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experiencelifemag.com
Print › | Back ›
Time to Cook
Cooking at home is one of the most reliable ways to shift your life in a
healthier direction. But where does a busy person find the time? Here’s
how you can make good food, fast.
By Helen Cordes |
March 2008 |
Weigh the Tradeoffs
Start Where You Are
Ready, Set, Cook!
Resources
Babs Didner never learned how to cook. She grew up the youngest in a large
family in which her mom and oldest sister ran the kitchen. “I was always totally
intimidated by cooking,” says Didner, 50, a school administrator in Austin,
Texas. So as an adult she turned to frozen dinners — when she wasn’t ordering
takeout or dining at a local restaurant. Then, a few years ago, she and a friend
found their way back into the kitchen as part of an effort to improve their
diets.
“My friend Michelle loves to cook, so we’d get together and
she’d explain cooking basics to me while we fixed our food,” says Didner.
“Sometimes we’d follow recipes, but she knew how to cook without recipes, too,
and she’d explain ways to do that, like how to thicken a mixture or what spices
went with what type of food.”
Armed with some basic cooking skills, Didner
made a discovery: She enjoys cooking. “It’s more relaxed and more fun” than
buying prepared stuff, she says. “And it’s cheaper and healthier,
too.”
Didner’s experience represents an evolution common among many who never
used to cook and now do. When you feel short on cooking knowledge or long on
other obligations (work, the kids’ soccer schedule, your yoga classes, the
laundry), home cooking can feel like an ambitious, unrealistic proposition or
even an impossible luxury. But when you head to the kitchen with some
essential know-how, fresh perspective and a few insider tricks, cooking can
become easier and more rewarding than you ever thought possible.
Here’s how
to get from the former perspective to the latter, and start feeding yourself and
your loved ones better in the process.
Weigh the Tradeoffs
It’s easy to
see how eating out becomes our default dinner plan: When we get hungry, we want
food now. So we head to a nearby bistro or pick up the phone to order takeout.
We spend nearly half our food dollars each year on dining outside the home,
according to the National Restaurant Association. And the U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) projects that we will continue to increase the dollar amount
we spend dining out by 10 percent each year through 2020.
This reflex
to dine out doesn’t just drain our wallets. It can also sabotage our health.
Whether we’re eating fast food, gourmet sit-down or takeout, we’re likely to
ingest more saturated fat (including trans fats), sugar and salt than we would
in our own home cooking. A USDA multiyear analysis (from 1977 to the mid-1990s)
found that the amount of saturated fat, cholesterol and sodium in away-from-home
meals increased in each subsequent year.
Another USDA study reported that,
ounce for ounce, foods eaten away from home are more calorie dense than foods
prepared at home. And the Washington, D.C.–based Center for Science in the
Public Interest recently reported that even “healthy” items at popular
casual-dining restaurants were anything but. A vegetarian burrito, for instance,
averaged 1,140 calories and 2,610 milligrams of sodium; a chicken-and-broccoli
pasta dish oozed 126 grams of fat.
Start Where You Are
“Take
one baby step, and you’ll be so pleased that you’ll be inspired to do more,”
says fresh-food enthusiast Nathan Lyon, host of A Lyon in the Kitchen on the
Discovery Health Channel. Lyon knows plenty of people who were
intimidated by the kitchen until they learned some cooking basics. Once newbies
learn a few simple techniques, he says, “they start to feel really empowered by
their new skills and the control they have over what they’re putting into their
bodies.”
Here are three easy steps toward getting past kitchen jitters
and into the flow of healthy home cooking:
1. Learn the basics Brushing up on fundamental food-prep and kitchen
techniques goes a long way when it comes to streamlining your cooking efforts.
Knowing things like basic knife skills, how hot pans should be, and at what
point certain types of ingredients or flavorings should be added can make the
difference between a disappointing or delightful kitchen
experience. And you can learn the basics without a huge time or energy
commitment. Try partnering with a friend or relative who loves to cook, as
Didner did. You can even make the exchange more enticing by offering a trade.
“One of my farmers’ market customers is a yoga instructor who mentioned that
he’d love to learn how to cook,” says Lyon. “So I taught him how to make
homemade butternut-squash ravioli with marinara sauce, and in return, he taught
me some yoga.”
Cooking classes can also help you develop your culinary
skills. Many high-end markets and food co-ops offer evening or weekend classes
on everything from how to chop vegetables and roll your own sushi to speeding up
prep time and cooking with seasonal foods.
And don’t overlook the value of
quality cookbooks. “Pick a cookbook that appeals to you, one that includes some
cooking basics,” advises Mollie Katzen, noted whole-foods chef and author. Her
own oeuvre of cookbooks includes the original Moosewood Cookbook (Ten Speed,
2000) and The Enchanted Broccoli Forest (Ten Speed, 1983). One of her recent
books, coauthored with Harvard University’s Walter Willett, MD, is Eat, Drink
and Weigh Less: A Flexible and Delicious Way to Shrink Your Waist Without Going
Hungry (Hyperion, 2007), a how-to on whole-foods cooking for weight loss. Other good primers with a whole-foods focus include Mark Bittman’s How to
Cook Everything: Simple Recipes for Great Food (Wiley, 2006); and The Healthy
Kitchen: Recipes for a Better Body, Life and Spirit by Andrew Weil, MD, and
Rosie Daley (Knopf, 2002). Once you’re armed with a little knowledge, you
probably already have all the cooking utensils you need to start experimenting,
says Lyon. “I make a point of not using anything on the show that an ordinary
kitchen wouldn’t have,” he notes. “And I only have one outlet in my kitchen.”
But Lyon does have a few high-quality pots and pans, several good
knives, and a hand mixer, spatula and cutting board. As your expertise grows, he
says, you can add tools that help speed up and simplify your time in the
kitchen, such as a food processor, which is useful for chopping and blending
ingredients.
Your foray into the kitchen will also benefit from setting some
goals. “Most people who aspire to cook more don’t lack recipes; they just lack a
plan,” says Katzen. That plan needn’t be elaborate or ambitious, she
notes. It might be something as simple as: “I’ll cook supper once a week,”
or, “This month, I’ll try a whole grain or vegetable I’ve never tried before.”
2. Carve out some time Cooking at home is a lot less time consuming than
we’ve been led to believe. Former University of California, Los Angeles,
anthropologist Margaret Beck, PhD, recently showed that preparing a whole-foods
meal takes about the same time as heat-and-serve cooking with convenience foods.
Beck videotaped families in Los Angeles as they prepared dinner.
Families using convenience foods often made more-elaborate dinner offerings or
prepared separate items for each family member. In one example, a family’s meal
of bread, cheese, greens, salmon, edamame beans and tomatoes took the same time
to get on the table as another family’s meal of microwaved barbecued ribs,
macaroni and cheese, prebagged salad, bagged dinner rolls, and cookies and ice
cream for dessert.
Keep in mind, too, that cooking includes downtime. You
may need to start a dish an hour before you want to eat, but once you get the
ingredients going, you’ll have some time to relax or get something else done
while it cooks. Many recipe books help you plan by spelling out “active time”
and “total time” for recipes.
You can also save time by cooking large amounts
of a main ingredient and then dressing it up in different ways throughout the
week. Katzen will cook a big pot of a grain such as millet or quinoa and then
“have it for supper with onions and greens, and the next morning I’ll have it
again with blueberries and walnuts.” (For more on quinoa, see Inspired Kitchen.
)
Also consider prepping your vegetables in advance, rather than
doing so just before each meal. “As soon as you get home from the market, cut
them up and blanch them in hot water for just a few minutes and put them in
containers in the refrigerator or freezer,” suggests Katzen. Later, you can
sauté, roast or grill them in a variety of recipes. An added bonus? The veggies
won’t get droopy if you don’t use them right away.
A full pantry is also a
time saver. When your cupboards and fridge are well stocked with healthy
ingredients that you use regularly — olive oil, canned tomatoes, frozen fruits
and veggies, eggs, tofu, garlic and onions, whole grains, canned or jarred
beans, hard cheeses — you’ll face fewer last-minute, time-guzzling trips to the
store.
When your shelves do need replenishing, you’ll save time by planning a
menu for the week ahead — before you hit the market. That way, you can get what
you need in one visit, rather than running to the store every few days.
If
you do start cooking and find you are missing something, try entering the
missing ingredient with the word “substitute” into an Internet search engine.
You might be surprised by how easily you can replace a missing ingredient
without compromising flavor or nutrition.
3. Build in pleasure Basic skills and kitchen efficiency are great, but they
don’t necessarily make cooking fun. For some of us, cooking has always felt like
a drag, no matter how much we know or how convenient it is. Are there creative
ways to make cooking feel more inspired and joyful, even for the cooking
averse?
Anna Lappé, coauthor with Bryant Terry of Grub: Ideas for an Urban
Organic Kitchen (Tarcher, 2006), suggests making prep time an opportunity to
socialize. You can invite family and friends to help prepare food — and then to
enjoy the results. “I’m a firm believer in having guests arrive when the food is
in mid-production,” says Lappé. “You can use the extra hands to put on the
finishing touches and save you time in the process.”
Or start an informal
supper club. One group of four families Lappé knows rotates meal making, so each
family enjoys a freshly made meal delivered to its home three times a week. The
entire group also converges for a weekly potluck.
And then, of course,
there’s always the romantic dinner for two. As Lyon attests, knowing how to
make mouth-watering and healthy foods can be good for your social life. “When
you know how to cook well, it can make quite the impression,” he says.
In
the end, however, cooking at home is its own intrinsic reward. It is a gift that
keeps on giving — nutritionally, economically and emotionally. “Making food at
home becomes a nurturing activity,” says Lyon. “It shows that you care for
yourself, your family and friends, and your community.”
Helen Cordes is a
freelance writer in Georgetown, Texas.
Ready, Set, Cook!
Here are some top tips for making cooking more convenient:
Invest in some
good cookbooks. Look for whole-foods-oriented books that include information on
cooking basics and a pantry-stocking checklist (see Resources, below).
Plan in advance. Decide on the weekend how many meals you intend to cook,
and then plan — at least generally — what you’ll put on the menu for each meal.
Then you can shop and prep efficiently for all of them at once.
Keep your
shelves, freezer and fridge well stocked. When you have a variety of healthy
staples on hand, both planned and impromptu meals get easier.
Hit the Web.
When you’re missing an ingredient or simply need inspiration, substitutes,
recipes and advice are only a click away. Try www.epicurious.com for starters. Share
the fun. Get family members or friends in the kitchen with you — everybody
learns and socializes while creating tasty food.
Resources BOOKS
The Working Cook: Fast and Fresh Meals for Busy People by Tara Duggan
(San Francisco Chronicle, 2006) How to Cook Everything: Simple Recipes
for Great Food by Mark Bittman (Wiley, 2006) How to Cook Everything
Vegetarian by Mark Bittman (Wiley, 2007)
The Minimalist Cooks Dinner by Mark
Bittman (Broadway, 2001)
The New Moosewood Cookbook by Mollie Katzen (Ten
Speed Press, 2000)
The Six O’Clock Scramble: Quick, Healthy, and Delicious
Dinner Recipes for Busy Families by Aviva Goldfarb (St. Martin’s Griffin,
2006) WEB www.discusscooking.com — A good place
to ask questions and get inspiration. www.foodsubs.com — Find substitutes for a
missing ingredient with “the cook’s thesaurus.”
www.foodnetwork.com/food/cooking
— Online guidance on cooking basics, tools and terms. http://health.discovery.com/fansites/nathan-lyon/nathan-lyon.html
— See cooking tutorials and tips from cooking-show host Nathan Lyon. www.sustainabletable.org — Resources
to find whole-foods cookbooks and ingredients, plus a message board to share
advice.
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Time to Cook
Cooking at home is one of the most reliable ways to shift your life in a
healthier direction. But where does a busy person find the time? Here’s
how you can make good food, fast.
By Helen Cordes | Features, March 2008 |
Weigh the Tradeoffs
Start Where You Are
Ready, Set, Cook!
Resources
Babs Didner never learned how to cook. She grew up the youngest in a large
family in which her mom and oldest sister ran the kitchen. “I was always totally
intimidated by cooking,” says Didner, 50, a school administrator in Austin,
Texas. So as an adult she turned to frozen dinners — when she wasn’t ordering
takeout or dining at a local restaurant. Then, a few years ago, she and a friend
found their way back into the kitchen as part of an effort to improve their
diets.
“My friend Michelle loves to cook, so we’d get together and
she’d explain cooking basics to me while we fixed our food,” says Didner.
“Sometimes we’d follow recipes, but she knew how to cook without recipes, too,
and she’d explain ways to do that, like how to thicken a mixture or what spices
went with what type of food.”
Armed with some basic cooking skills, Didner
made a discovery: She enjoys cooking. “It’s more relaxed and more fun” than
buying prepared stuff, she says. “And it’s cheaper and healthier,
too.”
Didner’s experience represents an evolution common among many who never
used to cook and now do. When you feel short on cooking knowledge or long on
other obligations (work, the kids’ soccer schedule, your yoga classes, the
laundry), home cooking can feel like an ambitious, unrealistic proposition or
even an impossible luxury. But when you head to the kitchen with some
essential know-how, fresh perspective and a few insider tricks, cooking can
become easier and more rewarding than you ever thought possible.
Here’s how
to get from the former perspective to the latter, and start feeding yourself and
your loved ones better in the process.
Weigh the Tradeoffs (Back to Top)
It’s easy to
see how eating out becomes our default dinner plan: When we get hungry, we want
food now. So we head to a nearby bistro or pick up the phone to order takeout.
We spend nearly half our food dollars each year on dining outside the home,
according to the National Restaurant Association. And the U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) projects that we will continue to increase the dollar amount
we spend dining out by 10 percent each year through 2020.
This reflex
to dine out doesn’t just drain our wallets. It can also sabotage our health.
Whether we’re eating fast food, gourmet sit-down or takeout, we’re likely to
ingest more saturated fat (including trans fats), sugar and salt than we would
in our own home cooking. A USDA multiyear analysis (from 1977 to the mid-1990s)
found that the amount of saturated fat, cholesterol and sodium in away-from-home
meals increased in each subsequent year.
Another USDA study reported that,
ounce for ounce, foods eaten away from home are more calorie dense than foods
prepared at home. And the Washington, D.C.–based Center for Science in the
Public Interest recently reported that even “healthy” items at popular
casual-dining restaurants were anything but. A vegetarian burrito, for instance,
averaged 1,140 calories and 2,610 milligrams of sodium; a chicken-and-broccoli
pasta dish oozed 126 grams of fat.
Start Where You Are (Back to Top)
“Take
one baby step, and you’ll be so pleased that you’ll be inspired to do more,”
says fresh-food enthusiast Nathan Lyon, host of A Lyon in the Kitchen on the
Discovery Health Channel. Lyon knows plenty of people who were
intimidated by the kitchen until they learned some cooking basics. Once newbies
learn a few simple techniques, he says, “they start to feel really empowered by
their new skills and the control they have over what they’re putting into their
bodies.”
Here are three easy steps toward getting past kitchen jitters
and into the flow of healthy home cooking:
1. Learn the basics Brushing up on fundamental food-prep and kitchen
techniques goes a long way when it comes to streamlining your cooking efforts.
Knowing things like basic knife skills, how hot pans should be, and at what
point certain types of ingredients or flavorings should be added can make the
difference between a disappointing or delightful kitchen
experience. And you can learn the basics without a huge time or energy
commitment. Try partnering with a friend or relative who loves to cook, as
Didner did. You can even make the exchange more enticing by offering a trade.
“One of my farmers’ market customers is a yoga instructor who mentioned that
he’d love to learn how to cook,” says Lyon. “So I taught him how to make
homemade butternut-squash ravioli with marinara sauce, and in return, he taught
me some yoga.”
Cooking classes can also help you develop your culinary
skills. Many high-end markets and food co-ops offer evening or weekend classes
on everything from how to chop vegetables and roll your own sushi to speeding up
prep time and cooking with seasonal foods.
And don’t overlook the value of
quality cookbooks. “Pick a cookbook that appeals to you, one that includes some
cooking basics,” advises Mollie Katzen, noted whole-foods chef and author. Her
own oeuvre of cookbooks includes the original Moosewood Cookbook (Ten Speed,
2000) and The Enchanted Broccoli Forest (Ten Speed, 1983). One of her recent
books, coauthored with Harvard University’s Walter Willett, MD, is Eat, Drink
and Weigh Less: A Flexible and Delicious Way to Shrink Your Waist Without Going
Hungry (Hyperion, 2007), a how-to on whole-foods cooking for weight loss. Other good primers with a whole-foods focus include Mark Bittman’s How to
Cook Everything: Simple Recipes for Great Food (Wiley, 2006); and The Healthy
Kitchen: Recipes for a Better Body, Life and Spirit by Andrew Weil, MD, and
Rosie Daley (Knopf, 2002). Once you’re armed with a little knowledge, you
probably already have all the cooking utensils you need to start experimenting,
says Lyon. “I make a point of not using anything on the show that an ordinary
kitchen wouldn’t have,” he notes. “And I only have one outlet in my kitchen.”
But Lyon does have a few high-quality pots and pans, several good
knives, and a hand mixer, spatula and cutting board. As your expertise grows, he
says, you can add tools that help speed up and simplify your time in the
kitchen, such as a food processor, which is useful for chopping and blending
ingredients.
Your foray into the kitchen will also benefit from setting some
goals. “Most people who aspire to cook more don’t lack recipes; they just lack a
plan,” says Katzen. That plan needn’t be elaborate or ambitious, she
notes. It might be something as simple as: “I’ll cook supper once a week,”
or, “This month, I’ll try a whole grain or vegetable I’ve never tried before.”
2. Carve out some time Cooking at home is a lot less time consuming than
we’ve been led to believe. Former University of California, Los Angeles,
anthropologist Margaret Beck, PhD, recently showed that preparing a whole-foods
meal takes about the same time as heat-and-serve cooking with convenience foods.
Beck videotaped families in Los Angeles as they prepared dinner.
Families using convenience foods often made more-elaborate dinner offerings or
prepared separate items for each family member. In one example, a family’s meal
of bread, cheese, greens, salmon, edamame beans and tomatoes took the same time
to get on the table as another family’s meal of microwaved barbecued ribs,
macaroni and cheese, prebagged salad, bagged dinner rolls, and cookies and ice
cream for dessert.
Keep in mind, too, that cooking includes downtime. You
may need to start a dish an hour before you want to eat, but once you get the
ingredients going, you’ll have some time to relax or get something else done
while it cooks. Many recipe books help you plan by spelling out “active time”
and “total time” for recipes.
You can also save time by cooking large amounts
of a main ingredient and then dressing it up in different ways throughout the
week. Katzen will cook a big pot of a grain such as millet or quinoa and then
“have it for supper with onions and greens, and the next morning I’ll have it
again with blueberries and walnuts.” (For more on quinoa, see Inspired Kitchen.
)
Also consider prepping your vegetables in advance, rather than
doing so just before each meal. “As soon as you get home from the market, cut
them up and blanch them in hot water for just a few minutes and put them in
containers in the refrigerator or freezer,” suggests Katzen. Later, you can
sauté, roast or grill them in a variety of recipes. An added bonus? The veggies
won’t get droopy if you don’t use them right away.
A full pantry is also a
time saver. When your cupboards and fridge are well stocked with healthy
ingredients that you use regularly — olive oil, canned tomatoes, frozen fruits
and veggies, eggs, tofu, garlic and onions, whole grains, canned or jarred
beans, hard cheeses — you’ll face fewer last-minute, time-guzzling trips to the
store.
When your shelves do need replenishing, you’ll save time by planning a
menu for the week ahead — before you hit the market. That way, you can get what
you need in one visit, rather than running to the store every few days.
If
you do start cooking and find you are missing something, try entering the
missing ingredient with the word “substitute” into an Internet search engine.
You might be surprised by how easily you can replace a missing ingredient
without compromising flavor or nutrition.
3. Build in pleasure Basic skills and kitchen efficiency are great, but they
don’t necessarily make cooking fun. For some of us, cooking has always felt like
a drag, no matter how much we know or how convenient it is. Are there creative
ways to make cooking feel more inspired and joyful, even for the cooking
averse?
Anna Lappé, coauthor with Bryant Terry of Grub: Ideas for an Urban
Organic Kitchen (Tarcher, 2006), suggests making prep time an opportunity to
socialize. You can invite family and friends to help prepare food — and then to
enjoy the results. “I’m a firm believer in having guests arrive when the food is
in mid-production,” says Lappé. “You can use the extra hands to put on the
finishing touches and save you time in the process.”
Or start an informal
supper club. One group of four families Lappé knows rotates meal making, so each
family enjoys a freshly made meal delivered to its home three times a week. The
entire group also converges for a weekly potluck.
And then, of course,
there’s always the romantic dinner for two. As Lyon attests, knowing how to
make mouth-watering and healthy foods can be good for your social life. “When
you know how to cook well, it can make quite the impression,” he says.
In
the end, however, cooking at home is its own intrinsic reward. It is a gift that
keeps on giving — nutritionally, economically and emotionally. “Making food at
home becomes a nurturing activity,” says Lyon. “It shows that you care for
yourself, your family and friends, and your community.”
Helen Cordes is a
freelance writer in Georgetown, Texas.
Ready, Set, Cook! (Back to Top)
Here are some top tips for making cooking more convenient:
Invest in some
good cookbooks. Look for whole-foods-oriented books that include information on
cooking basics and a pantry-stocking checklist (see Resources, below).
Plan in advance. Decide on the weekend how many meals you intend to cook,
and then plan — at least generally — what you’ll put on the menu for each meal.
Then you can shop and prep efficiently for all of them at once.
Keep your
shelves, freezer and fridge well stocked. When you have a variety of healthy
staples on hand, both planned and impromptu meals get easier.
Hit the Web.
When you’re missing an ingredient or simply need inspiration, substitutes,
recipes and advice are only a click away. Try www.epicurious.com for starters. Share
the fun. Get family members or friends in the kitchen with you — everybody
learns and socializes while creating tasty food.
Resources (Back to Top) BOOKS
The Working Cook: Fast and Fresh Meals for Busy People by Tara Duggan
(San Francisco Chronicle, 2006) How to Cook Everything: Simple Recipes
for Great Food by Mark Bittman (Wiley, 2006) How to Cook Everything
Vegetarian by Mark Bittman (Wiley, 2007)
The Minimalist Cooks Dinner by Mark
Bittman (Broadway, 2001)
The New Moosewood Cookbook by Mollie Katzen (Ten
Speed Press, 2000)
The Six O’Clock Scramble: Quick, Healthy, and Delicious
Dinner Recipes for Busy Families by Aviva Goldfarb (St. Martin’s Griffin,
2006) WEB www.discusscooking.com — A good place
to ask questions and get inspiration. www.foodsubs.com — Find substitutes for a
missing ingredient with “the cook’s thesaurus.”
www.foodnetwork.com/food/cooking
— Online guidance on cooking basics, tools and terms. http://health.discovery.com/fansites/nathan-lyon/nathan-lyon.html
— See cooking tutorials and tips from cooking-show host Nathan Lyon. www.sustainabletable.org — Resources
to find whole-foods cookbooks and ingredients, plus a message board to share
advice.
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