I'll let you in on a secret: restaurant food isn't better because chefs have magical skills. It's better because they use more butter, more salt, and higher heat than you do at home. Once you understand those three principles, your home cooking improves overnight.
The Technique That Changed Everything
This is one of those things that sounds simple but has a lot of nuance once you dig in.
Salt is the single most important ingredient in cooking, and most home cooks under-season dramatically. Professional kitchens season at every stage — the pasta water, the onions as they sauté, the meat before searing, and then a final adjustment at the end. Under-salted food tastes flat and boring, regardless of how good the other ingredients are. When you hear chefs say 'season to taste,' they mean add salt until the flavors pop.
Ingredients That Make the Difference
Now, this is where it gets interesting.
Here's a technique that will change your weeknight cooking: mise en place. That's the French term for 'everything in its place' — it means chopping, measuring, and organizing all your ingredients before you turn on the stove. It feels like extra work, but it actually saves time because you're never scrambling to dice onions while your garlic burns. Plus, it makes cooking feel calmer and more enjoyable.
Step by Step (With Room for Error)
For most people, Cast iron pans are having a moment, and for good reason. A well-seasoned cast iron skillet gives you a sear that no non-stick pan can match. They're nearly indestructible, they go from stovetop to oven, and they cost a fraction of fancy stainless steel sets. I picked up a Lodge 12-inch skillet for about $30 and it's the pan I reach for 80% of the time. The seasoning gets better with every use.
Adapt It to Your Kitchen
Acid is the secret weapon most home cooks don't use enough. A squeeze of lemon juice, a splash of good vinegar, or even a spoonful of capers can transform a dish that tastes 'good' into one that tastes 'wow.' Acid brightens flavors, cuts through richness, and creates balance. Next time your soup or sauce tastes flat, try adding a little vinegar before you reach for more salt.
In other words, that's the core of it.
The Lazy Shortcut That Actually Works
Meal prep doesn't have to mean eating the same sad chicken and rice for five days straight. A better approach: prepare building blocks. Roast a big tray of vegetables, cook a pot of grains, make a versatile protein. Then mix and match throughout the week — grain bowls on Monday, wraps on Tuesday, fried rice with the leftover vegetables on Wednesday. Same ingredients, different meals.
Final Thoughts
Cooking isn't about perfection — it's about feeding yourself and the people you love, one imperfect but delicious meal at a time. Don't worry about Instagram-worthy plating. Worry about whether it tastes good. Everything else is a bonus.