How much is โa handfulโ?
I recently read The Pedant in the Kitchen, which Michael Ruhlman also wrote up, and while I found it an enjoyable rant, one vexing thought that stuck in the authorโs craw was recipe instructions that call for โa handfulโ of something. He didnโt know what that meant and wondered why recipes couldnโt be more precise.

Writing a recipe thatโs acceptable to absolutely everyone can be daunting, if not impossible. The purpose of any recipe is the guide the cook through the process; too much explanation and overtly-long recipes turn readers off, while short recipes often get accused of not giving enough information. How much is enough, and how little is not enough? I once saw a three-page recipe for chocolate brownies from a famed pastry chef.
The recipe wasnโt anything unusual and didnโt have anything tricky, and was accompanied by an in-depth explanation of each process: the stirring, the melting, the scraping of the bowl, etc. There was a discussion recently about recipe โdeal-breakersโ, and to me, excessive-length is my waterloo. That recipe wouldโve scared me off.
Which it did.

Recipes have to assume a modicum of knowledge, otherwise theyโd be dreadfully long-winded. I try to pare things down by using more specific, descriptive words. Iโve stopped using the word โcreamโ when blending butter and sugar, and now use โbeatโ, since some folks ask where, or what quantity, of cream is called for.
(A favorite is Marion Cunninghamโs story about a reader complaining they couldnโt find the โpowdered sherryโ used in her recipeโwhich called for โdry sherryโ.)
Obviously, baking requires a bit more precision and instruction than, say, making soup. You canโt just say, โadd a handful of flourโ to make a cake. Although watch your grandparents bake, and thatโs how they do it without any worries.
The trick is to balance it so you donโt scare people away. I have a couple of baking books where the author is so frighteningly precise, Iโm afraid to make anything, fearing if I donโt measure my ingredients with a professionally-calibrated scale or a certain brand of measuring cups, Iโll have a full-scale disaster on my hands.
And some recipes, like pรขte ร choux are often based on a recipe, but so many variants can come into play (like bread recipes), that often the cook needs to do a bit of improvising. One day the flour may be damper or have more protein, the large eggs might not be as large as the others, and the butter may have more water or fat. Donโt forget that flour, butter, and other ingredients arenโt necessarily standardized and arenโt always exactly the same. Adding to the conundrum are โpremiumโ and โEuropean-styleโ products, which often vary radically from their everyday counterparts.
(For published recipes, I try to test recipes using store-brand products, which I figure the majority of people use. Afterward, I send my recipes to people who I would consider โnormalโ home cooks to test and see what their results are. I try not to tell them specific ingredients to use unless itโs critical to the result. The other โdeal breakerโ for me are recipes in books where a specific brand of ingredient is called for, one that I donโt have and canโt easily get. But do I post recipes on the blog using peach leaves and other esoteric things, since the blog is a diary of what Iโm cooking and sometimes Iโll have ingredients on hand that possibly arenโt widely available.)

So, back to โHow much is a handful?โ
It means that the exact quantity isnโt important.
Of course, recipes need to work and be follow-able. If youโre making a fruit salad and a recipe said, โScatter a handful of raspberries over the top.โ Do you really need to be told, โScatter 7.5 ounces of raspberries over the top.โ To me, thatโs annoying and I doubt anyone really needs to haul out their scale and measure the berries.

Like your morning toast, which you might โspread with a thin layer of jamโ, do you need to โuse an elongated butter knife, or spatula, grasping the handle, dipping the blade in the jam pot, and coating the bread with 1 3/4 tablespoons of the jamโ? If I asked, โHow much milk do you take in your coffee?โ or โHow much hot fudge should I ladle over my ice cream?โ, no one would answer with a precise quantity. I know, and I hope that you know, you can eyeball it perfectly, using your instincts, without taking out the measuring spoons.
(And I speak from experience since anyone else would need to be a biochemist to get my all-important morning cafรฉ au lait just the way I like it. But I can tell, precisely by looking at it, by instinct and by color.)
Like handfuls, youโll also notice I never call for specific quantities of citrus zest in recipes. If you grate a lemon over a cutting board, then measure out the zest, youโll lose a great deal of the flavorful, citrus oil, which will spray all over the counter. And Iโd rather you got that in your ice cream base. So Iโll say, โzest of 1 lemonโ, and if your lemon is slightly larger or smaller than mine, Iโd rather you not risk losing all that tasty oil in the name of methodical precision.
Cooking should be about feeding yourself, and sharing with others, especially true when baking cakes, cookies, and churning up batches of ice cream. And while the details may often be of importance, donโt let them interfere with your instincts and enjoyment of the process.







