When I was in junior high school, I was required to take home
economics, and to put it mildly, it was not my best subject. Let's
just say there were some, well, incidents in the school
kitchen that resulted in some very bad feelings and at one point my
forcible ejection from the room. Curiously, for some unexplained
reason, all of these incidents directly involved butter. (Discuss.)
As a result, for many years afterward, I was convinced that I could
not cook, and indeed, wouldn't even try. I considered making spaghetti
(and we're talking browning meat and pouring Prego over it here) the
very limit of my culinary abilities. Preparing anything that had more
than four ingredients, or following a recipe with a single French word
in it ("what the hell does 'saute' mean?") was nigh unthinkable. So
when I got to graduate school, that meant I ate out. A
lot. And that made me poor and fat. (Okay, poorer and
fatter.)
Then along came Joel. My roommate claimed that he didn't know how
to cook either, and that he was just experimenting himself, but by the
time he moved out earlier this year, he had founded and organized the
Local
Foods small group, created his own barbecue sauces, and catered
gourmet dinners for dozens of people on multiple
occasions. Let's put it this way: whenever he was in charge of
preparing Thursday night dinner at the Wesley Foundation, the
attendance noticeably increased.
I guess I just learned by osmosis. I played the sous-chef (having
first looked up what "sous-chef" meant), and learned what "saute"
meant, and generally got over my French-word phobia (though "julienne"
still gives me the willies). And now that Joel has moved on to greener
pastures, I bought some spices, a deep skillet, a nice chef's knife,
and a few cookbooks. A few nights a week, I cook dinner and seal up
the leftovers for lunch. Okay, I'm not making souffles or anything
here-- basically my repertoire is still limited to cutting up meat,
spices, and vegetables and throwing them on a hot surface-- but I'm
been able to prepare healthy, real dishes, and save a decent amount of
money doing it. Now, if I could just cook with butter without violent
flashbacks, I'd be all set.