Learning to Write an Original Recipe

stack of cookbooks

The two questions I hear most often are: 1) What is your favorite dessert? In some ways, this is like asking a mom, 鈥淲ho is your favorite child?鈥 I do my best not to be rude, but really, I want to shout, 鈥淚 love them all, duh! That鈥檚 why I鈥檓 a pastry chef!鈥 2) Do you create your own recipes? This answer is a hard one. Yes, and no. Let me explain.

jenny mccoy recipe developer

In my experience, gaining the skill鈥攁nd comfort level鈥攖o write an original recipe takes time and practice鈥a lot of time and practice. So what鈥檚 the point? You could simply use recipes already written by other chefs, right? But then again, what if those recipes aren鈥檛 quite perfect? What if there were ways you could build on ideas in other recipes to create something even better?

Below, I detail the route I took to pursue perfection in my own original recipes. For those of you who are aspiring chefs, I hope my experience can give you a sense of direction. I really enjoyed my journey and feel my experiences served me very well.

The Beginning

When I began my pastry career, I simply followed others鈥 recipes. At first, that meant learning the traditional methods through the pastry arts program at my culinary school. These recipes were designed to familiarize students with traditional baking techniques, as well as the tools and equipment used in commercial kitchens. They weren鈥檛 recipes I continued using throughout my career but they were a perfect starting point. They helped me build a skill set, while I simultaneously developed my palate and personal preferences.

pastry student pastry school

Starting a Career

After culinary school, I began working in restaurant kitchens. There I followed the recipes of my pastry chef to a T. That was a tricky time in my budding career to navigate. Many pastry chefs will just hand you a list of ingredients and say, 鈥淢ake a double batch of this,鈥 without any further instruction.

It was my job to draw from the skills I learned in culinary school, to decipher the code of ingredients and decide which technique fit the equation. When that didn鈥檛 work, a simple request worked exceptionally well: 鈥淐hef, can you talk me through this recipe so I know exactly what you would like?鈥 (This is a very helpful trick, turning your lack of knowledge into an opportunity to appear detail-oriented.)

This early stage of my career was also dedicated to collecting as many recipes as possible from a variety of chefs. It meant pouring over cookbooks and testing recipes at home in my spare time. I made studious notes about what worked well and tasted best, as well as notes for improvement. My cookbooks became covered in food stains and ink. And I had a drawer filled with little notebooks of recipes I jotted down from restaurant kitchens.

cookbooks

Additionally, I spent a lot of time eating out and volunteering at other restaurants, taking notes on flavor combinations, collecting more recipes and analyzing the work of successful pastry chefs. I drew diagrams of desserts I loved, so I would remember the various components in a dish. I always kept a copy of the dessert menu and archived them for future reference. In short, I created a kind of catalogue of sweets鈥攕tuffed with inspirational references, cookbooks, recipes and menus. This was before the invasion of digital photography, so I have very few images of the desserts from my early days. But today, I highly recommend snapping pictures of every dessert you love and filing them away too.

Trying Something New

When I finally reached the level in my career where I was able to begin developing menu items, all this research and hoarding proved incredibly helpful. I was able to cobble together original desserts, using a combination of other chefs鈥 ingredients. I would combine one pastry chef鈥檚 vanilla panna cotta with another chef鈥檚 strawberry gel茅e, toss in a tuile from a cookbook and voila: I created a new dessert. While these weren鈥檛 truly original recipes, the combinations of components were and that was perfectly acceptable by industry standard.

But eventually, that got a little old. After repurposing so many ideas from chefs I admired, I found a new desire to develop recipes to my personal standards and taste. I began by adjusting the flavors in the recipes I already knew well. The vanilla panna cotta became a lavender panna cotta; the strawberry gel茅e became blackberry-lime. I added a little black pepper to the tuile batter.

When my flavor adjustments worked, great! When they didn鈥檛, I went back to the drawing board. This resulted in some excellent results and some really disgusting desserts. It involved a lot of botched batches in the trash. Soon enough, I graduated to a new method of perfecting recipes. These new recipes were less about superficial changes鈥擨 focused less on swapping flavors and more on textures and consistencies.

panna cotta jenny mccoy
Milk chocolate panna cotta, cacao nib tuile, cherry cola sorbet and sauteed cherries

The Next Level

Let鈥檚 take a yellow cake, for example: instead of making four different recipes and using the recipe I liked best, I would line up four yellow cake recipes side by side. I added up the measurements of each ingredient and came up with the average.

From there, I had a base recipe to test. Once the recipe was tested, I鈥檇 begin to alter the amounts of ingredients to my liking. I would make each recipe over and over, making the tiniest of alterations until I executed a final product that I thought was perfect. This exploration really helped me to understand the functionality of each ingredient in a recipe. I gained a knowledge of baking principles.

For example, adding more baking powder is not always the best method for making a cake鈥檚 layers rise higher. And you can鈥檛 always swap cake flour for all-purpose flour just because you鈥檙e making a cake. This process also led me to create some of my very first 鈥渙riginal鈥 recipes. Understanding the purpose of each ingredient鈥攏ot just on paper, but in the application鈥攊s critical when readying yourself to write your own recipes.

Mastering Originality

Seriously, it took me about ten years of hard work to arrive at this point. Though, that鈥檚 not too bad when you think about the length of a lifetime, right? Once I fully understood how each ingredient in baking worked鈥攁fter falling down wormholes full of, say, hundreds of panna cotta recipes鈥攎y memory and confidence reached a new level of creativity.

When I want to create a new recipe nowadays, I can easily combine techniques and ratios of ingredients that I鈥檝e committed to memory. When it comes to panna cotta, I know exactly how much milk to cream I prefer, how much gelatin will set the custard just so, and I have an arsenal of flavors that I can incorporate into any recipe to make it my own.

That doesn鈥檛 mean that panna cotta has suddenly become 鈥渆asy鈥 to make. The mastery of ingredients and techniques that comes with years of practice has allowed me to reinvent even the most finicky of desserts.

jenny mccoy pastry chef

What鈥檚 more, this solid comprehension of ingredients鈥攃ombined with my personal preferences鈥攁llows me to read new recipes by other chefs and determine if they will work well. I can reverse my knowledge, not just to write recipes, but to know how to alter recipes in a cookbook I might be reading, to improve a dessert before I even try making it. So in the end, I find I no longer follow others鈥 recipes at all, but simply use them as a touchstone for inspiration.

A Gentle Reminder

Every pastry chef I know acknowledges that nothing is truly original. Yes, I am completely contradicting all of the advice I just shared. But, it鈥檚 the truth. You can learn to write recipes from scratch鈥攁nd I strongly suggest you pursue the ability to do so.

But, once you write what you think is original, don鈥檛 be upset when you find a recipe published elsewhere that is exactly the same. A panna cotta can only be so original, right? Instead of feeling a sense of defeat, recognize that you have arrived at a level of understanding that鈥檚 sweet in its own unique way.

Want to study with Chef Jenny? Click here to learn more about our Pastry & Baking Arts program.