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#1
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| Everybody, if I promise to write all my recipes in metric will you do the same? In your kitchen, in your house? Please? ![]() |
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#2
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| LOL I feel your pain. Are you starting a Chelf Talk metric movement? I'll back you ;-)
__________________ Life is a banquet, and most poor suckers are starving to death! Auntie Mame |
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#3
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| I'm with you. Metric is definitely the way to go. It's a waste of time having to convert recipes from volume to metric! I'm glad we use metric in Singapore, hooray for that. |
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#4
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| I am just stuck in old school I guess. My brain hurts when I have to think about metric, however I am wondering why the interest in changing? Frizbee -sometimes disgruntal about change....
__________________ Do what you do with passion....the rest will fall into place |
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#5
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| WHY???? The united Stated threatened to go metric years ago.LOL The legeslators couldn't understand it LOL |
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#6
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| LOL ![]() I am a CANADIEN!!!!!! I am BI-SYSTEMATICAL ![]() Personally, I far prefer the use of cups and pounds over millilitres and grams. I know my fist is a cup, my cupped hand is a teaspoon shallow and a tablespoon deep, that two fists is a pound and that 8 eggs is a cup. I have no idea what 10 eggs would be, other than to many... ![]() Also, metric temp divisions are not clean. 350 F, 400 F, nice, clean numbers that have very predictable results that work. I have no idea the centigrade on any of that. Now, if I was doing chemistry or physics or electronics, its metric all the way. ![]() But with cooking, the most complicated electronics there is is the on switch, the most involved physics is that sudden motions cause souffles to fall, and the most complex chemistry is that to four fists of flour I add two deep handfuls of baking powder and one shallow hand of salt a fist to four fists of liquid and viola.... quick bread to corn bread to pour batter ![]()
__________________ Space...the final frontier. These are the voyages of KeeperOfTheGood. His lifetime mission: to explore strange new worlds of flavour, to seek out new life and and ways of cooking it- to boldly grill where no man has grilled before. |
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#7
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| I too am Canadian and use both systems. I can only tell you how warm it is out side in metric (24 today! Woo hoo Summer! ) but I can only cook in imperial ( I think I need to calibrate my dep fryer again, which only has imperial markings on it). I drive 88 kilometers to work every day but my stairs are 4 feet wide at home. I have no idea how many kilograms I weigh (and am in denial as to how many pounds ) but I buy my deli meat in grams. So really has Canada gone metric, ya sure, and we are all bilingual, say "eh" and live in igloos! I guess it is a Canadian thing to not want to offend the old system, so even though the laws have changed the people have not. ![]()
__________________ Chef Bob"Ask not what you can do for your country. Ask what's for lunch?" ~ Orsen Wells (1915-1985) http://www.frappr.com/cheftalkcafe |
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#8
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| We should move to metric time - 100 second a minute, 100 minutes an hour and 20 hours a day. that makes a metric second about 1/2 of current second. It would probably never happen, but it would simplify everything. Right now you have a system with 100(milliseconds), 60(seconds, minutes) and 12/24 (hours). for calculations you have to switch three times. ahhrrrggghhh! |
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#9
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| Metric time! I love it!!!! Sign me up! ![]()
__________________ Chef Bob"Ask not what you can do for your country. Ask what's for lunch?" ~ Orsen Wells (1915-1985) http://www.frappr.com/cheftalkcafe |
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#10
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| Vernor Vinge and Charlie Stross in their fiction have used computer/metric time: kiloseconds, megaseconds, gigaseconds and so on. It's not perfectly clear if those are the binary computer multiples or the metric multiples, but it's a VERY interesting idea in light of their singularity based fiction. Stross is giving away his latest novel, Accelerando in an experiment. I was somewhat let down by the ending, but rather enjoyed the rest of the novel. Phil |
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#11
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| Most of the recipes I post are far more vague aproximations of amount than the US measurement system. I would prefer metric but sometimes I simply dont measure out ingredients. Like many, I'm more inclined to skim a recipe and "wing it" rather than follow it word for word. Of course, that does not apply to all food I cook. ![]()
__________________ Chris Hinds Chef, Blue Door Cafe' Culinary School Prospective |
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#12
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| My son and I are just finishing up his first Jensen Healey. The only tools I take care of are the metrics. Losing the standards keeps me from doing things around the house ![]() |
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#13
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| I'm an American living in Canada, so I'm having to adjust to the bi-system steaks cut in oz.. small measures are imperical, teaspoon, cup etc, but anything larger goes to liters not gallons oven is in imperical, fridges are monitered in imperical, the heat in the kitchen in metric shots at the bar are in oz. but wine (of course) is metric if the floor drain backs up, the water is measured in inches, not centimeters etc.. etc.. its confusing! I'm used to only imperical, metric would be fine, but using both seems challenging |
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#14
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| I only use metric unless a recipe calls for imperial. I also only measure things by weight, never by volume (more precise by weight). If a recipe calls for volume/imperial mesurements I just guess/estimate since I'm too lazy to convert. No ones noticed yet... |
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#15
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| The one great thing about metric, one that many americans don't understand, is that with that system recipes are actually ratios. They can be instantly changed. Like let's say I have a recipe that give me fifty 40 gram buns. Tomorrow I need a hundred and fifty 60 gram buns. I multiply the original recipe by 3(1.5x2). In ten - twenty(if you're really slllloooowww) seconds, you get the new recipe. Most of my recipes, if they need precision(I don't weight tomatos for salsa), call for ratio alone: 1 flour 2 liquid 0.25 egg yolks etc. |
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