THE COOKING SKILLS CONUNDRUM
Have We Lost Our Food Skills and How to Get Them Back was the bait-clicky headline of a recent piece in the Sydney Morning Herald.
The article by Paula Goodyer with contributions from dietitians
including Profs. Clare Collins and Margaret Allman-Farinelli makes the
point that “a host of factors have led to a generation who lack cooking
nous. The effect is a wider waistline and a thinner wallet”. It is worth
reading. But we seriously question putting the food skills of previous
generations on any sort of pedestal (think seriously overcooked
vegetables for starters).
Back in 2010 I created Recipes My Mother Cooked
for Allen and Unwin. As well as their Mum’s recipes, I asked the book’s
contributors (chefs, food writers, dietitians) to share some of their
family fare memories. Some mothers were clearly truly amazing cooks.
Many, however, had pretty basic skills and while family mealtimes were
memorable, the meals themselves, not so much. Hadleigh Troy (then
Restaurant Amuse, Perth; now Hampton and Maley) put it this way:
“Although Mum says she taught me everything she knows when it comes to
cooking, those who know her and love her are in on the joke.”
By food skills, Paula Goodyer is essentially talking
about learning to cook and to plan and prepare meals. Clearly, it’s
important to be able to feed yourself (and your family if you have one)
healthy fare. But, here at GI News we think it’s time to take off the
nostalgia blinkers because what we all need today are some new healthy
food skills to equip us to thrive in a world with a very different food
supply from any previous generation. Along with an abundance of locally
grown and imported fresh produce available year round, we have an
abundance of convenience foods from frozen vegetables and meals to
home-delivered meals and takeaways to help us put dinner on the table at
the end of the day (and possibly provide breakfast and lunch as well).
The practical healthy food skills we need to develop or to upgrade are our:
- Food knowledge skills to help us understand where the food we eat has come from, how it is grown, how animals are farmed, and whether or not it is sustainable.
- Food shopping skills to help us choose fresh produce and to make smart choices with convenience foods, home-delivered meals and takeaways.
- Food and nutrition skills to help us build healthy eating habits and to choose the sustaining foods we (and our families) need for good health and to cut through countless fads about foods, fad diets, and the misconceptions about healthy eating.
There are many reasons people choose convenience foods. Sometimes it’s the only option for those on the road or working insane hours; for people doing shift work; for the frail elderly who can no longer cook but want to stay in their own home; for those with a disability who can’t cook; and for those who don’t have cooking facilities. Other times convenience food buys us time. As Prof Jennie Brand Miller says: “I don’t want to spend more time in the kitchen. I know how to cook but I want the food industry to provide me with high quality, healthy convenience food (takeaway food, eat-in food, plonk-together-in-a-saucepan food) so I get to do other things higher on my priority list such as being outside, exercise, yoga, mindfulness, reading, sailing … We know the food industry can give us anything we want but they work by the law of supply and demand. We have to DEMAND.”
To help our readers choose healthy convenience meals of all kinds, we’ll be adding an Eat Out/Take Out story to What’s New? from this issue of GI News. – Philippa Sandall, Editor.
Read more:
- Paula Goodyer: Kitchen confidence: How we lost our food skills and how to get them back
- Recipes My Mother Cooked
- For food knowledge and practical shopping skills: The Good Carbs Cookbook
- For food and nutrition skills: Catherine Saxelby’s Complete Food and Nutrition Companion (second edition)