12-02-2012, 06:52 PM
|
#3
|
Senior Member
How Do You Identify?: Trans
Preferred Pronoun?: He, him, his
Relationship Status: Single
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: N/A
Posts: 1,775
Thanks: 4,557
Thanked 5,551 Times in 1,456 Posts
Rep Power: 21474853
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by JustLovelyJenn
My family has always cooked. Every family event involved time in the kitchen and I learned a little bit of something different from them all.
My fathers mother was an amazing cook. She could cook anything from scratch and did. She taught me how to measure by sight... taste and adjust my ingredients, and how to use my imagination and improvise.
My grandmother on my mothers side taught me a lot about "almost homemade" cooking and how to use cheap and quick things from the cupboards to make something no one would guess you didn't make from scratch. She was also the canner in my family... and I still love to can some of the things she made every year... like zucchini relish and chili sauce.
|
Hi Jenn
Seems like those of us who love to cook and value the rituals associated with creating our family "classics" or staples, developed a love of being in the kitchen at a young age.
You, like many others were very fortunate to have this experience. So many young people today are not getting that time in the kitchen that so many of us had and value as part of our formation as cooks.
If you are interested in teaching us something about canning please do!
__________________
“Lovers don't finally meet somewhere. They're in each other all along.”
― Rumi
|
|
|