for exactly 2 people.
@zapp3l3 жыл бұрын
As someone born to the metric worl i tend to use weight instead of volume. Sure, many recepies often contain wordings like "a tablespoon" or "a teaspoon", that means we use our regular spoons that'd we use for eating as well. For the sake of precision I bought a set of tablespoons and teaspoons that weigh out the exact standard and I'm pretty happy with it. Whether I use weight or volume depends on whether it is liquid or solid. Liquids can be measured extremly precisly by volume, while by weight solids are often more consistent. You can't rely on weights or volumes for seasoning, in that case I always always always go by taste.
@lsieman653 жыл бұрын
I thought you used “The Glug”
@tonatiuhornelas14723 жыл бұрын
Le glug
@TheRedKnight1013 жыл бұрын
@Ryan Gilmore as the Spanish would say.
@fiatlux88283 жыл бұрын
Sounds pretty German to me. Die Glüg.
@takdudung3 жыл бұрын
@@fiatlux8828 as the German would say.
@mbedj19743 жыл бұрын
you mean "goulag" right ?
@wafelsen3 жыл бұрын
I actually found that a kitchen scale reduced my dishes at least for some things.
@antiantipoda3 жыл бұрын
I use a scale when it's conducive to what I am making - measuring different liquids into a microwave safe bow, and volume for everything that is repeated use - a 1/3 cup measuring cup lives inside my oats jar, a 1/8 teaspoon inside my instant coffee.
@DJstarrfish3 жыл бұрын
I didn't, and now, instead of throwing my dishwasher-safe Pyrex cups in the wash, I have to meticulously clean a piece of electronic equipment so that I don't damage it
@gabtroublemaker3 жыл бұрын
The day I learned that I could weigh ingredients by weighing in the whole container/bag, zeroing the scale and then measure by how much I take away made me also use WAY FEWER DISHES too. Or just measuring lots of things that will go together anyways in the same bowl and just zeroing between ingredients, works like a charm
@Sarah-ic4yu2 жыл бұрын
@@gabtroublemaker how did I not think about this!! Thank you!
@spencerj3 жыл бұрын
This is such a neat style of content. Informational essays that have the density of a scholarly article, but the appeal and flow of a vlog. I love this channel
@sirmorningwood27073 жыл бұрын
I’d stick to weight. Theres a lot of funky intermolecular interactions that go on. Prime example is if you combine 20 mL of water and 50mL of concentrated ethanol, the volume won’t be 70mL. This is due to the way that the molecules arrange themselves, as well as the intermolecular interactions going on between the ethanol and water.
@michaelmarrinan99813 жыл бұрын
Doesnt matter much when im making brownies tho
@almostabeast2403 жыл бұрын
What the heck are you cooking where you combine pure ethanol and water? Diluted moonshine?
@cherecole37013 жыл бұрын
@@mechykb8624 I think he should
@brianross975317 күн бұрын
You measure the volume of each ingredient, not the volume of the mixture
@neil.forrester3 жыл бұрын
The solution to your stand mixer dilemma at 9:16 is that scales also measure negative weight. Put your ingredient container on the scale and measure how much weight you removed from it. This also removes the need for dedicated measuring bowls.
@walterbrunswick3 жыл бұрын
oh yeah because doing servo-type "feedback correction" makes baking so much funner and easier, you know, instead of just specifying e.g. "1 cup of flour"
@wandetta44673 жыл бұрын
When I started using weight for flour I started understanding how the volume looked throughout the whole process. So in that sense it helped me think for myself. When I'm not measuring with the scale I use my hands to grab what I want and it's been turning out pretty good and only getting more intuitive.
@spazzwazzle2 жыл бұрын
But you need a new reference point to build intuition for every new ingredient
@themusicfan96133 жыл бұрын
Adam mentions why I like cooking with weight. consistency. I own one of these jeweller's scales and use it all the time. I'm basically the "in-house chef" tweaking and developing recipes to adjust to my taste and ingredients. The scale is mainly there for documenting what I did the last time cooking a dish and then the next time I know exactly what to put in to get the desired results.
@zelo19963 жыл бұрын
This. cooking and baking by weight makes it easy to consistently replicate dishes. Some people like this for their home cooking.
@yidavv3 жыл бұрын
and that's completely fine. he isn't arguing with you, he just prefers not to do things by weight, and you do.
@CraftsmanOfAwsomenes3 жыл бұрын
@@yidavv The "robotic thinking" point kind of detracts from the idea of it being about preference tbh. Implies measuring by precise numbers somehow negatively impacts your whole outlook on life.
@yidavv3 жыл бұрын
@@CraftsmanOfAwsomenes sure, but towards the end literally says that he likes it probably just cuz he was raised with it. and people don't need to justify the way they cook, let people do their thing. but he is right about the robotic thing. thats just one side of using weights tho, just like themusicfan96 said, he finds enjoyment in tweaking recipes to his liking. the robotic thing is just how adam feels if he did it,
@CraftsmanOfAwsomenes3 жыл бұрын
@@yidavv I'm saying his earlier point detracts from his later point. I was aware his conclusion was that it was about preference in the end.
@motecarlo12863 жыл бұрын
What an awesome video. I'm actually born and raised in NY, but I will almost always choose to scale my ingredients, except small quantities. reason is because I was never taught how to cook so I'm afraid to venture out and test things out for myself and failing lol. I found it interesting that you pointed out this fear of mine by embracing it. always loved that about you, Adam. appreciate the different perspective.
@PatataMaxtex3 жыл бұрын
As a former chemistry student it always bugs me if solids are measured by volume, but I agree that it is okay at home in the kitchen. It just hurts the chemistry nerd inside me.
@Orynae3 жыл бұрын
"when you look at something in terms of weight, you're doing a weight to volume conversion in your head" Ok BUT, when you're thinking in terms of volume for a recipe, you're still doing a conversion in your head, whether it's space-it-takes-up-in-your-visual-field to cups, mL, or fluid ounces. As someone who's very bad at eyeballing even linear sizes, let alone volumes, I don't think humans inherently know how big a cup or a liter is. Look at how "well" people compare cup sizes between fat, short glasses and thin, tall glasses. Either way, what measurements seem intuitive is all lived experience and what you're used to.
@krankarvolund77713 жыл бұрын
Exactly XD I am absolutely lame to measure things with eyes, wether it's weight or volumes ^^
@WatchMeSayStuff3 жыл бұрын
Anybody who thinks they're good at eyeballing measurements with any kind of accuracy is delusional.
@matthewzaloudek3 жыл бұрын
@@WatchMeSayStuff You don't think it's possible for someone to cook a recipe multiple times and learn how to eyeball most of the ingredients to get an end result that is indistinguishable from one where they measured every ingredient?
@johnallens4793 жыл бұрын
A key difference in the idea in that quote, is that, when measuring by volume, you are using a consistent reference frame. A cup of flour, cheese, water, or whatever is still the same volume and looks the same. With weight, 100 grams looks different depending on what you are using and its density. So it is easier to learn to recognize a cup, and from there guess at half, third, quarter and so forth, than learning what 100 grams of every ingredient looks like (which no one does). So I do agree with you, humans probably don't inherently know but if you use volumes enough I think you could get pretty accurate or at least consistent between recipes that you make.
@krankarvolund77713 жыл бұрын
@@johnallens479 It's easier, when you're born in the volume system ^^ Personally I have no idea what a cup of cheese is, or a cup of flour ^^'
@PedroNariyoshi3 жыл бұрын
THANK YOU! I recognize that weight is "superior", but I feel it takes too much the "fun" of cooking. I can see the point for baking, which requires more precision for consistent results, but I enjoy that each time I bake, the baked product comes out "slightly different", temporal heterogeneity (not spatial, which is what Adam usually argues for, but for me both work).
@NishithThakkar3 жыл бұрын
I don't agree with your point but I see how it would be favourable to someone.
@oliverroberts51193 жыл бұрын
@@NishithThakkar KZbin commenting at it’s finest, well done sir 👏🏽
@evane96773 жыл бұрын
This is fine but I think, as a beginner, learning a set recipe for cookies that has set proportions of x, y and z is much more beneficial starting off. Beginners, who are getting into cooking, are also more likely to be watching videos like Adam's anyway.
@dodgeball283 жыл бұрын
I'm the opposite. Lol. Maybe it's just me but i actually want my baked goods to turn out great everytime i bake them. 😅
@themusicfan96133 жыл бұрын
I guess that's where people differ. For me the joy in cooking is tweaking recipes until I've perfected them (to my taste). I use a gram scale for that to see how much I put in. It's also very satisfactory to have an "ultimate" recipe that results in what you want every time.
@MatheusLeston3 жыл бұрын
I get your point, and I think you are right about everything you said. But one thing is pretty essential: for us, that don't live in the USA, weights help A LOT when reading a recipe for the first time because ingredients may vary. For example, here in Brazil, a stick of butter is about double in size of what you use there. Kosher salt is another example you have commented about in another video: it is unheard of here, and it occupies much more volume than refined salt (which is what we use day to day). Guess what? I found both of that the hard way by completely screwing some meals. I don't want to become addicted to weighting everything and only cook with a scale, but those weights help get a baseline for those quantities that get "lost in translation."
@TizonaAmanthia3 жыл бұрын
Never stop being what you are, and in the direction you're going, Adam. you do great things.
@Birticus23 жыл бұрын
Here in the North of Ireland we always use weight for large amounts, flour etc, and measuring spoons for smaller things like vanilla or baking powder
@LuisLopez-uy5jc3 жыл бұрын
Instead of using one cup and trying to eyeball what half is, wouldn't it be easier to use half a cup and fill it twice when you need a full cup. Same with the spoons. I do this all the time.
@GH-oi2jf3 жыл бұрын
A measuring cup for liquids is marked for fractions of a cup. It isn’t difficult to read.
@georgeamesfort34083 жыл бұрын
Long live the Empire
@williamhuffmantutorials Жыл бұрын
Meow
@Patterrz3 жыл бұрын
bring British, cup measurements in recipes scare me
@lightlysalted77903 жыл бұрын
Whoa
@crystalwolcott47443 жыл бұрын
how soon you forget your past
@isidore5513 жыл бұрын
@@crystalwolcott4744 British people be like "stone" and "gas mark" and think they have a right to chew out Americans
@seandemhairr45723 жыл бұрын
and 'sticks' of butter
@danm80043 жыл бұрын
I struggle to measure my HP Up in anything except grams.
@Ubeogesh3 жыл бұрын
My reasons for weight measurements: 1) To have reproducible results. I don't "aim" for specific weight of a certain ingredient, but I measure how much i ended up using of it; so that I can make fine adjustments next time 2) To track calories. But for spices and salt and such, of course I always go by taste and have the feeling of how much I need.
@Jonathan-A.C.2 жыл бұрын
Well the first can also be done by volume, but the second I wholeheartedly agree with
@austinthrowsstuff3 жыл бұрын
That scale with fractions instead of a decimal hurts to even look at lol
@Sigmagnat6503 жыл бұрын
That shit belongs on measuring tape... measuring tape that I will never use because cm/mm is so much more convenient, if not hilarious when you call out for a cut on a job site that needs to be 157.35cm.
@walterbrunswick3 жыл бұрын
@@Sigmagnat650 Being born in Canada and working in construction, I much prefer imperial to metric. A long time ago I read a good post from a gentleman making a point that 12 is much more divisible and 'natural' than 10. Also that there are 12 hours in a day and not 10. The jist was that it's easier in practical use.
@GreenBlueWalkthrough3 жыл бұрын
@@Sigmagnat650 More convenient then saying a human in 5 foot 9 inch instead of 179 Centimeters?
@Sigmagnat6503 жыл бұрын
@@GreenBlueWalkthrough More convenient for short people who like to sound taller, I bet.
@GrandmaGlitter233 жыл бұрын
Adam, I hope you see this! I have ADHD and silence is my worst enemy when it comes to trying to stay focused (I'll just hyperfocus on the silence instead of getting things done) and funny enough, playing your videos in the background is one of the only ways I can stay focused. I have played your key lime pie and new york style pizza videos probably countless times 🤣 And what helps the most is that you don't play music in the background. I'm a vocal music student so I get really distracted by background music in a video, and sometimes I'm even practicing my music while playing your videos. Therefore, thank you for your music-less food educational videos!! They've helped me tremendously. (I also enjoy your content in my free time, I just thought you might find this interesting!) 😄
@robertdabbs26063 жыл бұрын
I always used volume measurements with my US cookbooks and had accurate results almost all of the time. However, when I began using UK and European recipes I was "forced" use metric weights and measures. I have found this invaluable when weighing dry ingredients and have converted almost all of my US recipes to metric. This is especially useful when measuring flours, grains, and some sugars, as well as many other minor ingredients.
@commenter59013 жыл бұрын
I just don't measure at all. I just pour it in till it looks right... but most of my recipes are just in my head, and because of my food allergies, I've had to adjust them so much that they barely resemble the original recipe that inspired them...
@chawndel82792 жыл бұрын
He wasn't arguing about metric, and made that clear multiple times. The argument was volume vs weight. Completely different discussion.
@Tjieena3 жыл бұрын
Adam, will you do a video on cookingspray and other lowcalorie stuff? Would be interesting to see the science behind those products and how they can be that low calorie, and if its bad for you Cheers and keep the videos comin, love em!
@andredetoni8973 жыл бұрын
Would love the video
@mrmojorisingii3 жыл бұрын
Another vote for this. My parents use Pam all the time so I grew up with it. But when I moved out of the house I realized how weird and (I hesitate to use this imprecise word) "unnatural" it is. Maybe redundant is the better word: I just use butter or oil--ingredients I always have on hand--for my frying/nonsticking needs. But all that said, their food tastes great, and my food tastes great, but I wonder if there is a difference in nutrition? Or maybe none of it matters and it would make for a terrible video :D
@apermisgreat16443 жыл бұрын
That would also be interesting considering the fact that in the US, companies are allowed to market things with less than 5 calories as zero calories.
@MichaelSchiciano3 жыл бұрын
It'd be good to explore it, though one point I can broadly make is that in some areas of food labeling, something can be labeled as low (or even no) calories if it is beneath a particular threshold of calories _per serving_. Because of this, it can be the case that something actually has calories, and a decent amount of it, but a single 'serving' of it would fall under, say, 5 calories, to a point where it could legally be labeled as having zero calories per serving. If I'm not mistaken, this was the case for something like Diet Mountain Dew, a beverage whose second ingredient is orange juice concentrate, but when taken at an 8-12 oz serving, it was able to be labeled for a time as '0 calories' due to being underneath that particular threshold. Current labeling treats an entire bottle/can as a serving, and seems to be more accurate in this respect. So while I haven't done deeper research, I would presume that MOST cases where products seem to be lower calorie than they 'should' be, at least one reason could come down to serving size matters.
@apermisgreat16443 жыл бұрын
@@MichaelSchiciano yeah, I first heard about this from Technicality Studio’s video about Splenda, an artificial sweetener marketed as “zero calories” which actually has slightly more i.e. immediately usable calories than actual sugar.
@anderskilgour79473 жыл бұрын
The real question is... How will this affect my brownie skins
@trysta733 жыл бұрын
16:14 to cut to the message we all need to hear most regardless of where we're from
@nihalb45153 жыл бұрын
This channel isn’t just about cooking or recipes and I love that
@keltonexplains64153 жыл бұрын
Just be careful not to make the same mistake I did by measuring by volume as in sound. At least I know now that tomato sauce in a glass jar makes my family members scream louder than pasta.
@jakeb67033 жыл бұрын
additionally that adds more conversion factors between Moms yelling and standard metric scolding
@markvandermeijen-page41113 жыл бұрын
Speaking as somebody who learned to cook from my mum, who used pounds, ounces & fluid ounces, and then kilograms, grammes & millilitres, I've always been more comfortable with weight, rather than volume. Then, in my 50's, I moved to the other side of the world to a country which prefers volume & I struggled mightily for a long time. I've been trying to discover whether an NZ cup measure is the same as a US cup, but have only found highly differing answers on the interweb. Now, I tend to convert volume measurements into weights, so I can be sure I'm using the right quantities although, like you, I still use volume for tiny quantities.
@llamatronian1013 жыл бұрын
A New Zealand cup is 250 ml, unless it's an old recipe from before the switch to metric, in which case it might be an imperial cup or just whatever teacup the chef kept next to the flour.
@frod0r3 жыл бұрын
0:43 Actually Swedes measure Flour in Deci Liters lol
@greenefieldmann30143 жыл бұрын
And grams, and tablespoons, and teaspoons
@C0urne3 жыл бұрын
Same here in Finland. 2.5dl of milk, 8dl flour, one egg, 100g of salted butter, 1 tsp of ground cardamom etc.
@lukasjuul44873 жыл бұрын
Also here in Denmark, I think it is a Nordic brotherhood thing.
@greenefieldmann30143 жыл бұрын
@@lukasjuul4487 No one likes you, Denmark.
@CreativityCurve3 жыл бұрын
Yup, was just about to comment that myself. Those in-between measurements like deciliters/decimeters/hecto(gram)s seem to get ignored a lot when Americans talk about metric units, but they are very commonly used here. I measure flour in deciliter cups pretty much every time I use it. Then again, I'd probably use a kitchen scale if I actually owned one...
@tomraineofmagigor34993 жыл бұрын
"You'll melt your scale" sounds like there's innovation space for stoves that are also scales
@hindering42783 жыл бұрын
I really liked how as he said that he then cut to a shot of his scales, which has a glass plate. :)
@jakubzbroda3 жыл бұрын
You can measure the thing you are adding to the pan easily. Adam screwed this part of his argument up.
@quikrick73 жыл бұрын
Shhh, don't tell Adam about the Tare button used with a trivet or cork coaster on the scale.
@nemi-ru53183 жыл бұрын
Or just put something on your scale that protects it from the heat, doesn't everybody have like a cork board or something like that at home for putting hot pans on the table? I mean most scales are usually big enough for that.
@andbuitra3 жыл бұрын
@@nemi-ru5318 I have to say I don't cook so complex dishes that require me to accurately measure a lot but in the weird ocassion I need to measure something into the vessel I'm cooking in I just put a towel over my cheap scale, tare it out and do the measurement. A cutting board would work too. Yeah, it may be "cumbersome" but you are already cooking something difficult, adding something so small wouldn't matter at that point
@VideogamesPang3 жыл бұрын
I don't really have preference for volume vs weight but something that really screws with me as an Australian is when recipes use cups and spoons as standard measures. This is because an Australian cup is 250ml while an American/rest of the world cup is 240ml, and an Australian tablespoon is 20ml while an American tablespoon is 15ml. I have no idea why they set it up that way but it definitely doesn't help anything. So for one, if I find a recipe that uses cups and spoons I have to figure out if it's an Australian recipe or not, and secondly it means the cups and spoons you can buy here for measures are all for the Australian standard so you are using non-Australian recipes you either have to adjust by eye or own a special second set of measures just for foreign recipes. Regarding the whole volume vs weight thing, for me its a matter of the type of ingredient. Flour, sugar, milk that kind of stuff is all fine to measure by volume. But I'll be annoyed if a recipe asks me for a quarter cup of butter. You want me to cram the butter in the cup?
@dananskidolf3 жыл бұрын
I remember you saying in a previous video about how it's helpful to base the recipe quantities on what is conveniently available, e.g. the 500g of flour in that BBC recipe will read to most as "a bag of flour". That's probably the easiest way to measure.
@qwertyTRiG3 жыл бұрын
When we were learning weights and measures in school, the best way to visualise a kilogramme was "a bag of sugar".
@CPMG20003 жыл бұрын
My baking went to another level when I started weighing my ingredients.
@jamesregovich52443 жыл бұрын
The point about feel and how it should look is spot on. I started making pasta from a recipe in a well known chef’s book. I have never used anywhere near the amount of flour called for. Over time I have adopted the method of using a mound of flour and a number of eggs based on how much I want, and then kneading it to the consistency that works.
@evertontsai44963 жыл бұрын
I usually don't measure spices or seasoning when I'm cooking either. I just keep pouring them in until the spirits of my ancestors slowly say "stop, my child".
@krankarvolund77713 жыл бұрын
I don't have ancestor's spirits to help me cook, so I just shake the bottle until I think it's enough. And sometimes I taste to feel if it's enough ^^
@dantepalazzo3 жыл бұрын
Adam, please keep putting my weight measures in your recipes, alongside with your volume ones, and we’ll all be happy.
@Keromaku2 жыл бұрын
In cooking I rarely use weight based measurements, but for baking its the only way I want to bake, the baked goods come out way more consistent and consistently better than with just volume measurements
@Keromaku2 жыл бұрын
@@crimsonelite214 I feel this honestly. I just think about french macarons and I've made some before and the science is real!
@squngy02 жыл бұрын
One trick you neglected is that you can measure the before and after weight of the ingredient instead of the mixture. If I wanted to add something to the mixer I could weight the bag put in some stuff then measure the bag again to see the negative value. Also, you can still eyeball stuff even if you don't have experience with it, because it will for sure have the net weight on the package so you just take whatever fraction you need. For example, if the package is 100 grams and you need 30 grams, you just take slightly less then a third.
@knirfien20912 жыл бұрын
Indeed, this is what I do if I need to add something to the mixing bowl mid mixing. Just put the container on the scale and set to zero.
@jennyneon3 жыл бұрын
*Imagine a series called “Cooking with Adam.”*
@griffiyuk3 жыл бұрын
I just imagined happiness
@jaylopo12453 жыл бұрын
Isn't that just his channel..?
@undeniablySomeGuy3 жыл бұрын
how is that different from what he normally does?
@homermakes3 жыл бұрын
Or Food History with Adam
@gheromesilvestre78033 жыл бұрын
In the alternate universe..
@Gamer__Panda3 жыл бұрын
Ye, that's fair. Here where I live (northern Czechia) I have never seen stuff measured by volume (aside from liquids). In fact, all the housholds I did get to cook in or partake in kitchen activities do not even have volume measuring utensils like probably every US household does i.e. measuring cups n spoons.
@Magyyyyy3 жыл бұрын
Hey Adam, there's a footage corruption in between 3:45-3:50 might want to fix that