Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All recipe creators (including American ones) use weighed out ingredients when developing recipes bc it's so much more precise. For the US market they then convert back to volume based measurements.
Weighing and baking is a way better system and even Americans are speaking out in favor of it, eg. Alison Roman on one of her videos.
But it doesn’t make sense to convert back to volumes. Just leave it as mass. Yes, it is way more precise. It makes zero sense to ever use volumes to measure out solids. I worked as a chemist for years.
A scale is 1 more thing to buy and you can still cook with volume. As much as bakers love to talk about how precise measurements need to be, they're full of it. Close enough works in 99% of cooking situation
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You might get a more insightful response if you weren’t so hostile about it. I’m sure there is a historical reason for this if you really want to know.
Bring ignorant to science is why America uses stupid volumes for measurements rather than mass.
sure. If you think of countries that have contributed nothing to science, America certainly comes to mind
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All recipe creators (including American ones) use weighed out ingredients when developing recipes bc it's so much more precise. For the US market they then convert back to volume based measurements.
Weighing and baking is a way better system and even Americans are speaking out in favor of it, eg. Alison Roman on one of her videos.
But it doesn’t make sense to convert back to volumes. Just leave it as mass. Yes, it is way more precise. It makes zero sense to ever use volumes to measure out solids. I worked as a chemist for years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All recipe creators (including American ones) use weighed out ingredients when developing recipes bc it's so much more precise. For the US market they then convert back to volume based measurements.
Weighing and baking is a way better system and even Americans are speaking out in favor of it, eg. Alison Roman on one of her videos.
But it doesn’t make sense to convert back to volumes. Just leave it as mass. Yes, it is way more precise. It makes zero sense to ever use volumes to measure out solids. I worked as a chemist for years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You might get a more insightful response if you weren’t so hostile about it. I’m sure there is a historical reason for this if you really want to know.
Bring ignorant to science is why America uses stupid volumes for measurements rather than mass.
Anonymous wrote:All recipe creators (including American ones) use weighed out ingredients when developing recipes bc it's so much more precise. For the US market they then convert back to volume based measurements.
Weighing and baking is a way better system and even Americans are speaking out in favor of it, eg. Alison Roman on one of her videos.
Anonymous wrote:All recipe creators (including American ones) use weighed out ingredients when developing recipes bc it's so much more precise. For the US market they then convert back to volume based measurements.
Weighing and baking is a way better system and even Americans are speaking out in favor of it, eg. Alison Roman on one of her videos.
Anonymous wrote:You might get a more insightful response if you weren’t so hostile about it. I’m sure there is a historical reason for this if you really want to know.
Anonymous wrote:We aren't talking about liquids, of course.
But it makes absolutely zero sense to use volumes for measurements when cooking or baking. Tsp of salt? Cup of flour? Tsp of baking powder, etc? What in the bloody hell? I'll never understand why Americans love to cook ass backwards and don't use MASS while cooking or baking. It makes infinitely more sense to use GRAMS of flour, salt, etc. while baking/cooking like the rest of the world does. Why is it so ingrained to use asinine measurements in US kitchens?