(photo: cooking at home begins with basic ingredients; olive oil is key)
“By becoming a cook, you can leave processed foods behind, creating more healthful, less expensive and better-tasting food that requires less energy, water and land per calorie and reduces our carbon footprint. Not a bad result for us — or the planet.”
Why Don’t Americans Cook at Home?
The two sentences above are part of a well written
article by
Mark Bittman, the esteemed journalist and food writer. Bittman’s main thesis is centered on the notion that Americans do not cook enough of their own food, rather they rely on ready to eat foods prepared via fast food outlets, restaurants, or mega-corporations. In short, Bittman believes that we’ve lost the basic ability to cook at home and, for many, were never taught the basic life skill.
My view on the topic is rather straightforward as I believe we don’t, despite recent efforts to improve the fresh food system, have a tradition or passion for food in the United States. Children are not taught to eat well because they are not feed well; all fueling the myth that
making food at home is expensive, laborious, and simply nor worth it.
Solving the Food Crisis in America
As Bittman argues, I think there’s an easy way to solve the food crisis in America and it doesn’t involve money (a common answer to many problems). The answer is to simply start cooking at home and begin your home cooking adventures with simple dishes. Bittman mentions lentils, stir frys, and chopped salad as basic dishes. I happen to think the
entire Italian food repatoire is a good starting point as
acookblog.com author states, “One of the things I like best about Italian food is that at heart it’s open-source peasant food; whatever is on hand can be made to work”
So, where do you start if you don’t come from a tradition of making food at home? My suggestion is to start with a few
basic kitchen essentials (can’t cook without tools) and then dive right in with the following dishes:
So, become a home cook or encourage the folks in your life to make good food at home.
Related Posts from Scordo.com
Author: Vincent Scordo
Lead Italophile (and/or lover of all things Italian).
Hey, thanks for the link (though it needs fixing; it’s acookblog.com). I agree completely; people need to cook for themselves and their families regularly. Kids need to grow up eating real food made from real ingredients.
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