Created For This
The Kitchen
To say I’d learned a little in
the past three months would be an understatement. I had never spent so much time in the
kitchen, it wasn’t that I didn’t enjoy cooking, but my meals were beginning to
grow dull, even to me. Week after week, I
would prepare meals from experience, rarely using a recipe, nor buying new
ingredients, and then what seemed to be a moderate inconvenience to
stay-at-home all the time began to stir uncommon thoughts. I began to worry about worst-case
scenarios. What if this pandemic causes
a food shortage? What if we run out of
food? What if we consume more than we
need leaving us starving at the end of the stay-at-home order? I was actually happy that I was carrying
excess weight, convincing myself I would survive longer. I concluded that it was up to me to manage
our resources well so that none of us would suffer.
It was easy for my mind to
run away from reality. Before I knew it,
I was creating circumstances out of thin air.
I didn’t share a lot of my thinking with those in my family, but they
became more aware that I was reducing portion sizes and restricting the open
snack time munching that was customary. How
is it that our minds trap us into believing that things will get worse rather
than better? Where do we place our trust
in circumstances that seem out-of-control?
Truth be told, we control far less than we believe we do. Times of prosperity only camouflage our
insecurities. It is times of uncertainty
that challenge us to depend on our Creator.
An Over Abundance
It didn’t take long for me to peruse the contents of our pantry,
refrigerators, and freezers. I felt truly
fortunate that our food supplies were overflowing. There was no need to panic. Many people in fear had cleared grocer’s
shelves like one does when a major blizzard is announced. This didn’t make us better than anyone who
did. It gave evidence that we had been
plagued with scarcity thinking all along.
I’d never lived through the Great
Depression as my grandparents experienced.
Once they had lived through it, food became significantly important to
them. It was what they always offered as
a gesture of love because they knew how difficult it had been to live without
provisions.
A quick review of the contents showed that many items were getting
dangerously close to their expiration date—a common occurrence in our
home. In the past, we had periodic
cleanings to reorganize the shelves of our pantry and would discover that we
had items that were one to two years out of their recommended ‘use-by’
date. I now considered, how dangerous it
would be to consume products that were two or three months past their
expiration. We soon discovered that some
items lasted well-beyond their recommended disposal date, like milk, which can
be used for cooking.
My weekly trips to the grocery were always accompanied with a shopping
list of items that I needed to restock, but more times than not, I would find
myself adding things to the shopping cart that I could not live without, an
impulse buy. I also developed a bad
habit of doubling. If I put one box of
elbow macaroni on my shopping list, I would often pick up two. Why not buy a second for some date in the
future when I wanted an extra box? If
someone were to unpack our groceries, they might have assumed that I was buying
for two families, not a family of four who lived five minutes from a local
grocery store. As much as I hate to
admit, trips to the food pantry to offer donations only came when I would
reorganize our own pantry and decide something no longer had the same appeal as
the day I put it in our shopping cart.
For the first time in the history of our household, I began to consider
how to make use of products that I would once relinquish due to
disinterest. I took it as a personal
challenge to see just how empty I could make our pantry before I returned to
the grocery store. I was pretty
successful.
Meal Planning
Meal planning was not a new concept for me. On many occasions, I had tracked my food
consumption in a phone app to help me shed a few unwanted pounds. I am often ten to fifteen pounds above my
desired weight and often would find my personal aggravation the key to changing
my eating habits. But I would often veer
off course for several months if not a year.
Gradually the weight would be a problem I could not ignore. No one in our household had as slow of metabolism
as I, so as I would gain four or five pounds a month, everyone else consuming
the same content, and sometimes more would maintain their weight nicely. Tracking seemed to be the only guarantee that
I would not continue to add weight to my moderate five-foot four-inch frame. I had grown tired of using the app, and I had
stopped taking pictures of each plate of food I consumed. Both were practical tools I used for weight
control. Now was time to begin tracking
again, but not just for myself, but for the entire family to make sure we did
not over-consume food because we were either stressed or bored. I made it a personal objective to discontinue
throwing food away. If someone didn’t
eat all the food on their plate, it went into a storage container to be added
to their next meal. We had developed some very wasteful habits. Meal planning would become essential if we
wished to manage the resources that were available to us.
Savings Add Up
The Amazon® package arrived on the front
step; I hoped it was the parcel for which I had been waiting. I had been waiting for the 8 x 8 aluminum
pans to arrive. Our upcoming vacation
would be much easier to enjoy with meals prepared in advance. For the past several months, I had only
ordered a handful of meals from local restaurants, either takeout or
delivery. Everything else had been
prepared in our own kitchen. With the
stay-at-home order in place, we hoped to reduce the chance of something from
outside entering our home and making us sick with the very infectious CoVid19
virus. Only an occasional well-planned
trip to the family-owned grocery store became necessary. A vast majority of our household purchases
during the past three months were made online with either curbside pickup or
home delivery. Hand soap, garden seeds,
nail clippers for the dog, a thermometer, and non-perishable food items like
coffee were ordered through our Amazon Prime® account without concern for
delivery charges. Perishable
refrigerated or frozen foods were ordered either from Sam’s Club® or Meijers
using a shopping service called Shipt®.
I quickly discovered that shopping the old-fashion way with a shopping
cart moving up and down the aisles had precluded my understanding of what our
purchased items costs. I would wait for
the news at the register but could often estimate from based on the content of
my cart how much our groceries would cost, give or take $5. But now I was able to see the price for a
gallon of milk, a tub of margarine, or a bag of shredded cheese as I placed
each item in my online cart. I would
often review my full cart and begin to make decisions on what to keep and what
to remove. What I consistently found was
that I could reduce our weekly (or more like bi-monthly) shopping expenses by
$100 or more when someone shopped on my behalf, working strictly from our
shopping list. The one time I returned
to our old grocery routine, my bill shot back up, impulse buying. I now realize how easy it is to return to old
habits when one doesn’t pay attention to their own personal pitfalls.
New Ideas
It was time to take advantage of having more time to spend in the
kitchen by renewing my interest in not only meal planning but trying something
new. It had been a long time since I had
tried new recipes. My first adventure
was attempting to make tempura-battered vegetables. The method was pretty straight-forward, and I
had all the simple ingredients on hand.
I chopped carrots, zucchini squash, and summer squash diagonally. I made onion petals and washed snap
peas. After coating them with batter and
frying several batches, my counter was full of a variety of new flavors lightly
battered vegetables. I investigated how
to freeze the extras learning that I needed to first freeze them in single
layers before grouping them in airtight freezer bags. Reheating them in the air fryer made a
perfect side dish for several meals. I
was pretty impressed with how closely my tempura tasted when compared to one of
our favorite restaurants.
Bread was not readily available, so since I had some yeast stored in the
refrigerator, I decided to look up some homemade recipes. I had used all the prepackage bread mixes
that had been long stored in our pantry within the first several weeks of the
stay-at-home order. A YouTube® video
produced by a professional bread maker gave me some new secrets to proofing and
creating precisely the right consistency that I might find at a local
bakery. The approach to making bread was
both tasty and simple. I had never
realized how easy it was to make bread from home; homemade pretzel’s followed
with a slight modification to the recipe.
This bread-making was followed by dinner rolls, cinnamon rolls, and
breadsticks, the smell of yeast bread filling our noses. As I continued to make bread, I learned that
diced jalapeno and parmesan cheese pleased the spice girl in our family. The bread-making venture was a huge success
and has become one of my weekly routines.
In addition to tempura, bread, and some new variations on casseroles and
soups, I learned how to successfully encrust fish and chicken with nuts,
cornmeal, parmesan, or potato flakes. A
family favorite was homemade ice cream made on an old appliance buried in the
freezer that may have only been used once or twice in the eighteen years we’d
owned it. The more I experimented in the
kitchen, the higher my confidence increased.
I decided to resurrect an old swiss steak recipe that I hadn’t made in
years because it never turned out as good as I expected. Trying a new technique by searing the steak,
coating it generously with flour, and cooking it in broth for about six hours
in a slow cooker, this has now become a new family favorite.
Use of Appliances
For years, I’ve been the queen of appliances. I owned a bread maker, a juice maker, a
Kitchen Aid® mixer with multiple attachments, an air fryer, an instant pot,
multiple crockpots, cast iron skillets, a food processor, an ice cream maker, a
yogurt maker, and many more kitchen gadgets.
Many of these items have set on shelves collecting dust for years. I had even overgrown the room where I stored
all these appliances and began to fill the metal shelves in our garage with
items seldom used. I decided that it was
either time to use them or lose them. As
I learned the skill of bread making using my Kitchen Aid®, I realized I no
longer needed my bread maker. It offered
no noticeable convenience. The juicer
was impractical using far too much fruit and took hours to clean up after
use. Little by little, our closets were
cleared of unwanted and duplicate items, and large totes were filled in the
garage, waiting for the opening of local donation centers.
I began to scan the Internet and open cookbooks that I had once
purchased because the pictures were so appealing that I found great
entertainment in looking at them, but never attempting to use them for the
purpose for which they were designed. I
was a collector of cookbooks and took nearly 30 unused books to our local
library just before the stay-at-home order was given. A homemade batch of ice cream, the first time
use of a cookbook focused on sorbets, ices, sherbets, gelatos, and yogurts, was
delicious. Learning new air frying
techniques came from both YouTube® videos and the two cookbooks, which were sitting
restlessly on my shelf, hoping to make a comeback. I made Kale chips, apple chips, onion petals,
roasted nuts, breaded eggplant, and encrusted fish. I also learned to add water beneath the
perforated surface to darken dinner rolls creating a pretzel top and to make
egg souffles. I had never used baking
pans or ramakins inside the cooker but learned that any baking dish that can go
in the oven could be used in an air fryer, parchment paper too. Adding popcorn seasoning to potatoes and
roast carrots, or even spices like nutmeg, add a new flavor dimension. An appliance I had frequently used has become
even more valuable.
Meal Preparation
Before the pandemic of 2020, I had begun to cook in larger quantities,
making one dish for consumption and another packed away to be given away when
the need arises. On several occasions,
when making dishes like lasagna, instead of making one, I would make five,
freezing four. During the consumer panic,
when many grocery items were restricted, it was much more challenging to cook
in this manner. Having several backup
meals handy in our freezer brought both peace of mind and significantly easy
meal preparation. Now that purchase
restrictions have been lifted to some degree, I will again return to making
multiple batches to save time and create the added convenience of freezer-to-oven
meals.
Charity
Like many people sequestered to their homes, clearing closets, pantries,
cabinets, and storage units of unwanted items became an activity that
represented a productive use of time.
This time of adjustment has allowed us to see more clearly that sharing
our good fortune with others is the right thing to do. Just like evaluating which kitchen
appliances, pots, pans, and utensils had lost their appeal, clothing, shoes,
and odds and ends of everyday life found their way into storage bins to be
given away once the donation centers reopened.
Appreciation
During this unprecedented time that people were asked to stay-at-home to
reduce the spread of CoVid19, I recognized that the things we’ve taken for granted
could no longer be overlooked. If there
was only one lesson to learn during this time, it is to pay attention to life. It is easy to fall prey to materialism. The ‘got-to-have-it’ mentality reveals that
items become far less appealing once we own them, bringing little satisfaction when
we look for a place to store them.
Finding Her Place in the Home
Now that three months have passed, I realize that I have the benefit of
looking at life differently. I’ve
learned the joy of serving my family from the kitchen and enjoying great conversations
around the kitchen table. I’ve found my
place in the home. This sweet adventure
of 2020 was found, hidden in plain sight.
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