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The Cooking Advice We Should Probably Stop Giving

Healthy Fact of the Day

Frozen fruit and vegetables can be just as nutritious, or even healthier, than fresh. Because they are picked at peak ripeness and flash-frozen, they often lock in more nutrients.

Cooking advice is everywhere.

It comes from cookbooks, social media, family group chats, strangers in comment sections, and that one friend who read half of a food science article once and will not let it go.

Some of this advice is timeless. Some of it is genuinely helpful. And some of it—if we’re being honest—has outlived its usefulness.

Here are a few food “rules” that might be due for a polite retirement.

“You Must Follow the Recipe Exactly”

Recipes are guides, not legally binding contracts.

Yes, baking is more precise. Yes, some techniques matter. But the idea that deviating from a recipe is a mistake has scared an entire generation of people out of enjoying their own kitchens.

If you:

  • Swap an herb
  • Adjust a spice level
  • Use what’s already in your fridge

You’re not doing it wrong. You’re cooking.

Some of the best dishes happen when someone looks at a recipe and thinks, “I get the idea.”

“Good Cooking Takes a Long Time”

This one is responsible for more takeout orders than we’ll ever know.

Time can improve food—but it’s not a requirement. Plenty of excellent meals come together quickly because someone understood flavor balance, heat, and restraint.

A fast meal isn’t a lazy meal.
A slow meal isn’t automatically a good one.

What matters is intention, not the clock.

“If It’s Not From Scratch, It Doesn’t Count”

This rule has caused more unnecessary guilt than underseasoned chicken.

Using store-bought components doesn’t make a meal less “real.” It makes it realistic. No one wins a prize for grinding their own spices after a 10-hour workday.

The real question isn’t “Did you make everything yourself?”
It’s “Does this taste good and make sense for your life?”

Cooking should support your day—not punish you for it.

“Salt Is the Enemy”

Salt has been misunderstood for decades.

Used carelessly, it can overpower food. Used thoughtfully, it makes food taste like itself. Most bad home cooking isn’t over-salted—it’s under-salted.

Salt doesn’t exist to make food salty. It exists to wake everything else up.

Learning how and when to season matters far more than avoiding salt altogether.

“Fancy Ingredients Automatically Make Better Food”

Expensive doesn’t always mean better—it often just means unfamiliar.

A thoughtfully cooked meal using humble ingredients will always beat a confused dish built around something rare and expensive. Great cooking is about understanding, not flexing.

The best kitchens in the world know this. Home kitchens should, too.

“You Either Know How to Cook or You Don’t”

Cooking isn’t a talent you’re born with. It’s a skill you practice—often imperfectly.

Everyone who “just knows” how to cook has:

  • Burned things
  • Oversalted things
  • Underestimated cooking times
  • Served meals they’d rather forget

That’s not failure. That’s the process.

Confidence in the kitchen doesn’t come from never messing up—it comes from realizing you’ll survive when you do.

What We Should Be Saying Instead

Maybe it’s time to replace rigid rules with better questions:

  • Does this make sense for tonight?
  • Do I understand why this works?
  • Do I like how this tastes?

Those questions lead to better food—and more enjoyable cooking.

The Bottom Line

Cooking advice should empower, not intimidate.

The goal isn’t perfection. It’s nourishment, creativity, and the occasional surprise. The best meals rarely come from fear of doing it “wrong.” They come from curiosity, confidence, and a willingness to trust your instincts.

So break the rules. Adjust the recipe. Use the shortcut. Season boldly. Cook often.

That’s how people actually learn.

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