Not yet a member Already a member ? Forgotten password ?
PETITCHEF
Add your blog-site | Add your recipes | Receive daily menu | Contact us


Growing up Foodie


By (Visit website)



My first memory of being a foodie was in my Grandma?s kitchen. Grandma was always very patient with me… and I was an endless fountain of questions. I remember stirring pudding… not instant, not from a box. Grandma threw together a few ingredients then put the concoction on the stove. It had to be stirred pretty much constantly, and I always wanted to help. My job was to stir… and stir… and stir. And that pudding that I helped with always seemed to taste better than the pudding I didn?t help with.


We had a garden too, and chickens. I helped pick produce from the garden, helped snap, pod, stem and shuck all the food we grew. I helped Grandma forage for wild plums and gooseberries to make jam. I hunted eggs and despite the fact that I didn?t like it all that much, watched the process of butchering the chickens we would eat. I experienced the process of food from start to finish. I never knew how lucky I was until many years later.


My next foodie experience was an Easy Bake oven. I was in heaven… until I ran out of the ?mixes.? Being creative by nature I decided to make my own mixes! They weren?t great. Actually, they were pretty bad. But, I kept trying… occasionally I would happen upon a mixture that worked. But invariably, after that one success, I would make a cake that was more salt than flavor.


By junior high I had taken a home economics courses. The first recipe I ever made in school, from start to finish, was spaghetti ?sause.? That?s how it?s written on the recipe card, anyway. I do remember it tasting VERY good! Again, I?m pretty sure it was because I had labor invested in it.


I had more home ec courses under my belt in high school. By this time I was starting to understand the concept of measuring, and proportions… so no more salt cakes. I remember wanting to try popovers. No idea why, because I?d never had them… I think I saw them in a cookbook and thought they looked interesting, so I tried them.


My greatest invention… because let?s face it, the salt cakes weren?t my greatest moment… was parmesan-crusting. I was making myself a snack… a sandwich… and I threw some parmesan on and Voila! I flip the sandwich over and there?s this lovely golden brown crust of parmesan just begging me to take a bite! I?m pretty sure I was the first person who EVER did this, too!


Two years after graduating from high school, I got married and the real trial by fire began. I ?thought? I was a great cook, but didn?t realize what it was like to cook at least one meal daily. Luckily, I had a wonderful mother-in-law, Ruth, who took me under her culinary wing. Don?t get me wrong, my own mother is a good cook too but she tended to be the ?get out of my kitchen? type. You can learn a lot by watching, but the hands-on training I received from Ruth was priceless.


This time, I wasn?t watching the chicken-butchering process, I was helping. She sensed my reluctance and pretty much insisted on me helping. She was a wonderful lady but she didn?t take no for an answer. So, I helped. And I learned, or rather, re-learned, making things from scratch. Where your food comes from. How to cook fresh. And I learned that what many people think of as ?making do? is really the way everybody should eat.


We seem to have this idea that going out to eat, and buying convenience foods in the grocery store, is the only way. When things get tough, we grow some vegetables in our garden, or patio containers, and consider that to be ?making do.? I would like to see the tide turn… and I believe that it is, in a small way.




I would like to see the concept of cooking fresh and from scratch become the right way to do things. Again. The French have it right. They go to market pretty much every day and buy their ingredients for dinner. Then, they prepare it. Trust me, when you?re faced with a refrigerator full of ingredients rather than something you can warm up and eat in 3 minutes, it cuts down on impulse eating! It?s also a much healthier way to live.



Tagged: chicken, Easy Bake, foodie, French, fresh, garden, parmesan crusted, popovers, pudding, spaghetti, spaghetti sauce


related searches :



Rate this recipe : Not good   so so   Good   Very good   Excellent !!!  




Imprimer cette page

Send this recipe to a friend

ask a question about this article

share on Facebook


Related recipes

  • Recipe Foodie Movie Friday: Goodfellas (with red sauce recipe)
    Foodie Movie Friday: Goodfellas (with red sauce recipe) (1 vote)
    Goodfellas . In our opinion, one of the best movies of all time, and one we can watch over and over. Good thing, too, since lately it seems to be on AMC every day! As you probably know, it's not a movie about food, but about a group of[...]
  • Recipe Royal foodie joust red onion jam blt
    Royal foodie joust red onion jam blt
    Main Dish Easy
    30 Minute(s) 1 Minute(s)
    Ingredients :Rebecka's Red Onion Jam 2 1/2 quarts thick sliced red onions (about 15 med 6 large) 2 tablespoons Hawaiian Alaer Sea Salt 2 teaspoons Bolivian ...
  • Recipe Painting Fort Purple... Coffee Point, Yazdani Bakery with Purple Foodie
    Painting Fort Purple... Coffee Point, Yazdani Bakery with Purple Foodie (1 vote)
    With the star bakers of Yazdani. Pic: Shaheen Peerbhai Shaheen, the Size Zero Baker of the Belgian chocolate cake fame , who writes on The Purple Foodie , DM'ed me on Twitter yesterday. She was at Bombay Store for a shoot. We met up[...]
  • Recipe Blogger Foodie Exchange and E-book Update
    Blogger Foodie Exchange and E-book Update (1 vote)
    I hope everyone had a lovely Valentine's Day! My husband got me these beautiful flowers early in the morning. Seems as though he had been hiding them from me! Stealthy indeed. We decided that we were not going to cook but[...]