Recipes for leaving home
June 29th, 2008 by happypaulSource: Sydney Morning Herald (Original Article)
SEX And The City’s Carrie kept part of her $40,000 worth
of shoes in the oven, presumably safe in assuming that she was
never going to roast her Manolos by mistake - that’d be a leathery
leg of lamb. Her shopping skills are legendary, chopping skills
negligible and even a binge-drinking teenager knows there’s not
much nutrition in a cosmopolitan.
But Carrie’s not real - important to remember that - and surely
this dearth of cooking skills is not typical? Having cooked a
muffin and stuffed a capsicum some time in Year 8, are people quite
a lot younger than Carrie capable of leaving home and cooking their
own dinner well enough to stay healthy?
Keen that my children not see the oven as an extension of the
closet, and aware that osmosis doesn’t really cut it as food
preparation training, for a while there Sunday night at our place
was life-skills night. The two daughters took turns making dinner
and I assisted with chopping and translating recipes.
We raided the cookbook shelves and ranged through the cuisines
of India, Japan and Italy, with the meat-avoiding younger daughter
exploring the high-fibre realms of vegetarian cooking. We ate more
pasta than was strictly necessary, and learned there’s not much of
a vegetarian nature that will satisfy a man who has been
windsurfing on Botany Bay for the past four hours. The project was
going well until maths intervened. The maths tutor is only
available on Sunday evenings. In the run-up to the HSC, maths
skills trump life skills.
Catherine Saxelby, nutritionist and mother of an 18-year-old
daughter and 20-year-old son, admits she, too, has been only
“moderately successful” in teaching her children to cook. “You have
to find the right moment, and even then a whole meal can be
overwhelming,” she admits. She’s started to break the training into
steps but the goal remains. “The children need to master a mince
dish, a stir-fry, a barbecue and a roast. Without those skills,
they’re cheaptravelnews at the mercy of fast food.”
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