...after changing a bunch of stuff.
I see this a lot on places like allrecipes.com and the Food Network website. People will leave a poor review for a recipe, stating whatever was wrong with it, but also stating a bunch of stuff they did differently! For example, I was just reading a recipe for homemade peanut butter pie. The recipe says to make a chocolate crust using crushed chocolate wafers, and to also use homemade peanut butter for the filling (and gave the recipe for the homemade peanut butter.) One review gave it a 2 out of 5 stars, stating it wasn't very good, but also stating she used graham crackers instead of chocolate wafers in the crust, and that she used store bought generic peanut butter! Of course it's not going to be as good if you don't actually follow the recipe.
I change recipes all the time to suit my and my husband's taste. He hates onion, so if a recipe calls for a bunch of onion, I usually leave it out or use only a little, and sometimes sub something else that I think might go well (a lot of times a bit more garlic, or sometimes something like green bell pepper if I think it'd go well in the dish.) If it doesn't turn out, I don't leave a bad review because of it.
I see this a lot on places like allrecipes.com and the Food Network website. People will leave a poor review for a recipe, stating whatever was wrong with it, but also stating a bunch of stuff they did differently! For example, I was just reading a recipe for homemade peanut butter pie. The recipe says to make a chocolate crust using crushed chocolate wafers, and to also use homemade peanut butter for the filling (and gave the recipe for the homemade peanut butter.) One review gave it a 2 out of 5 stars, stating it wasn't very good, but also stating she used graham crackers instead of chocolate wafers in the crust, and that she used store bought generic peanut butter! Of course it's not going to be as good if you don't actually follow the recipe.
I change recipes all the time to suit my and my husband's taste. He hates onion, so if a recipe calls for a bunch of onion, I usually leave it out or use only a little, and sometimes sub something else that I think might go well (a lot of times a bit more garlic, or sometimes something like green bell pepper if I think it'd go well in the dish.) If it doesn't turn out, I don't leave a bad review because of it.
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