I must respectfully disagree. Yes, it's a chemical process and, if you want an exact reaction, you will need to measure carefully. But my grandmother was an excellent baker of breads and cakes - and so was my mother. I would often watch them just take handfuls of ingredients and mix then take a little more of this an that and mix - the results were always fantastic; I have never experienced better. God forbid that every cake comes out tasting exactly as the last one or the same as next door's!
When it comes to batter, which is where this all started, I just heap the flour into a bowl, look at it, think is that enough for the number of servings? and adjust. Then I add a little baking powder (must work out how much I use to compare with the above), just beat with the number of eggs I feel like using, add milk and whatever seasoning I am using be it for a savoury batter or a sweet one, beat it some more - too thick, add a little more milk etc.
When I really think about it, that's how I do most of my cooking - I never measure spices or herbs but go as I see fit at the time. Cooking should be a 'fuzzy' art not an exact science! (IMHO )
When it comes to batter, which is where this all started, I just heap the flour into a bowl, look at it, think is that enough for the number of servings? and adjust. Then I add a little baking powder (must work out how much I use to compare with the above), just beat with the number of eggs I feel like using, add milk and whatever seasoning I am using be it for a savoury batter or a sweet one, beat it some more - too thick, add a little more milk etc.
When I really think about it, that's how I do most of my cooking - I never measure spices or herbs but go as I see fit at the time. Cooking should be a 'fuzzy' art not an exact science! (IMHO )