Planning Dinner
Cooking dinner is part of most of our lives. Some of us enjoy it
while others do it out of necessity. Whether we enjoy cooking or
not, for most of us, deciding what to make for dinner can be the
hardest part of preparing the meal.
When I was a young mother, I remember dreading the four o'clock
hour as it came around when I still had not decided what to fix
for dinner. Sometimes the kids would ask, "What's for dinner?"
as that time of day approached. In frustration I would
contemplate making macaroni and cheese with hot dogs, again.
When it came to preparing meals, sometimes I wished I didn't
have so many choices. I wanted the decision to already be made;
we are having _ for dinner, then I would not
have to think about it anymore, I would just do it.
I remember seeing my sister browse through cookbooks for hours
when we were teenagers. She loves to cook. She would read out a
recipe to me then say
"Doesn't that sound yummy?" I'm sure I looked back at her with
black stares as I thought to myself, "how does she know if
something tastes good without trying it first?" My sister seems
to know instinctively how to adjust recipes to make them taste
even better, leaving out this ingredient or that, then adding
more of this, etc. I am one who has to follow the recipe exactly
as it is written. I only have to imagine the ruined meal if I
were to try to change something.
Cookbooks are helpful but they rarely include the complete meal put
together. I like knowing what side dishes go well with a main
dish. I also want a week of meals to be well balanced. Often
cookbooks are grouped by same foods. I might see a meatloaf
recipe next to beef stroganoff, which is next to a beef
stir-fry, then beef stew, and hamburger, etc. I don't like
spending time browsing through cookbooks flipping back and forth
from category to category.
A problem I have run into several times when following a recipe
is when it calls for an obscure ingredient. On occasion I have
wondered the grocery store isles looking for an ingredient
listed from a recipe. Being uncertain of leaving the ingredient
out, fearing it would alter the outcome of the meal negatively,
I would pace the store isles searching for the item, asking
store clerks who usually shook their head stating they didn't
know what it was or where it would be located. It's not that I
reject the idea of new or different ingredients, but I don't
appreciate searching the store for something, which isn't even
available at a regular grocery store.
One of the reasons cooking meals seems worth it to me is because
I love having my family sit down together for dinner. It is
always nice to hear my children conversing with one another and
having that family time together. Even after I have asked my
children how their day went when they return home from school,
they give me a small report but for some reason much more
information comes out at the dinner table while we are eating
together. It never ceases to amaze me.
I noticed when we buy fast food, we rarely sit down together to
eat it. We each take our food and go to various rooms in the
house to eat. But when I prepare a cooked dinner, we all sit
down together at the table to eat, then the conversation starts
flowing.
We each have our own talents in life, and I recognize cooking is
not one of mine. When something does not come easy to me, I can
acknowledge I need help. For me, that help is having a weekly
dinner menu plan with well-balanced meals, delicious recipes and
a shopping list. Now I enjoy cooking dinner instead of feeling
it's such a chore.