🐱 Is Cooking Anti-Feminist?

CatParty

Much has been said in recent years about the feminist question; about what it means to be a woman in the 21st century, and especially about the anti-feminist connotation.

The pandemic brought on a bout of cleaning. You open the door of your one closet (closet space is at a premium in Brooklyn) and start flinging on the floor a shirt not worn in years, three pairs of trousers that don’t fit, the vintage coat never worn and that dress that has nowhere to go. In between making piles of these stay, this doesn’t, you find a book of recipes purchased when on a fierce campaign to become a cross between Nigella Lawson and Carmen Aboy Valldejuli, with a touch of Julia Child.

The book was bought before the pandemic hit and locked us all up. It hasn’t been read during the long hours of 2020, so it will probably not be read or used at all. And this gets one to thinking: why this quest to be a great cook, to be the next Barefoot Contessa, or Laura Esquivel?

This, on top of everything we do? It begs the question: Is cooking anti-feminist?

For women, food ends up being a political subject. Hillary Clinton learned that the hard way in 1992 when she said — “I suppose I could have stayed home [and] baked cookies” and had hell to pay for it.

Women, and especially working women, are still expected to take on the bulk of the housework. One comes home after winning a major case in court or heading a newsroom to wrestle with a Julia Child recipe, all the while muttering awful things about Julia under one’s breath. Roasting a chicken is not my idea of a wonderful ending to a busy day.

Then why do we do it? Is it eons of training that women can only show their nurturing through cherry pies and casseroles? Is it true that one must win a man through a platter of engagement chicken?

We were told growing up (and I believe other Hispanic women can relate) that a way to a man’s heart is through his stomach. Put a bit more eloquently, here you have a case in point:

“A woman who knows how to compose a soup or a salad that is perfectly harmonious in flavour ought to be clever at mixing together the sweet and harsh elements of a man’s character, and she will understand how to charm and keep forever her husband’s heart and soul.” Berjane, ‘French Dishes for English Tables’ (1931)

The writer Nora Ephron stated that “whenever I get married, I start buying Gourmet magazine.” I can assure you, I didn’t. I was far too busy jumping off helicopters in war zones. I was a huge disappointment, in that department, to the women in my family.

My grandmother was an amazing cook, an army of pots and pans going at the same time, meat sizzling and white rice simmering away. She was the Generalissimo of her kitchen, a stained, dog-eared copy of Cocina Criolla by Dona Carmen Aboy Valldejuli always by her side.

My Mum was also a great cook and seemed to do it all by instinct. It was in her DNA, passed on by my grandmother and all the other women that came before. These women took pride in their cooking and expressed their love via a plate of rice and beans, fried plantains, and sweet mango slices.

I have always seen the kitchen as a sort of a dungeon and relate to the words written by Laura Esquivel in Like Water for Chocolate — “The trouble with crying over an onion is that once the chopping gets you started and the tears begin to well up, the next thing you know you just can’t stop.”

Cooking makes me cry, maybe because I am not very good at it and it makes me feel like I am not complete as a woman. And one tries. If my friends saw me with this red apron stamped with apples, wooden spoon in hand, arguing with Child’s Mastering The Art of French Cooking, they would be shocked.

Did you know it took 50 years to translate that cookbook to Spanish? It’s prologue states that women will not find a better antidote to the rush of the day than taking a quiet look at its pages. Hmmm.

So let’s do that.

Ingredients: roast boneless pork, baked in salt for several hours, if you want. Twelve to 18 white onions of one to one and a half inches in diameter peeled, 12 to 18 small new potatoes peeled and cut into ovals of one and a half inches. Salt and pepper. A founded iron saucepan. Two tablespoons of oil or oil extracted. Julia says that “onions and potatoes absorb a distinctive flavor when they cook with pork in this manner.” And this is just the beginning.

Buy the meat the night before and marinate it with what she calls Marinade Seche — a tablespoon of salt, 1/8 of fresh pepper, 1/4 of thyme or sage, 1/8 of bay leaves, a pinch of all species. Half a garlic — optional. Place it inside the refrigerator. We’re doing fine. Roti by Porc Grand’ Mere — just simply a pork roast with potatoes and onions. How hard can it be?

Well, I’ll tell you, cooking a Julia Child recipe is like running a marathon. It’s like nailing yourself to a culinary cross. It’s work. And this was one of the easiest recipes in the book. Julia was a strong woman and she didn’t panic or get tired.

But we do — it’s enough. I follow Eleanor Roosevelt’s codicil: Those invited to the White House quickly learned a vital rule: eat before you go.
 
Everyone - man or woman - should, at bare minimum, be able to cook a week’s worth of basic meals. That’s not a gender thing or a relationship thing, it’s a basic survival thing.

When Covid hit, 3 guys I worked with - all in their late 20’s/early 30’s told me that it was the first time they’d ever had to cook for themselves, and I was floored.
 
Everyone - man or woman - should, at bare minimum, be able to cook a week’s worth of basic meals. That’s not a gender thing or a relationship thing, it’s a basic survival thing.

When Covid hit, 3 guys I worked with - all in their late 20’s/early 30’s told me that it was the first time they’d ever had to cook for themselves, and I was floored.

My best friend only just got into cooking, he would order doordash for everything. I convinced him to get a grill and he loves it.

He is still in his 20s and grew up in a food desert, the only food he really knew was fast food and take out. When I was in middle school they taught Home Economics and I learned how to cook a few basic dishes but I doubt those are still taught.

If you can follow directions you can follow a recipe. If people reading this thread dont know where to start Kiwi Farms actually has a really good recipe thread. You can also check out recommended foodtubers, but whatever you do, never take a recipe from the wendigo himself.
 
Everyone - man or woman - should, at bare minimum, be able to cook a week’s worth of basic meals. That’s not a gender thing or a relationship thing, it’s a basic survival thing.

When Covid hit, 3 guys I worked with - all in their late 20’s/early 30’s told me that it was the first time they’d ever had to cook for themselves, and I was floored.
I never understand how people think cooking is some great Herculean task. It’s literally just following directions
 
My best friend only just got into cooking, he would order doordash for everything. I convinced him to get a grill and he loves it.

He is still in his 20s and grew up in a food desert, the only food he really knew was fast food and take out. When I was in middle school they taught Home Economics and I learned how to cook a few basic dishes but I doubt those are still taught.

If you can follow directions you can follow a recipe. If people reading this thread dont know where to start Kiwi Farms actually has a really good recipe thread. You can also check out recommended foodtubers, but whatever you do, never take a recipe from the wendigo himself.
Home Ec really needs to be a requirement for high school. Call it "adulting" classes or some shit. And it needs to actually teach how to cook.

I had it in middle school too, but all we were taught was how to make an extremely tasteless omlet with one egg, and made a pizza (which involved being handed a lump of canned dough, 1 table spoon of sauce, and 1/2 a cup of cheese) which also tasted like shit. Nothing about measuring, or how to use a knife safely to chop stuff. Since I had been cooking meals for a couple of years by then, just stuff like Hamburger Helper and such, it seemed retarded.
 
I never understand how people think cooking is some great Herculean task. It’s literally just following directions
I do have attention issues sometimes if the recipe has more than about 6 steps, and will occasionally just get frustrated and save it for another day.

But at this point, between Youtube and apps like Yummly and books like “3 Ingredient Meals” and shows like “Good Eats”, there’s not only tons of relatively simple recipes, you can find them in the teaching style that works for you.
 
Learn how to turn on a stove, and be able to figure out both when water is boiling and how to read a clock. Blamcis, you got yourself the ability to prepare noodles or rice. Buy a collander for the noodles. They're like a dollar.

Buy a can of cream of chicken, or hormel chilli, or tuna, and a can of vegetables of your choice. Open both cans and empty them into the pot of cooked rice or noodles. Now you have a reasonably functional meal that will keep you from dropping dead.

If you want to get fancy, learn about garlic, paprika, cayenne, black pepper, salt, cumin, and oregano. Try them out and see what you like; combine them well and you can make your three dollar casserole actually tasty.

You want desert? Make the rice again, and this time add some butter, brown sugar, and cinnamon. Holy shit, feminism is over!
 
Another pile of shit article to advance an agenda that creates unhappy 30 year old unmarried women. No, cooking is not anti-feminist or anything like that, neither is it beneath you to cook or clean like I have seen some woke women insist. It is a fairly basic skill that can lead to delicious and complicated dishes if you want to go down that rabbit hole.

Shit like this is what give those cringe inducing redpilled men ammo. Why would I marry when the modern woman is unwilling to do the basics of housekeeping or cooking when I can just do it myself, and probably better? I still remember a number of years ago when I was back in university, the modern women in dorms were a) shit cooks who could barely figure out how to cook a decent pasta sauce and b) fucking mess makers in the kitchen.

Articles like this and what they promote is done with the underlying attempt to nuke the family unit from orbit and it pisses me off. With the internet, with books and other guides, inability to cook like any functioning human is pathetic. There is no excuse.
 
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