-Pat Conroy
Cooking is a philosophy; it's not a recipe.
-Marco Pierre White
-Colonel Sanders
Many years ago, I used to enjoy cooking. Many many years ago.
It’s actually quite amazing that I can remember that far
back, but I did like buying different ingredients, and trying out new recipes.
When I was newly married and had my own kitchen with its own
pots and pans, spoons and sieves, I began to collect recipe books. I had received a
few as wedding presents but, while these had lovely pictures, the recipes were
either boring, impractical, too expensive, or – and this happened surprisingly
often – nonsensical. (Everyone knows that nectarines and strawberries grow in
different seasons! At least in my local shuk…) I needed to buy my own books to
reflect my new life in Israel.
Recipe books are, in fact, a great way to learn Hebrew, and
I bought several. I learned the words for bean sprouts and turnip, nutmeg and
ginger, grater and peeler, stir and sauté. I even learned the word for recipe.
We put up shelves in the kitchen to store all the cookbooks
I bought and I perused them often looking for inspiration.
When the kids were little and I was home with them, I would often
try out new things: bean and barley soup, cinnamon-laced meatloaf, bizli
covered chicken, lemon meringue pie, mandelbroit, squash with red peppers and
zaatar, banana chocolate chip cookies. (Some offerings were more popular than
others.)
And then, one day, I got a job. I was meaningfully employed.
I had a desk with pens and pencils and a stapler, and a computer with a
keyboard and a mouse, a fax machine, and a printer.
My job was not arduous, and I often had spare time on my
hands where I was simply required to be in the office ‘just in case’. I spent
some time looking up recipes online to see how I could prepare the extra
eggplant I had just bought, or what to do with one of the ten bags of pasta I needed
to use up before Pesach. I would find a wonderful recipe that was just perfect.
My memory not being great, I would print up the recipe on the printer that was
just next to me so I would have it when I got home. And then I would print up
the other recipe because I couldn’t really decide which one to use. And what to
make for dessert? And the salad recipe looked interesting also. I would print
up a few recipes and take them home and put them on the kitchen shelf with the
recipe books.
I worked with a printer next to my desk for 17 years.
I didn’t print out recipes every day, but by the time I
retired, there were more than a few pieces of paper piled around the house. If
I ever actually needed a recipe that I knew I had, I was not able to
find it and would have to look it up online again (and print it out).
I decided a while ago that one of my first projects upon my
retirement would be to organize said piles of recipes into categories and file
them away properly where I would be able to find them when needed.
First I had to make room for the piles. I cleared away space in the only area big enough to hold the piles – the floor – brought pile after pile from the kitchen shelf, and plopped myself down to begin.
It was cold on the floor. I was going to have to put on some socks, but there were two problems:
1. I hate socks.
2. I would have to get up off the floor to put them on.
It took me two and a half days, but I succeeded in separating all the recipes into categories: soups, salads, meats, side dishes, dairy foods, potatoes and rice, and baked goods. Being a good Jewish girl, I also made a pile of kugel and latke recipes (I had, at least, 23 different kugel recipes and 47 latke recipes), and another for hamantashen (none of which I have ever made and probably never will). There was also a small pile of special foods for Rosh HaShana, and a HUGE pile of Pesach recipes.
While dividing all the recipes into categories, I was able
to discard about a third of them as either doubles or recipes that asked the
question ‘what were you thinking????’
I was now left with half a dozen piles that needed sub-categorization.
I began with the soups. I divided them by ingredient; tomato
soup in one pile, onion soup in another etc. etc. Seeing as I had 12 different
minestrone soup recipes, I had to read them all to see if they were different
from each other. Spoiler – they weren’t. I kept two recipes. (One has green
beans and one has peas).
I had some trouble with the sub-categorization. Should the artichokes
and carrots in lemon sauce be with the carrots or with the artichokes? Or,
and this just occurred to me, with lemons??? And what about the potato pizza?
Should it be in the potato pile or in the pizza pile – two utterly different
categories?
This was not a simple task.
It’s been just over a week since I began this project, and I’m almost finished. I have filled six binders with organized recipes and I have several loose plastic covers holding more recipes because I ran out of binders. I even cleared space on a shelf.
My floor is almost cleaned up. I have one more pile remaining
– the baked goods pile (which is really quite high, but to be fair it includes
cookies, cakes, pies, brownies, donuts, and banana bread). I’ve managed to
reduce the original piles by about half.
Some members of my family have asked me, since everything is so nicely organized, will I be cooking every day? Will I be trying
out new recipes again? Now that I’m retired and have more time on my hands,
will I rediscover my joy of cooking?
It turns out that collecting recipes and cooking are two
totally unrelated hobbies.
But if anyone ever needs a recipe for couscous salad, I’ve
got five.
7 comments:
As my Dad z"l used to say about my mom z"l: "A sure way to know that your mother will never make a recipe is if she puts it on the refrigerator."
It is a well established fact, that collecting something, and using it, are too incredibly different hobbies 😉
Nice project.
When I redid my kitchen, I got rid of all of my cookbooks and the box with index cards that had my recipes. Over the years I had blogged most of my favorite recipes, so now if I need to check something, I just check my blog.
And now instead of cookbooks on the shelves, I have my mugs and various other coffee equipment.
Loves this reesa. Thank you
Thank you Reesa for another good giggle. I use an Emunah calendar that has a different recipe for each month. At one time I must have kept about 10 years' worth 'just in case' I wanted to find a recipe. I just checked and found I currently have the calendars going back 5 years - 60 recipes. I have never used one of them.
Frieda
Funny! I identify!
My daughter, when she was in Jr High, began to organize my clipped, copied, printed, handwritten recipes, but when I saw what she did (paste, tape the recipes to A4 pages & slide each page into a nylon sleeve) & knew I'd never use the recipes this way, I went through my big pile & tossed more than half out.
I retired 14 yrs ago, moved out of that house & have STILL not gone through the pile 🤦♀️
I'm always SO IMPRESSED with you, Reesa 😀
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