Saturday 22 November 2008

 

The latest culture as recommended by our staff

Michael Henderson

Michael Henderson suggests


Women! Get back in the kitchen!

Wednesday, 4th June 2008

That’s the answer to the food-shortage crisis, says Rose Prince

‘Must go, I have to cook dinner,’ said my friend Robin, who had dropped in on his way home from work. Jumping on his bike, a fresh mallard and some curly kale in his rucksack, he pedalled off home to his young wife. It’s the ‘he’ part of this that gets me. My new copy of Delia Smith’s book hit the doormat a few days later, packed with recipes asking for cooks to do little more deft than open a can, and I am still in recovery after watching Nigella Lawson’s series about processed gloop. Meanwhile, the busy HarperCollins editor Robin Harvie’s lucky young wife Laurence gets dinner cooked for her by someone who has no intention of cheating. I asked him if it was normal among his friends for the men to take charge of dinner — they are all about 30 years old. ‘Totally,’ he said.

So I turn on the telly. Let down by the girls, I watch the men. Jamie Oliver and Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall are giving us bad news about cheap hens. Make stock with organic chicken bones, they chorus. In a show called Kitchen Nightmares, Gordon Ramsay, a chef famous for his complex, technique-led cuisine, is screaming at the feckless keepers of dirty fridges in the restaurant world. ‘Change your f***ing ways!’

I had always thought that the nurture chromosome existed in women long after the hunter-gatherer instinct had died in men. My mother fed her six children three meals a day until we were as full as pelicans, but I never saw my father enter a butcher’s shop. But now we have high-profile female role models like Delia and Nigella saying ‘sod the potato-peeler’ and responsible cooking advice is instead dished out by a trinity of macho hunter-gatherers.

It would not matter in the slightest, but I suspect that the economic and sociological ills connected to food relate to the great female cop-out. Childhood (and adult) obesity, food waste and all its linked environmental woes would not exist if women were in charge of kitchens. Women once drove the market. It was women who coped in a food crisis. In the second world war British women fought on the home front with their vegetable gardens and cunning ways with rations and rabbit. But the extreme effort was too traumatic, prompting the Housewives Union to march after the war demanding the end of rationing and that the incoming government sort out the food supply. This they did, with new farming techniques designed to over-produce. A burgeoning feminist movement then saw to it that cookery was gradually phased out in schools, and now the successful young woman with a family to feed has a number of tools at her disposal — in the form of convenience food produced by an obligingly inventive food industry — all of which keep her out of the kitchen.

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Kent Charters

June 20th, 2008 1:48am

Balls. I know more about household economy than my wife ever learned. It's mostly instinct: don't waste. Think of ways of making do with what's in the fridge and the kitchen. Hell's it's not rocket science! Mind you, I don't do "presentation" and I don't care about setting a table. I care about the food. Cheers

Scottie

June 22nd, 2008 10:40am

Typical feminine prejudice,
women are wastefull and have no
idea of a family budget.They are too egocentric
Their multi tasking brains do not allow them to focus on specific targets

Scottie

June 22nd, 2008 10:41am

Typical feminine prejudice,
women are wastefull and have no
idea of a family budget.They are too egocentric
Their multi tasking brains do not allow them to focus on specific targets

Catherine

July 9th, 2008 2:21pm

My small circle of friends and I must be bucking this trend, because all of us - men and women - cook everything from scratch, as economically as possibly. Maybe because we're fresh out of student digs but we spent time balancing budget-option meals against the need to eat well.
Some lucky few of us learned from our parents the skills of healthy, sensible cooking, but unless cooking from basic ingredients becomes the norm again, how are generations to come ever to learn that ready-meals are for emergencies only?


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