Category Archives: food

Bringing The Heat

This Foodie Friday, let’s bring the heat.  Specifically, let’s talk about hot peppers.  Many people, myself included, enjoy spicy food.  The problem with cooking food that brings the heat is that what’s hot to me might not be hot enough for you.  Now that I think of it, the opposite is nearly always true – if I’m happy with the heat in a dish, chances are most of the folks for whom I’m cooking are going to find it hard to eat and enjoy.

This image shows a Habanero chile, which is th...

(Photo credit: Wikipedia)

This article from First We Feast summarized it nicely:

A 2013Technomic study showed that 54% of Americans prefer spicy sauces and dips—a number that was and likely still is increasing rapidly. Unlike so many other taste preferences, though, the growth of spice brings with it a prickly issue: How much heat can your tongue handle?

As it turns out research shows that tolerance to hot food is both genetic and a learned habit – you can train yourself to eat hotter food if you’re willing to go through the pain of doing so, and some folks have a head start based on genetics.  “Hot” or “Spicy” is really a subjective term even though a measurement standard exists that make it really easy to tell how much heat is in a dish. Scientists can measure Scoville units to determine how the capsaicin in a pepper or a dish registers as heat.  It’s an objective standard.  Which brings us to the business point today.

Too many of us rely on gut feel – how we perceive things to be – rather than an objective standard.  What seems fine to us might be intolerable to our customers. There is little in business that we can or should do without measuring, even if we can’t test in advance.  That’s not to say that we never should put things out there based on our own tastes, but we need to listen carefully to feedback and be prepared to adjust the seasoning.  It’s fine to bring the heat in any product or business, but let’s remember that some folks can’t stand any heat and will go running from our kitchens if we’re not paying attention.

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What’s Your Bacon?

Foodie Friday, and our topic today is bacon. I’d encourage vegetarians and vegans to come back Monday because this is about to cause you to sound like Colonel Kurtz: “the horror, the horror…”

English: Uncooked pork belly bacon strips disp...

(Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I was making supper last night, and as I was rummaging through the fridge I noticed an abundance of bacon. That’s neither unusual for me nor bad, but I guess these unopened packs had been sitting around for a while and the expiration dates were approaching. I had planned some shrimp and mushrooms but good cooking is nothing if not adjusting on the fly, so the shrimp were dry-brined and wrapped in bacon. The mushrooms became stuffed with a cheese and bacon mixture. What’s one to do when he finds a pile of cheese and bacon left? Poppers, of course, since there were some jalapeños sitting in the veggie drawer (yes, I do have one of those).

Somehow, two pounds of bacon got used up. The shrimp and mushrooms, which would have been fine regardless, were way better because of the bacon. It reminded me of the time my crew went to a rodizio for lunch and were stuffed to the gills on meat when yet another server came by. We asked what he had – “turkey.” No takers. “Wrapped in bacon.” Everyone had some.

What does this have to do with business? Simple. What’s your bacon? What are you adding to everything you do to make it even better? Where is the value-added that represents you going the extra mile and doing something special?  Wired and Food Network did a little study in which they

compared the ratings of all the recipes that fit a certain description-—sandwiches, for example. Then, we calculated the average rating for those foods if they did not include the word “bacon.” We ran the numbers again using only recipes that did include bacon. The results were pretty great. Of all the foods we analyzed, bacon lends the most improvement to sandwiches.

The addition of that one special thing made the reviewers feel more positively about the product.  So what’s your bacon?

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Filed under food, Thinking Aloud

Alchemy

This Foodie Friday it’s all about alchemy. Back in medieval times, alchemy was seen as magic even though it’s the forerunner of modern chemistry. Way back then, the point was to convert base metals into gold or to find a universal elixir. It was a seemingly magical process of transformation, creation, or combination. To me, part of why I love to cook is that magic. It’s something that any of us can do as we transform raw ingredients into something more valuable than the ingredients themselves.

An Alchemical Laboratory, from The Story of Al...

(Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I have friends to whom making a simple sandwich taste delicious is magic. They can’t cook at all. What a shame, as Chef Ramsay would say. I believe that learning to do some simple cooking makes us more self-sufficient and the confidence which ensues carries over into other parts of our lives.  If you’re in business, it turns out you’re more of an alchemist than you think.

The obvious comparison is anyone who manufactures a product, transforming raw materials of lesser value into something else with higher value.  As an aside, we forget sometimes how many people it really takes to make anything, since we tend to forget that if we use lumber or minerals or just about anything else to create our products, many people had to create or harvest those raw materials for us.

I look at great managers as alchemists.  Anyone can put together a group of people and charge them with tasks.  It takes an alchemist to transform that group into something more, converting the base metals into gold.   It’s the same magic as what goes on in the kitchen.  Sure, the better the ingredients, the better the dish, but coaxing something special out of even average ingredients is just as magical.

So here is to all of you alchemists out there, both those in the kitchen and those in the office.  Have a magical weekend!

 

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Filed under food, Thinking Aloud