Last Tuesday night, the week of Thanksgiving, we ate French Bread pizzas for dinner. I had a baguette that was about to go stale, a half jar of Raoโs marinara in the fridge, a ball of mozzarella, and very little desire to spend more than two minutes on dinner. I didnโt even feel like expending energy on a vegetable, instead deputizing 12-year-old Abby to chop up some Romaine hearts and call it salad.
A week later โ last night โ I was pan-roasting a duck breast, simmering a wine-macerated-cherry sauce on the stovetop, and whisking a homemade vinaigrette, while reading Elizabeth Dunnโs essay in the Atlantic, โThe Myth of Easy Cookingโ on my phone. (No, the irony was not lost on me.) For those of you who havenโt read it, the basic idea is that the food industry โ particularly magazines and cookbooks โ over-promise on the speed and ease of recipes. They offer up complicated curries and homemade pie dough as though anyone with half a brain cell can throw them together for a regular old weeknight family dinnerโฆafter spending a day at the officeโฆwith a toddler underfoot. The result of all this? Dunn, the mother of a one-year-old, writes: โโฆThe weight of expectation imposed by our cooking culture, which offers unrealistically complex recipes while at the same time dismissing them as simple, can be crushing.โ
I agree with her premise.ย Like Dunn, I was working as a food editor when I had a one-year-old; Like Dunn, I was wary of all the recipes we convinced ourselves were quick, easy, and โkid-friendlyโ to boot. (A partial ridiculous list: lettuce soup, homemade multigrain crackers, a pork dish that called for some kind of dehydrated apple chip garnishโฆsorry, Iโve tried to block that one out); And presumably like Dunn, I took part in endless office conversations about the balance between attainable vs. aspirational cooking, i.e. no one was going to buy a magazine that taught them how to make French bread pizzasโฆnor were they going to subscribe to the idea that a pan-roasted Hudson Valley Duck with a Cherry-Peach reduction was a viable option for a Tuesday night family dinner. The answer, of course, was somewhere in between. (Maybe theย Aspirtainable? You heard it here first!)
Dunn also writes this: โThe decision to cook from scratch may have many virtues, but ease is not one of them.ย Despite what weโre told, cooking the way so many Americans aspire to do it today is never fast, and rarely easy compared to all the other options available for feeding ourselves.โ
Of course sheโs right โ of course itโs easier to one-click a meal on Seamless than it is to roast vegetables and sausages, no matter how many different ways I tell you that is the worldโs simplest dinner โ but itโs Dunnโs tone of resignation I feel the need to address before scores of Atlantic readers throw up their hands and surrender to take-out. Her underlying assumption seems to be that we are the same cook from one night to the next, from one year to the next. Weโre not. At least, Iโm not. When I was a full-time, commuting mother with a witching-hour one-year-old, step 4 in a recipe, asking me to, for instance,ย brown something in batchesย was an affront to my existence. (As was just about anything during those sleep-deprived years.) Now, working from home with two middle schoolersโฆitโs just Step 4.ย On French bread pizza nights, I canโt imagine Iโll ever want to turn on the stove again; On Hudson Valley Duck nights, I canโt believe how therapeutic it feels to try out a recipe thatโs been in my โSomeday Fileโ for a few months now. Even after a stressful, busy day. (Busy? I hear my younger self say. Youโre not allowed to use the wordย โbusy.โ)
Anyway, itโs a tricky proposition โ not to mention a total condescending cliche โ to say that things get easier, or to measure someone elseโs experience by oneโs own. All I can do, here in DALS land is point you in the direction of aspirtainable recipes, dishes to cook when you donโt really feel like cooking, dishes that donโt crush your spirit but remind you why itโs worth it to stay in the game. To that end: A favoriteโฆ
Totally Aspirtainable Sausages with Roasted Fall Vegetables
2-3 carrots, peeled, and chopped into disks
1 bunch Romanesco or broccoli, trimmed
1 fennel bulb, trimmed and cut into wedges
olive oil, a generous drizzle
salt and pepper
4 links, sweet Italian sausages (or your favorite kind โ andouille, chicken chorizo, etc.)
Preheat oven to 400ยฐF. In a baking dish, toss together the vegetables, olive oil, salt and pepper. Roast for 30-35 minutes, tossing half way through, until slightly caramelized and cooked through. Meanwhile, cook sausages in a pan over medium heat, tossing every few minutes until browned and cooked through, about 10-12 minutes. Serve sausages with vegetables, crusty bread, and an assortment of grainy and hot mustards.
*We started roasting the vegetables before the oven got to 400ยฐF, which is why the temperature display in the photo says 263. (It wonโt work out too well at that heat.) Also, our oven clock hasnโt been accurate in seven years. We were notย makingย dinner at 1:52.
Second (or third?) the comment on throwing the sausages in the oven โ Jamie Oliver was the one who gave me the courage to do it straight from the freezer, and it has fallen into regular rotation for those nights when we need a โdesperation dinnerโ โ like tonight. Thanks as always for inspiring those of us who are weary with lunch-packing, and live nowhere near a good pizza delivery place.
i love this! iโve resolved (again) to dial down the guilt this year. that includes cooking. itโs true! you are not the same cook from one night to the next, etc. watching othersโ curated photos can add to the guilt but iโve resolved that if itโs mostly home cooked and weโre all at the table together, weโre good. and if itโs too much sometimes and you have to order out, whatever. although iโm dying to try the roti recipe from your first book for my half-guyanese husband! thank you for always providing balance to the home/life discussion. itโs not all or nothing. no judgementsโฆ