Editor's note: this is the first in what will be a series of Kitchen Klutz stories from Zaissa, as part of our larger Confessions series. Enjoy!
If it couldn't be microwaved, ordered, or pushed through a little window into our car, we didn't need it. That was our family motto when I was growing up. Our family was made up of an only child and a single mother, so logistically, this was reasonable.
So by the time I left home, my entire cooking repertoire consisted
of this: I could make really good cheesy
scrambled eggs.
My other impediment to cooking is that I have a rebellious sort
of character. Unfortunately it's paired with the fact that my only real passion is
laziness. The result of which is that I am laziness revolutionary; the sort of
person who would throw a pot away if scrubbing it were going to require more
than 10 minutes of real shoulder work, which occasionally is a problem with
really good cheesy scrambled eggs.
Rebellious and passionately lazy people are willing to rebelliously
cut corners at great personal or financial risk. We will even put our dignity
on the line if, in the end, we think there is a chance the gain is that we will
have to do less stuff we don’t like doing. This disposition sometimes has interesting results
when following a recipe.
Over the last few years, as part of this adventure I embarked on
called “learning to cook and bake things people will eat” I have made some
discoveries about which corners can and which corners absolutely cannot be cut.
But I have gotten ahead of myself. I am going to go back to the beginning
of it all.
As a young newlywed I was a full time student, with a full time
job, and I was planning on a full time career. I warned him I would not learn
to cook. And, this worked fine for the duration of my first marriage. We
remained childless for a good while and when we were blessed with the
pitter-patter of little feet, it was just the one set of them. And she was a
huge fan of cereal, fruit, and cheesy scrambled eggs.
However, for non-kitchen related reasons (I assume) I found
myself divorced and on my own at 30.
I had a lovely little apartment that had plush carpet, and a
large—and, I am told, full of first-rate appliances—kitchen of my own. I had,
other than my own, only one mouth to feed, which I did well enough with fresh
sliced veggies, fruits, cereal, a little lunch meat and bread, and of course,
cheesy eggs.
Fast forward once more, I am happy to report the opportunity to
live in wedded bliss with my soulmate enticed me away from my plush carpet and
large, to me at the time, useless kitchen. In a whirlwind, the mouth count went
up by one tiny perfect mouth. And just as we were recovering from the shock, we
learned it would be going up by yet another.
My mother, who lived in another state, called me one day, while
I was home and about to burst out my third child into the world, and suggested, as she had multiple times before, that
fast food was not going to cut it forever with a family of soon-to-be five, and
that for the health of all of them and myself, I needed to learn to prepare
meals at home, and probably buy groceries too, and she also suggested I get a haircut,
because evidently in my most recent blog post of family photos I was looking “kind
of ragged.”
I believe that with this phone call though, she was staging an intervention.
She demanded I go to the kitchen and get a casserole pan of some
specified size. I snapped a photo on my cell phone of a long, rectangular,
glass bowl thing I found in the cupboard that I had had for years and I text
messaged the image to her. She said it would do.
Then she told me to turn on the oven to some temperature, which
I did, after checking inside of it, where at that point in my life I sometimes
stored things like extra plates or cups that didn’t fit any place else.
As instructed I then opened the freezer and found the meat she
assured me she put in there on her last visit. For about 30 minutes I read the
names of spices I had on hand (though had no idea where they came from) and chopped
and arranged things into the pan as instructed, step-by-step. I did things with
tin foil, and seasoning, and spoons until she instructed me to put the pan in
the oven. And set the timer.
And when it beeped, from the oven came something I had never
(ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever) pulled from the oven before. It was a
family meal. For a while, I think my husband and I just stared at it. Of course
we had had proper meals before, each of us, him at home growing up, and me, at extended
family occasions – but never with our little family, not in our little home.
Something about that moment lit a spark. I think it must be akin
to what a young wizard feels at Hogwarts on his first day if his first spell
works. Like, he’s seen this stuff before, sure, but actually making it is,
well, magic. And the first time you perform magic is, even if you live in a
world where it’s all around you, nothing shy of empowering … titillating … amazing!
And so it began. I resolved that I would become competent—nay, GREAT in the kitchen.
My first attempt at cookies was days later. Without technical
support from my mother by phone the attempt ended with these little mounds that
were kinda heavy and exploded into a sugary dust upon impact of any surface
they were propelled at. It turned out, that particular use was the most
enjoyment anyone got out of them.
I’ve gotten better.
I have made some
terrifying mistakes along the way.
Sometimes my shortcuts pay off.
Substitution has often been the mother of invention.
I have learned some hard
lessons.
And I have made some hard pastries.
5 comments:
I'm inspired already! Can't wait to read more from this series!
Oh man, can I relate!
Haha. I love this a lot. Remind me to tell you about the time that I made soup and used real garlic cloves for the first time - but thought that a clove meant a head. I think my skin was oozing garlic for about a week.
Ha! Or the time I copied down a recipe from someone else and I thought it said 3 onions (I still don't know what it really said...) But did I put 3 entire onions in one casserole? Yes, yes I did.
Meg! I did that one! "Clove" just sounds like a whole thing to me!
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