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by eT8AZithxooKei6 2797 days ago
OK. What if you have a dinner party for 6 guests, but your recipe is written to give 8 portions?
2 comments

What I'd do in this case (and this is true for most everyone I know) depends on what "portion" means:

- If it's something that can be reasonably divided among guests (such as a soup or something similar), then I eyeball the portions so they're all approximately even. Optionally, if there's an ample amount, you can simply let people decide how much they want through self-service.

- If it's something that's demarcated by physical objects (e.g. dinner rolls, cupcakes, etc), then you have a few other options: Leftovers to save for later, split them among people who want extra, or give them away to whomever wants them.

I don't know about the OP you're replying to, but I rarely divide a recipe up based on expected portions since portion size is highly variable. Should I have extra left over, then I deal with that accordingly. If I'm cooking to get rid of an ingredient, I don't particularly care if I miss the mark by a few portions provided I have enough in the first place for the objective.

(The other problem is that portioning in this question seems to me to assume that all guests are equally hungry.)

That's solving a different problem. Again: I understand how to scale a recipe (which is what you're describing).

Let's do this as a math problem.

How I tend to cook: Xbutter + Ysugar + ZFlour = 20 Cookies.

How OP is cooking: 2 butter + Ysugar +ZFlour = X

We're setting different known quantities (him butter, me portions) and then solving for the rest. They're fundamentally different approaches in cooking philosophy. And again, neither is "wrong" I just found OP's style to be novel enough to comment on