My partner and I had a conversation recently about the process of learning how to make traditional food from family members. They remarked that their grandma could just touch dough and know how to alter the recipe by poking at it. Or she would say things like, “it rained yesterday” and adjust. In other words, the only way to learn how to make all this stuff was not just to follow the recipe, but to make it over and over with a master and learn the little adjustments.
Compare that to how food is mass produced. Rather than needing a master to adjust the recipe, the entire point is to use processes and ingredients which can be worked with to get consistent scalable results.
And my take is that there’s something fundamentally different between the sorts of foods that can be made through industrial processes and ones that can be iterated on and learned by humans to be made by hand.
All very true and a nice thing to think about. I think I've got this sense with masa harina now, which admittedly is a lot easier to adjust. Fresh tortillas yum yum.
When you make most of your own food from scratch, you get a different relationship with it. And for most of humanity for most of our existence, food was (is) scarce, so we figured out how to make magic with what's plentiful, or simply available at the time. Our best foods came from valuing spending the time to make these things better, to create joy from simple ingredients, even when times might be tough. To make our friends and family happy.