I can cook very well,do ironing and keep a clean house.
I also like pets,hang gliding and cosy nights in.
PO box 6592-338 for more photos details
I find it completely flummoxing that anyone can't cook at least well enough to be able to pull together a few raw ingredients and generate calories palatable enough to stay down and feed others without too many complaints. It's a basic skill fundamental to being a functioning human. I can't tell you when I learnt to cook - I don't think I ever did - it was just a drip feed of watching other people doing when I was young, then doing a bit, then doing it all. You get to the point where you just know - quantities, cooking methods and times, what works with what. I'll look in a cook book every few months maybe to look for inspiration or if doing something where exact ratios might be needed for it to set or whatever; but other than that it's just a freestyle - what's in or needs using up, what's cheap or in season, what we fancy.
I wouldn't call myself a cook, as in I don't get off on all that bollox on masterchef - I'm no food snob. But feeding myself and others a balanced and attractive diet is just a fundamental - like breathing or keeping yourself clean.
Those people who are actively having to 'learn' in adulthood.....anyone brave enough to try and explain how that came about? Were you from a traditional house growing up, where your mum dealt with all the domestic stuff and you were neither expected or encouraged to get involved? Were you a little bit spoilt maybe? Is this mainly a 'men of a certain age' problem? Or was your youth a bit dysfunctional and there were no role models doing actual cooking at home (I taught a young lad once who at the age of 11 had never eaten a meal from a plate or at a table in a home that had no cutlery). How did you get through your young adult years?
Those people who are actively having to ‘learn’ in adulthood…..anyone brave enough to try and explain how that came about?
I'm no Gordon Ramsey but I was astonished at the unbelievably low level of cooking ability of some people when I went to uni.
One of my housemates had literally never cooked anything for himself at all ever. Not even a boiled egg. He wasn't thick at all, he just came from a house where his Mum did all of that. Put a plate of food on the table, he ate it, the plate miraculously disappeared off to be cleaned and put away ready for it to next appear laden with food.
He lived on cheese sandwiches and some truly vile "Pasta 'n' Sauce" stuff out of a packet - pour some grit out of a packet into a pan, add water, heat for 3 minutes.
He never did any washing up either the lazy bastard. Once we gathered up all his piles of used plates and crockery and cutlery and dumped it all on his bed.
I don't get it either
Mum is a staunch feminist and just taught me for as far back I can remember. To me its a basic life skill
*sends fasthaggis a message*
Yep but then my first job was, and i paid my way through uni as a chef..although nowhere fancy
I think the aim is to start with recipes and then overtime you learn to adapt them more to your taste, or what you have in cupboards.
You can then build up a bank of recipes and meals for certain occasions, every day family favourites, special meals for anniversaries, meals for when friends are over etc..
One thing that has really enhanced cooking for me, despite it being something i've alway enjoyed (when its not a job) is growing fruit and veg, huge satisfaction when you look down and you've grown half the veg on your plate.
Yea, I went to public school (everything done for you) from 11-18 and my mum is an amazing cook, so I still struggle in my mid-40's to make anything that I could offer to others. I can keep myself healthy enough but probably only able to cook 4 or 5 different meals.
I could have learnt, just never needed to. Also, I find recipes confusing and intimidating so just make stuff up or watch other people and copy them. Plus I live on my own so it's not like I need to impress anyone. But I would like to be better at it!
@IdleJon it was starting to catch in a few places, but to be honest our ‘new’ oven cooks everything a bit fast, so I tend to check things at about 90% of the cooking time and frequently take things out early.
TBH I was going to post a tray bake recipe based on Cod/bake fillets, but that’s a bit more ‘cook until it’s ready’ which takes some of the simplicity away from the tray bake concept.
Those people who are actively having to ‘learn’ in adulthood…..anyone brave enough to try and explain how that came about?
When I was at school the boys did woodwork and the girls did 'home economics' which did actually involve real cooking from real ingredients. I've read a few time now that home economics these days involves a lot of how to deal with ready prepared foods rather than cooking from scratch from things you grew in your own garden. I'm always wondering if that is deliberate in someone somewhere trying to create a society of 'worker bees' who also consume from other workers and this is their idea of a society. However hanlon's razor pretty much always applies and I think they teach that because it is needed rather than anything Machiavellian
edit: got to say that I do love the 'Nat's what I reckon' cooking videos. I'm not sure it is a good way to learn any technique but the attitude and spirit is spot on
Yes I can cook. Me and Mrs OD share the cooking. Do a lot of one pot veggie food. But can also bake cakes and pies etc but rarely do.
p.s. - rereading the above, it comes across a bit arsey. Well done anyone who is getting around to learning to cook in adulthood - you won't regret it. And once you know, you just know.....like riding a bike.
When I was at school the boys did woodwork and the girls did ‘home economics’ which did actually involve real cooking from real ingredients.
How far are you going back? In the early 80s both boys and girls did everything - woodwork, metalwork, cooking and needlework. I could take my own jeans in at 13! 🙂
How far are you going back? In the 80s both boys and girls did everything
Oh at least a decade before that, and I'm the one that does the sewing in my house but that's because I get to use machines. Our 60s sewing machine is a mechanical marvel but there is a whole other thread there
I should also add that I'm super glad we learned woodwork and metalwork at school. I'm not sure where else i would have learned it and I've found it so useful ever since.
I can, but fairly straightforward basic stuff, as I’m just not interested in the process of cooking. And as there’s just me, spending several hours preparing for half an hour eating, it’s just not worth it.
One of my housemates had literally never cooked anything for himself at all ever. Not even a boiled egg.
Yip. I lived with a lad in the first year at uni who was exactly the same. He would look at the cooker as if it was a thermonuclear device that could be detonated at any moment. Mind you, he was the same with a washing machine. It was all a strange new world to him
I remember the first time he went shopping and he came back with the contents of a trolley dash that you couldn't actually put a meal together with. Just mountains of completely random stuff as he'd never actually cooked a meal in his entire life
His mum had basically infantilised him through doing absolutely everything for him until the moment he left home.
I don't often "cook" (as opposed to throwing some stuff together to pour down my gullet) but I quite enjoy it whdn the mood takes me. I tend to have a go for anniversaries or Mrs Pondo's birthday or just when she's down or whatever - found a simple teriyaki salmon recipe which is lush, can do ok mussels, can do a passable Wagamamas chilli squid. We like seafood. 🙂
I can sew, do DIY stuff and cook, sortof.
cooking is a weird one. always enjoyed home-ec at school and was good at it. I can follow a recipe well and am unsure how others can't. However, I lack artistry and, like a textbook autistic, can make the same thing perfectly time and time again, but can't vary it, and coudn't describe what fiddling about with ingredients will do to the taste of things.
Thankfully my wife has ADHD and is a culinary wizard, by comparison. I just switch things down that are about to burn/boil over and tidy around her so she has enough pans to use (and she uses them, all), and keep tabs on what she is doing if she gets distracted by squirrels.
we're a disfunctional, but effective team.
I've just knocked off for the day so I'm off to kitchen to put the radio on, crack a beer open and cook a fish pie 😀
I really enjoy cooking, I find the whole process quite therapeutic. House is full of recipe/cookery books and can I can sometimes be found reading recipe books as bedtime reading looking for inspiration. I cook a huge variety of things and also enjoy experimenting (it doesn't always go well). Mushroom kofta curry tonight, it was lush 🙂
I can sew, do DIY stuff and cook, sortof.
forwards lovewookie's contact details to TJ 😉🙃🤣
Yes, you can find me on OnlyFlans…
Well played.
Yes I can. I can't say I'm a great cook, but I do enjoy some time spent rustling up meal.
We've also insisted that our kids leave home able to cook 5 proper meals without need for a recipe book or much processed. This seems to be highly unusual, and both the lads who are at college / Uni report that they are very popular and have both given cookery lessons to house mates.
I guess I was lucky my mum amongst other things was a HE teacher, so by the time I was 12 I could cook a full 3 course meal and have kept evolving at it ever since (she used to say it was lovely watching her son cook). My late wife was a very good cook but once her MS took over she said I was a much more inventive cook than she ever was 🙂
Now I'm in a new relationship my girlfriend has managed to bring up 2 daughters without them going hungry but was never really allowed into the the kitchen by her own mother & the fact she struggled with the settings on her oven the other night sort of shocked me!
I love cooking for others though so that works fine in our relationship, & she's a really appreciative audience 😀
Yes I can cook. I love cooking. Probably explains the waistline, or the cooking being an excuse to sup wine is 😂. I learned from my mum, spent time as a pub manager, catering manager, chef (by way of having to), hotel manager. All food related. It can be hugely frustrating and hugely rewarding in equal measure. YMMV
I pleased to say that, no, I can't cook. I think the time spent preparing and cooking food is a massive waste of time.
Weren't we promised (like flying cars) a single pill per day to get rid of having to cook and eat?
I'm happy with beans on toast, or just toast.
Sorry.
Weren’t we promised (like flying cars) a single pill per day to get rid of having to cook and eat?
I think that Huel is what sir is looking for. It's not for me but i believe from here that it is ok
Beans on toast rocks though along with lots of other simple things like scrambled eggs
Fortunately the wife and I are both pretty handy in the kitchen. I'm a bit handier if I do say so myself.
She's better at the staples where I'm a bit more adventurous. I seem to do well with Asian dishes and cook for the flavour (read loads of butter), whereas she cooks healthier.
She works with people who don't have many life skills and I didn't realise how fortunate I was for paying attention in home economics class and having my mum get us involved in the kitchen when we were kids.
It does take practice though, when I left home I was quite proud to cook a meal of fray bentos, can of tatties and a can of peas!
Watching masterchef over the years has helped with technique and flavours. YouTube is also an excellent resource!
I don't recommend celebrity masterchef though... Some boy was boiling coleslaw last time I watched it! 😂
I can, but fairly straightforward basic stuff, as I’m just not interested in the process of cooking. And as there’s just me, spending several hours preparing for half an hour eating, it’s just not worth it.
You just described me, though there isn't "just me" so the missus does most of the the cooking (she likes it and is more fussy).
Frankly, I'll eat anything as long as it fills my stomach and provides the needed nutrition. Meals rarely take longer than 10 minutes for me to devour so it never seems like a worthwhile use of time faffing around in the kitchen. I guess that makes me some sort of heathen.
Yes I enjoy cooking BUT I also massively overcook volumes so I get a stack of leftovers in the freezer to use up later. Soup, chilli, curry, stews in particular. Mostly make it up as I go along depending what ingredients I have, once you know the basics it’s easy enough and I’m not a fussy eater. I also do a bunch of easy quick things like kippers or a stir-fry when I want a light meal.
Just had a baked potato with chilli brisket that was in the freezer (an idea someone posted here a while back - a big improvement over mince). 10 mins to prepare, tasty and healthy.
Love a roast too - easy once you’ve got the hang of it and you usually get a load of leftovers and soup out of it too.
I guess that makes me some sort of heathen.
I’ve got a mate who’s attitude to food is that it’s the fuel his body needs to keep him alive. He takes no pleasure in eating, never mind cooking. His diet is absolutely terrible
I always just put this down to him being from Glasgow 😂
@Elshalimo. My hero there.
And as there’s just me, spending several hours preparing for half an hour eating, it’s just not worth it.
Are you preparing a banquet. I had a stir fry for tea tonight, about 1.5 hours to prep cook eat and wash up.
Yeah i can cook fairly well.
I got quite into it during lockdown and really enjoy it now.
I do 90% of the cooking in our house - my wife doesn't enjoy 'cooking' but she is a pretty damn good baker.. so we've got most bases covered.
@matt_cooks_and_rides on the 'gram.
Yeah I'm pretty good if I do say so myself. Can knock up most things. Practice makes perfect and things that you think are difficult or take loads of time, soon become second nature. But like manuals or bunny hops on a bike
Don't like cooking from a recipe the first time as it seems really stilted but after the first time I know what I'm doing and tweak it thereafter.
Timings are a good point. Used to hate doing roasts because of it but pretty easy. Meat then roast potatoes take the longest, then your boiled veg only take about 15 minutes at the end. Easy peasy.
I'm also in the Keith Floyd school of cooking and find a beer or wine helps if you're stressed out about a particular recipe.
Only time I got properly cheesed off was making a chocolate mouse which just didn't work when we had guests over for a big dinner, even though it worked fine when I trialed it.
Anyone, no matter how bad a cook can make soup
Lol my mum makes terrible soup! It's such a shame as she grows lot's of lovely veg on her allotment then just piles in a random bunch of veg, doesn't pay any attention to seasoning, stock or herbs and waits for it to cook down into a mush. I avoid it when offered now after being presented with a bowl of what is more like baby food than soup. She's mostly not a good cook and I used to get things like boil in a bag beef with gravy as a child so I started learning to cook in my early teens. Ready Steady Cook with Ainsley Harriet got me started and then on to Jamie Oliver. A good friend who I lived with in my 20's went to catering college and taught me some things especially how to do a good roast and gravy and then it's gradually become a passion over the last 20 years. Now I find I don't get too many dinner invites as people are intimidated 🤣
So yes it takes time like decades I'd say to become a really good cook but also requires that you have a deep passion for it because it is time consuming if you want to get more elaborate and have a large repartee.
Started cooking by necessity when I got my own place, circa 28 years ago. Found I enjoyed and went from there. I do 95-100% of the cooking in our house, mostly from scratch and reckon I cook to a very high standard. Obviously not chef level as I can't cook at the pace/volume they do but I can pull together some seriously cheffy dishes using all the techniques.
OP - A good cook book is the Mary Berry 'Cook the perfect Step by step'. She shows with photos how to prepare and cook a dish, along with the ingredients, how long it takes to cook etc. Plenty of tips alongside the recipes.
Yes.
Another vote for Gousto here, ive cooked more in the last 2 years than the previous 20. No idea how i survived before i met my missus.
crack a beer open and cook a fish pie
I've been here so long my first thought was that @ton was coming to dinner!
For the OP stay away from stir-fry from scratch just now. It can take hours to prep veg for fast frying in 3 minutes.
Herself does the day to day with some help from me and I get to bake cake/bread/biscuits and do the odd fancy meal or dessert. One of my most treasured recipes is written in my mum's spidery hand-writing as her health was failing due to the brain tumour. It's called Canadian Lemon pud and produces a lemon custard under a sponge in the oven.
Yep - I have always loved cooking and pottering (and having a few beers) in the kitchen - I very rarely make anything from jars of sauce and only refer to recipe books for a few of the more complex dishes. Indian, Chinese, Thai, Italian, Mexican, Moroccan etc. Things like risotto and pasta dishes are dead easy. I also do Sunday dinners for the family / in-laws almost every weekend but we do have a hostess trolley so I never have to think about timings of different parts (I usually end up doing four or five different veggies, homemade gravy etc so I am happy to have the hostess on hand.
Last night was kung po chicken, tonight would ordinarily be homemade pizza but I am going out for beers with friends, tomorrow it's a Mexican with fajitas, enchiladas, nachos, black bean rice and roasted spicy sweet potato chips.
Started making hot food during COVID, had no interest before. Now I'm able to get things heated and mixed and served that is edible. Unsure if say I can cook, but we don't go hungry.
I've always happily done fry-ups or steaks/lamb but there isn't much to really do with those. Now I can cook other things, so hopefully healthier, but no-one ever asks me to cook...however, no-one else wants to so I'm happy to give some just-above-basics on a plate.
If you can read and have a bit of sense then you can follow a menu . I think that cooking , along with first aid should be on the national curriculum . I was a chef for 34 years but if im cooking for just me or can't really be bothered I just stick a jacket potato in the microwave , heat a tin of ratatouille and throw a tin of tuna into it . open the spud , pour in the ratatouille and tuna mix , put some grated cheese on top and eat . There are hundreds of things like that which need minimal preparation and are healthy and nutritious . Pasta and rice dishes that you can cook in one pot are everywhere . You can even eat them from the pot if you are particularly lazy .
I think that cooking , along with first aid should be on the national curriculum .
Well....it is! And has been since the advent of the national curriculum.
As ever, it might not always be taught uniformly well, by the right people with the right facilities and sufficient resources. And schools held to account for not providing it if they don't.
If you are old and remember home economics and portly rosy cheeky middle aged ladies making jam roly poly, or if you are a bit younger and remember teachers being forced to get kids to 'design' the layout of pizza toppings and the like - those days are now thankfully gone. It's not just cooking - there is also a lot in there about being a good consumer of food - understanding food groups, having the ability to identify healthy from the unhealthy etc.
This is the English version of the national curriculum.....
Cooking and nutrition
As part of their work with food, pupils should be taught how to cook and apply the principles of nutrition and healthy eating. Instilling a love of cooking in pupils will also open a door to one of the great expressions of human creativity. Learning how to cook is a crucial life skill that enables pupils to feed themselves and others affordably and well, now and in later life.
Pupils should be taught to:
Key stage 1
use the basic principles of a healthy and varied diet to prepare dishes
understand where food comes from
Key stage 2
understand and apply the principles of a healthy and varied diet
prepare and cook a variety of predominantly savoury dishes using a range of cooking techniques
understand seasonality, and know where and how a variety of ingredients are grown, reared, caught and processed
Key stage 3
understand and apply the principles of nutrition and health
cook a repertoire of predominantly savoury dishes so that they are able to feed themselves and others a healthy and varied diet become competent in a range of cooking techniques [for example, selecting and preparing ingredients; using utensils and electrical equipment; applying heat in different ways; using awareness of taste, texture and smell to decide how to season dishes and combine ingredients; adapting and using their own recipes]
understand the source, seasonality and characteristics of a broad range of ingredients
I haven't read the entire thread so apologies if there's already lots of recommendations of YouTube channels, but I can wholly recommend Kitchen Sanctuary on YT. There's lots of great recipes, some really tasty stuff and they're all dead easy to follow. Although I've just done the mince beef fried rice one and it was a bit of a let down.... But that's the only one so far!
https://youtube.com/@Kitchensanctuary
And this is also an extra tasty, very easy recipe
https://www.saltandlavender.com/creamy-tuscan-sausage-gnocchi/
Yes.
I worked as a short order/steak cook in my teens and all but ran a fish and chip place for nearly a year. Not much cooking really, but you learn about looking after food and timings (and drunken arseholes).
Both my grandfathers worked in the catering trade between the wars. One was Head chef at a posh hotel in London (Claridges maybe?) and the other worked for a high end chain as their "events" chef.
My mum was taught to cook by her dad. Because Grandma couldn't cook for shit. Her brother wasn't, same story with my dad.
My generation is me (can cook) brother (award winning chef) and 5 cousins. None of whom can cook for various reasons.
Do any of you have a nice simple recipe that’s easy to follow?
TBH no. Simple stuff I usually do on the fly, depending what's in the fridge.
Only use receipes for complicated stuff.
