You mix together chemicals and compounds, delicately adding them and heating them at specific temperatures to get a desirable output. You often have to care for other factors like air flow (how much to leave the pot closed or open) and material weight (like not adding too much in a cake or it’ll all sink to the bottom).
A kitchen is just a laboratory, and chefs are just scientists that focus on taste. I get it now.
Watch some Good Eats with Alton Brown, he talks a lot about the chemistry involved in cooking
J Kenji Lopez too.
Also a core concept in the novel/AppleTV series Lessons In Chemistry:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lessons_in_Chemistry
That’s what I was going to say :)
Legit, I was a passable cook before good eats. After watching it for a while, not only did it give me a bit of passion for cooking, but I got good at it. Then serious eats came along and helped me refine some more. Once you start thinking of cooking and baking as controlled chemical reactions, it makes things easier to grasp.
Gives you not only the how but the why, which just opens up a bunch of other learning types for cooking.