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  3. Betty Crocker broke recipes by shrinking boxes

Betty Crocker broke recipes by shrinking boxes

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  • L lemmythinkaboutthat@lemmy.myserv.one

    You and my dad would get along great. He uses a whole bulb; his fried rice version has this toasted garlic flavor that’s just tasty.

    My SIL adds Better Than Bouillon Roasted Garlic with her garlic rice (I dont remember if it’s a teaspoon or tablespoon).

    Another version we learned was adding a combo of grated garlic and baked garlic; they both have different yet distinct flavors. That’s my aunt’s version and she uses chicken broth (Alton Brown’s recipe).

    Lol on the fancy… good for you. You’re right though, different kinds of rice require different amounts of water. We already got that lecture from our grandparents a looooong time ago.

    heythisisnttheymca@lemmy.worldH This user is from outside of this forum
    heythisisnttheymca@lemmy.worldH This user is from outside of this forum
    heythisisnttheymca@lemmy.world
    wrote last edited by
    #143

    we went to the greek festival a couple weekends ago and came home with a whole quart of fresh toum. i’m about halfway through and the cats are about used to my new smell

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    • FauxPseudo F FauxPseudo

      One scoop of rice. Rinsed a few times until the water is mostly clear. Throw it in the pot I always use for rice. Add water to the lower line that has developed over the years of making rice in the same pot. The upper line is from making mac and cheese so don’t use that one. Some salt. Maybe some oil or butter depending on the final dish. Place the lid on.

      Bring to a boil, reduce to low. Wait until the lid harmonics change to tell you there isn’t any liquid water in there anymore. Use a fork to check the bottom of the pot for water. Done.

      No one else here knows how to make rice. Everyone thinks a rice cooker would make my life easier. I had one. I tossed it because it kept scorching the rice.

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      threeme2189@lemmy.world
      wrote last edited by
      #144

      the lower line that has developed over the years of making rice in the same pot. The upper line is from making mac and cheese

      Maybe you need to scrub your pots more thoroughly. If they’re stainless steel or something similar there shouldn’t be any permanent stains forming unless you don’t use enough elbow grease.

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      • T treczoks@lemmy.world

        Cooking freehanded can work. Cooking is art. Baking, on the other hand, is science. Every ingredient must be measured precisely, or you’ll get seriously funny results. And often on the bad side of funny.

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        xep@discuss.online
        wrote last edited by
        #145

        You can also science cooking. Meat thermometers are absolutely fantastic.

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        • Q quovadishomines@sh.itjust.works

          There are recipes based on package sizes which is fine for chocolate chips or nuts but becomes intensely problematic when it is leavening ingredients. Half-a box of bisquick was a valid measure when there was one size on the shelf.

          Some of my family recipes go back 150-250 years so along the way some of the collection contains cards calling for a tin of x, y, or z. I still sometimes use a ham glaze that calls for a bottle of coca cola.

          jordanlund@lemmy.worldJ This user is from outside of this forum
          jordanlund@lemmy.worldJ This user is from outside of this forum
          jordanlund@lemmy.world
          wrote last edited by
          #146

          Oh, man, “bottle of Coca-Cola”. When I was a kid, that meant a 16 ounce glass bottle, but prior to that it could have been 8 ounces, 10 ounces. Now it could be 1, 2, or even 3 liters.

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          • X xep@discuss.online

            You can also science cooking. Meat thermometers are absolutely fantastic.

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            T This user is from outside of this forum
            treczoks@lemmy.world
            wrote last edited by
            #147

            Or, like I do, Sous Vide.

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            • FauxPseudo F FauxPseudo

              During the previous round of shirkflation I warned people about knowing what year a recipe was from because “a can” means something different in 2004 than in 2010. And now it means something different again in 2025.

              Now boxes are getting the shrink treatment too.

              cross-posted from: https://lemmy.bestiver.se/post/618032

              Comments

              blackmist@feddit.ukB This user is from outside of this forum
              blackmist@feddit.ukB This user is from outside of this forum
              blackmist@feddit.uk
              wrote last edited by
              #148

              Who the fuck is buying those boxes if they still need things like eggs adding?

              It’s just pre-measured flour, baking soda and sugar. You can do that in under a minute. Shit, the stuff is in the same aisle.

              D pokey@midwest.socialP C R 4 Replies Last reply
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              • blackmist@feddit.ukB blackmist@feddit.uk

                Who the fuck is buying those boxes if they still need things like eggs adding?

                It’s just pre-measured flour, baking soda and sugar. You can do that in under a minute. Shit, the stuff is in the same aisle.

                D This user is from outside of this forum
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                dodos@lemmy.world
                wrote last edited by
                #149

                It’s brain dead easy cooking and people that do it were probably taught by their parents to.

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                • L lemmythinkaboutthat@lemmy.myserv.one

                  I’m curious, do you use the first line on your middle finger to measure water?

                  That’s how my grandmother taught us (pot and rice cooker).

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                  bcsven@lemmy.ca
                  wrote last edited by
                  #150

                  The problem with that is that the size of the pot changes the volume of water with a linear finger measure.

                  Like for extremes if you had a test tube shaped pot with a foot of rice deep and only a finger depth of water is way different than a giant wide pot where grains area single layer and then a finger depth over top.

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                  • FauxPseudo F FauxPseudo

                    I said the average grandma because I was talking about the average instead of mine. Today an average grandma is someone who grew up in the '80s. This shouldn’t have gone on this long so I’m going to try to make this very clear. I was not talking about my grandmother. I’m talking about the average grandmother. The average grandmother grew up in a post kitchen era. They grew up as a latchkey kid in the '80s tossing things in the microwave. The vast majority of grandmas don’t know how to cook anymore.

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                    bcsven@lemmy.ca
                    wrote last edited by
                    #151

                    Your average grandma is only 45 years old or less? Wow, popping out kids quick in that family. Hate to see the low end of this average

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                    • S ShellMonkey

                      Never heard of the place around here, but I like the thought. Buying things for odd amounts like to top up a spice jar without having a separate large container.

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                      bcsven@lemmy.ca
                      wrote last edited by
                      #152

                      They carry a huge variety too.

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                      • D dodos@lemmy.world

                        It’s brain dead easy cooking and people that do it were probably taught by their parents to.

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                        E This user is from outside of this forum
                        etterra@discuss.online
                        wrote last edited by
                        #153

                        Restaurants do it all the time. Imagine the cake you really like at that one place. Now imagine that it’s literally just Betty Crocker.

                        I learned this first hand at my very first job at 16 and I’ve never looked at fast food the same way since. The fast food in question is a well-known regional chain, as large McDonald’s. Places like McDonald’s have their own dedicated supply chain.

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                        • FauxPseudo F FauxPseudo

                          During the previous round of shirkflation I warned people about knowing what year a recipe was from because “a can” means something different in 2004 than in 2010. And now it means something different again in 2025.

                          Now boxes are getting the shrink treatment too.

                          cross-posted from: https://lemmy.bestiver.se/post/618032

                          Comments

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                          _core@sh.itjust.works
                          wrote last edited by
                          #154

                          There are thousands of recipes sites on the internet with dead simple recipes, especially for cookies. Baking from scratch has never been easier to do.

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                          • T timeworntraveler@lemmy.dbzer0.com

                            Cmon man, there’s two kinds of recipes: one with exact measurements and precise instructions, usually written in metric with a lot of notes and contingencies… and then there’s general guideline cheat sheets and refreshers, which you use when you already know how to cook it.

                            If a recipe tells me “a couple spoonsful” and I don’t know what to do, the problem is not the recipe, it’s that I don’t know what I’m doing.

                            So what do you do? you learn. or I guess you could be like NileRed and watch food burn in front of your face because you don’t want to deviate from the recipe. over and over again. but hopefully you’ll learn to deviate soon.

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                            landless2029@lemmy.world
                            wrote last edited by
                            #155

                            American here. I always sucked at baking until I discovered a UK site using the metric master race measurements.

                            It was all in grams instead of tablespoons/ounces/cups.

                            Suddenly my shit was perfect…

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                            • blackmist@feddit.ukB blackmist@feddit.uk

                              Who the fuck is buying those boxes if they still need things like eggs adding?

                              It’s just pre-measured flour, baking soda and sugar. You can do that in under a minute. Shit, the stuff is in the same aisle.

                              pokey@midwest.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
                              pokey@midwest.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
                              pokey@midwest.social
                              wrote last edited by
                              #156

                              The reason for having to add an egg, milk, or some other simple ingredient is because the mix companies found out people were more willing to adopt these mixes if there was a step where they had to do something beyond just adding water. Or at least this is what they told me on the Jiffy Mix factory tour as a child.

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                              • H humorlessrepost@lemmy.world

                                It would be better if other recipes adjusted accordingly.

                                The Zatarans Jambalaya box still says to add a pound of smoked sausage. But those sausages went down to 14oz. Then 12oz. Now some are 10oz. The box still says to add a pound. It’s becoming a hotdog/bun situation.

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                                prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
                                wrote last edited by
                                #157

                                I haven’t made Zatarans Jambalaya in years but I remember having this exact problem. I would have to use like 1 1/3 packages of sausage and end up with 2/3 of a sausage leftover

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                                • T timeworntraveler@lemmy.dbzer0.com

                                  Cmon man, there’s two kinds of recipes: one with exact measurements and precise instructions, usually written in metric with a lot of notes and contingencies… and then there’s general guideline cheat sheets and refreshers, which you use when you already know how to cook it.

                                  If a recipe tells me “a couple spoonsful” and I don’t know what to do, the problem is not the recipe, it’s that I don’t know what I’m doing.

                                  So what do you do? you learn. or I guess you could be like NileRed and watch food burn in front of your face because you don’t want to deviate from the recipe. over and over again. but hopefully you’ll learn to deviate soon.

                                  P This user is from outside of this forum
                                  P This user is from outside of this forum
                                  prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #158

                                  You are confusing baking with cooking.

                                  Baking is much closer to a science than cooking. It is all about precise measurements, and you have to be a very good baker to “wing it” and end up with a consistently good end product.

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                                  • L landless2029@lemmy.world

                                    American here. I always sucked at baking until I discovered a UK site using the metric master race measurements.

                                    It was all in grams instead of tablespoons/ounces/cups.

                                    Suddenly my shit was perfect…

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                                    timeworntraveler@lemmy.dbzer0.com
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #159

                                    baking by volume is INSANE why would anyone do that?!

                                    i remember as a kid my nan telling me to not pack the flour too tightly in the cups or the measurement will be off. like why not just weigh the flour?!

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                                    • T timeworntraveler@lemmy.dbzer0.com

                                      baking by volume is INSANE why would anyone do that?!

                                      i remember as a kid my nan telling me to not pack the flour too tightly in the cups or the measurement will be off. like why not just weigh the flour?!

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                                      landless2029@lemmy.world
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #160

                                      I often have issues explaining to literally everyone that oz and fl oz are not the same… Only true match is water which is what it was created for.

                                      8oz is weight.
                                      8 fl oz is volume…

                                      So a cup of flour is a volume measurement of something that should be measured by weight.

                                      I bought a food scale and gram everything now.

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                                      • T treczoks@lemmy.world

                                        Where do galette (buck wheat savory pancakes from Britanny) and puff pastry come together? Or is that just another Amerikan kitchen misnomer like “pepperoni” or “bologna”?

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                                        socialmediarefugee@lemmy.world
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #161

                                        The website joyofbaking.com defines the term galette as “a French term signifying a flat round cake that can be either sweet or savory and while [recipes can use] puff pastry as a base, they can also be made from risen doughs like brioche, or with a sweet pastry crust.”

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                                        • jordanlund@lemmy.worldJ jordanlund@lemmy.world

                                          Same only with Pasteis De Nata:

                                          Link Preview Image
                                          Pastéis de nata from the Big Green Egg

                                          Craving pastéis de nata? No need to buy them when you can bake this sweet Portuguese delicacy yourself using this recipe on your Big Green Egg.

                                          favicon

                                          Big Green Egg (www.biggreenegg.eu)

                                          My problem: There are different puff pastries out there and so I made the recipe THREE TIMES to figure out the best one to use.

                                          Spoiler - The most expensive one.

                                          Dufour.

                                          Link Preview Image
                                          PUFF PASTRY DOUGH - Dufour Pastry Kitchens

                                          Dufour's puff pastry is the epitome of fine dough—crisp, buttery, and flaky, perfect for both savory and sweet creations.

                                          favicon

                                          Dufour Pastry Kitchens (dufourpastrykitchens.com)

                                          Here’s the difference:

                                          “first enclosing a “butter block” in the dough”

                                          Compared with:

                                          Link Preview Image
                                          Frozen Sheets Pastry Dough - Pepperidge Farm

                                          When you start with Pepperidge Farm Puff Pastry, you can create extraordinary dishes, both savory and sweet. Let your imagination take you to delicious places! Each Puff Pastry sheet is made up of many delicate layers, each one essential to creating its supremely light, airy texture. Sheets are ready to be shaped, filled and baked. […]

                                          favicon

                                          Pepperidge Farm (www.pepperidgefarm.com)

                                          “VEGETABLE OILS (PALM, SOYBEAN, HYDROGENATED COTTONSEED)”

                                          Store brand is the same.

                                          None of them were AWFUL, just the Dufour is head and shoulders above the others, and 4x the price.

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                                          socialmediarefugee@lemmy.world
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #162

                                          Hah! I used Dufour also. My choices were that and Pepperidge Farm but I knew the critical part was it had to use real butter. Looking at the prices I knew that PF being half the price meant that they had to make some serious compromises. If I’m going to eat a bunch of calories I’m going to do it right.

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