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Would you rather see the possibilities or have the answers? In this episode, we practice aiming for approximation and then fine tuning though iteration. We explore the difficult act of knowing when to recalibrate while we revisit a recipe from the past and make it our own.
Feed Your Fire is a mashup discussion about life topics and food. Sometimes we’ll cook, other times, we’ll just eat, but in each episode, we’ll share stories and have a conversation that pushes us further in our relationship with ourselves and other people. Feel free to just listen or to cook with us.
Visit our website www.feedyourfireforlife.com.
Hello and welcome to Feed Your Fire. I'm your host, Kim Baker.
Today we're going to talk about one of the most powerful tools that we have at our disposal
as the architects of our life, freeing ourselves of the rigid ideas that don't serve us and
leveraging concepts that do. And we're going to do the very same thing in the kitchen, building
on our successes, creating space for our Feynman and savoring every bite.
Would you rather be able to see the possibilities or have the answers? Don't worry, there's no quiz
at the end of this episode. We're sort of trained to be solutions minded. And yet whether
we're talking about things in our personal lives or our careers, rarely is the solution
to something a direct hit. Just recently, I was on this panel at my alma mater, a little
shout out to the spiders. And we were talking about entrepreneurship and how the reality
of the experience differs from what I might have thought when I was studying. And my
answer to that question is that in real life, the process is much more iterative. It's
not just that you refine your tactics along the way, sharpening them as you go. It's that
even the vision and possibility of what you're creating is honed by the feedback of the live
environment. We're trained from an early age. We're given a question and we're expected
to provide the answer. But even in disciplines as precise as math or data science, the idea
of iteration is embraced where all you need to start is an approximation, which gets recalibrated
throughout a repetitive process. And not only is there an expectation of refinement, there's
this idea of finding the best solution, knowing that not all answers are of the same quality.
And yet we put this pressure on ourselves to get it right, that we somehow should have
known better, that we should have chosen differently or moved along faster. Our intellectual
frameworks exist in an organic world. And when we create these rigid linear expectations,
we're setting ourselves up to fail when what we really need to get started is just knowing
where to direct our arrow. What's inherent in these mathematical processes of iteration
is knowing when and how to recalibrate. And that, I believe, is the secret sauce and the
part that may be most difficult. In business school, I remember learning about the downfall
of blockbuster. Eddie Jensey's listening might need a history lesson here, but millennials
and above will certainly remember the old video rental chain that essentially failed
to recalibrate. They had to find their offering very tactically. And when streaming came to play,
they stayed too rigid and they failed to adapt and iterate, revisiting something that's
working seems risky, but not making necessary adjustments might be the biggest risk of all.
And I would bet we've all seen this in one form or another in our personal lives. We
can get caught up in our own routines and we miss the writing on the wall or maybe we
just want things to stay the same. So we don't bother with an assessment, but taking a minute
to challenge or revisit what we know is a flex. It's a sign of strength, not weakness.
What we could learn from data science is to create space for reflection, to have it be
a critical step and not an afterthought. We also have to get clear on what we're measuring.
The wrong metric can lead to misdirection. And lastly, we have to listen for feedback.
This can come from people or our contextual environment. Today we're going to practice
these ideas in the kitchen. A couple of years ago in season one, we had made these biscuits.
The episode was about doing things differently, getting out of our comfort zone. And as part
of that exploration, we prepared a recipe that wasn't our own. We prepared a well-known
recipe from Allison Roman, the luckiest biscuits. And I had this idea to come back to something
that we had already done. Building refinement into our process and the idea of when and
how to recalibrate. I started with reflection. Even though the recipe that we prepared was
in fact delicious, there were a lot of other recipes online that got five star ratings.
I wanted this recipe to be my own. And I said that as my objective. I did a bunch of research
on the ratios of ingredients helping me to understand their interaction with one another
and a framework for how to begin. I also wanted to bring some innovation to the recipe.
And so I'm here to share that iteration with you today. We're going to start by cutting two
sticks of European butter into small cubes and pop them into the freezer. I like to let that
chill for at least 15 minutes. Then when you're ready, put 470 grams of flour, which is about
three and a quarter cups into a mixing bowl. Add a pinch of salt and about a tablespoon and a
half of sugar along with a teaspoon of baking soda and two and a half teaspoons of baking powder.
Then we're going to run that through a sieve to sift it. Everything we do in this recipe is to
create lightness and airiness. When your butter is cold enough, add it to the mixture and with a
paddle attachment, let it run for a few minutes until those cubes of butter are like pebbles.
Then pour a cup of buttermilk and gradually, barely having the mixture just come together.
The dough will be kind of scraggly and that's exactly what we want. Then pour the dough out onto a
clean countertop. We're going to work it with our hands, getting everything just incorporated
without overworking the dough. Form the dough into a rectangle shape. Then use a bench scraper to cut
the dough into pieces. I personally like to create mini biscuits that are about an inch and a half
square. You can certainly cut these larger if you prefer. Now unfortunately, like all good things
in life, these require a bit of patience. So after we cut them into squares, we're going to place
them on a parchment lined baking sheet and pop it into the refrigerator for a bit. You want this dough
to be really cold when you bake it. Once you've waited about a half hour or as long as you possibly
can wait, we're going to finish up the biscuits by brushing them with some buttermilk and sprinkling
them with some maldonsalt. You can certainly stop there for an absolutely amazing biscuit recipe,
but since we're exploring the best possible solution, I'm going to take it a step further and
using a small spoon, like almost like a measuring spoon, or your finger, poke a hole in the center
of each of those biscuits. Now these are going to rise when you bake them, so you kind of have
to go deep. If you want any chance of the jam staying in the center of the biscuit. And once you've
made that indentation, I want you to fill it up with some jam. I use some apricot peach on some,
some strawberry preserves on another. Feel free to use your favorite or whatever you have on hand.
And then pop them in the oven for about 12, maybe 15 minutes max. The jam will kind of have
risen up with the dough and spilled a bit onto the outside, giving it kind of this deliciously
rustic flair. I highly recommend you eat them right out of the oven. But if you must, remove them
from the parchment paper and let them cool on a rack. If you're wondering what the feedback was,
yeah, you can say it went over pretty well in our house. I like to think of this recipe as your
ticket to freedom. Not just because these biscuits have sort of the nostalgic Americana vibe,
but because setting up the expectation for iteration relieves us of the impossible task of trying
to get it right the first time, every time. It gives us permission to explore, to take one step
forward and maybe a step back. But eventually we find two in the formula and like this recipe,
we create something that we can call our own. Until our next episode, I say so long. Feature
Fire, where food nourishes growth. Feature Fire is sponsored by Cassari Consulting,
where insight meets innovation. That's K-A-S-A-R-I Consulting.com.
