Confident Kitchen

“Cooking is 80 percent confidence, a skill best acquired starting from when the apron strings wrap around you twice.”

“Out of the kitchen, onto the couch”

When we let corporations do the cooking, they’re bound to go heavy on sugar, fat and salt; these are three tastes we’re hard-wired to like, which happen to be dirt cheap to add and do a good job masking the shortcomings of processed food. And if you make special-occasion foods cheap and easy enough to eat every day, we will eat them every day. The time and work involved in cooking, as well as the delay in gratification built into the process, served as an important check on our appetite. Now that check is gone, and we’re struggling to deal with the consequences.
The question is, Can we ever put the genie back into the bottle? Once it has been destroyed, can a culture of everyday cooking be rebuilt? One in which men share equally in the work? One in which the cooking shows on television once again teach people how to cook from scratch and, as Julia Child once did, actually empower them to do it?

Let us hope so. Because it’s hard to imagine ever reforming the American way of eating or, for that matter, the American food system unless millions of Americans — women and men — are willing to make cooking a part of daily life. The path to a diet of fresher, unprocessed food, not to mention to a revitalized local-food economy, passes straight through the home kitchen.

But if this is a dream you find appealing, you might not want to call Harry Balzer right away to discuss it.

“Not going to happen,” he told me. “Why? Because we’re basically cheap and lazy. And besides, the skills are already lost. Who is going to teach the next generation to cook? I don’t see it.”

Full article by Michael Pollan here. Well worth the read (though it took me 4 days to get around to reading the entire thing). So have the skills been lost or is it the motivation? The archives are there: Julia’s cooking shows are available to watch. We have cookbooks that teach technique. We have a plethora of cultures to learn from that haven’t lost the skills or the inclination. We just need the motivation. In our house, we eat over 90% of our meals from scratch. I have made it a priority to eat well, which has led to numerous health benefits as well as peace of mind. Has it been worth it? Oh yes.

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