mharriman;16701 wrote:but who’s going to go back and add all those ingredients to the millions of recipes? Sounds daunting to me.
I believe that Jane's proposal was only for fresh pantry ingredients and strictly moving forward not going back to update recipes already indexed. If you look at the earliest books that are indexed, you will find there have already been a number of changes where earlier recipes were not brough up to the new standards.
I agree that for someone like yourself who plans out meals for a week with your cookbooks at hand, the change would not provide a noticeable benefits. However, there are many who have a very different approach. Unless I have special events that require advanced planning, I go to the market (meat, fish, ethnic, grocery ...) and see what is available and of high quality. In my boondocks, I cannot assume that anything fresh will be available - much is stocked in small quantities and it depends upon who shopped before me. Don't ask about my failure to find chestnuts to go into my traditional brussel sprouts the first year I moved out here. The result is that I may be purchasing a cut of meat or an uncommon vegetable (like the week they had name because of an error in ordering) that I don't have a recipe for in my head. I either guess or look up potential recipes on my phone. Another user expressing frustration at this problem is what motivated my raising the issue again.
I wish I had access to the statistics on the perishable pantry items as search terms for recipes. I doubt that they are frequently searched for. If I am right, the effect on the search engine and results should be minimal. However, the results would be more consistent as they would be less dependent on the number of servings the recipes is for.
Sidenote: when I lived in the city, I tended to shop daily. I was raised picking items out of the garden or the freezer or the pantry of home-canned foods. I've never made the switch from choosing the best, freshest ingredients to cook to choosing the recipes and hoping for the best for ingredients. Home ec teachers, dieticians, and financial planners never made a dent on my practice.