What are some things to make for a complete beginner(me), and how do you make them?
Complete beginner with a budget, or complete beginner with no money? I ask just because the first time many people realize that they are complete beginners is right around college/moving out, and they often have no money then, either. Anyway, some of my college favorites:
pasta with egg sauce (It has some other name, but I forget how to spell it)
1/4 lb pasta
one egg
1/4 cup milk
1/4 cup powdered Parmesan/Romano cheese
1/4 cup crumbled bacon (cooked until crispy, then crumbled/chopped)
ground pepper to taste
boil water for pasta, combine other ingredients and mix until well blended.
Once pasta is cooked, drain well and rinse in boiling water if desired.
Return Pasta to cooking pot and pour the egg mixture over is, then mix thoroughly to coat the pasta and cook the egg. Serve hot
Rysith-'Carbonara'.
One of my favorites, that I cook a couple of times a year.
A lot of recipes will call for proscutto. American bacon is much better, in my opinion, especially if you can get good, thick-cut bacon. Sometimes this comes covered in cracked black pepper (I've bought it before, in the supermarket). The pepper mentioned is integral to the dish, so this would be ideal.
The only problem I have with Carbonara is that it always comes out a little bland for my tastes...so I tend to add other ingredients. I always add lots of garlic.
Mushrooms (the cheap white ones, thick sliced and cooked separately, on very high heat, which intensifies their flavor. You could use portabello/crimini, or any kind of edible mushroom, really) are good, spinach or Swiss chard-preferrably fresh-is also good, precooked just until it wilts, beforehand.
Both of these, I'd add at the very end, as a "topping".
I'd also probably serve this with sauteed chicken livers on the side, if I had any handy.
I've also seen recipes which add meatballs, chicken, Italian sausage.
Hawkfrost: What sort of things do you like to eat? If you'll let me know, I'll try to find you some easy recipes.
The nice thing about just learning to cook is you can experiment around and figure out what you like to eat, and then learn how to cook those things, before branching out.