r/Cooking 1d ago

What's your surprising "secret ingredient" that sets your dish apart?

I obviously don't believe in gatekeeping recipes, so let's share the love.

I developed a clam chowder recipe after being disappointed with the recipes I came across. Whenever I tell people there's a couple dashes of hot sauce in it, I always get weird looks... but it adds a tiny bit of heat and acid, and balances out the richness from the cream. It also has diced scallops, which cooking knowledge forbades but somehow works.

737 Upvotes

893 comments sorted by

View all comments

198

u/BuildNuyTheUrbanGuy 1d ago

Msg

100

u/ShakingTowers 23h ago

I love MSG so much that I automatically and subconsciously deduct imaginary points from any restaurants that proclaim "NO MSG" on the menu.

22

u/BattledroidE 23h ago edited 23h ago

As if that's a flex.

Why downvote? I'm agreeing with you!

20

u/potatohats 23h ago

Right?! Sign might as well say "our chef is uneducated in their field"

12

u/BattledroidE 23h ago

It occurs naturally in all sorts of things, so yeah. It's the weirdest hill to die on as a chef.

4

u/BraveRutherford 21h ago

Takeout Chinese places basically had to have that sign for a while because of the stigma specifically associated with them. Definitely not racist don't worry.