Saturday, August 27, 2016

Receptive vs Expressive Level of Knowing.


In the world of language, we use "receptive vocabulary" to refer to the words that we understand in listening or reading, and we use "expressive vocabulary" to refer to the words that we not only understand well but can also skillfully use in speaking and writing.

Learning to taste well is the receptive food skill. Learning to prepare food is the expressive or productive skill.

Just like learning a word isn't an on/off switch process, learning how to cook is also a dimmer-switch, a "crescendo" process. The good thing is that, we don't have to make flash cards. We eat at least three times a day to refresh it.

Without a good receptive level of knowing your food, it will be hard to build up the expressive level of food skill because our receptive food memory sets up how we evaluate what we taste.

Moreover, if the receptive understanding of food is skewed, nothing out of nature and prepared by human hands naturally will taste like the processed food that you often had when you just started learning to cook. Discouraged, you thought you suck at cooking and you stopped trying. How sad!

Remember, pick up something fresh and is safe to eat raw, but will perish eventually if left long enough. Wash it clean and eat it as it is without messing with it. That's what you should compare to when you evaluate your cooking.


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