Isn't that a paradox though? Because you get a bowl, but then you remember that and think you need a bigger bowl. But then you remember you need a bigger bowl then you think, so you just go bigger and bigger and bigger until you end up making a salad in an empty kiddie pool, and you would've gone bigger but that's about as big as you could find.
What I've found: When you go to make a salad you choose a bowl. Then you remember you need a bigger bowl. You get out a bigger bowl. You start making your salad. You judge how much lettuce you need. You use the bowl as a guide. You add other salad ingredients proportionately to the lettuce. Your bowl is too small for the salad.
To fix this: Pick a bowl. Decide how much lettuce you need. Get a bigger bowl. Don't adjust your lettuce. Continue making salad.
Alternatively: measure your ingredients, figure out what size bowl you need to fit that much salad (might take a little trial and error). Use the same bowl and the same measurements everytime.
To fix this: Pick a bowl. Decide how much lettuce you need. Get a bigger bowl. Don't adjust your lettuce. Continue making salad.
Alternatively: measure your ingredients, figure out what size bowl you need to fit that much salad (might take a little trial and error). Use the same bowl and the same measurements everytime.