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DinnerPicky Eating

Muffin Tin Tapas

By August 7, 2013October 2nd, 201326 Comments

I think by now Iโ€™ve made it clear how much of an inspiration Peg Brackenโ€™s I Hate to Cook Book has been in my life. Not because the recipes are good โ€” quite the contrary, in fact. With brilliantly nostalgic (but not-so-appealing) names like Ham Lime Supper and Fast Cheese Scallop, Iโ€™ve never been tempted to cook even one.ย The writing, on the other hand, holds up remarkably well. A former ad copywriter, Bracken is the master of the zinger, and sets up a chapter like nobodyโ€™s business. Whenever Iโ€™m in a rut (writing, cooking, or both) I find myself breaking open my way-yellowed, barely-bound paperback copy, then inevitably following Andy around the house reading entire paragraphs to him (โ€œ..And now listen to this one!โ€) Like this intro to her chapter about entertaining.

โ€œWhen you hate to cook, you should never accept an invitation to dinner. The reason is plain: Sooner or later, unless you have luckily disgraced yourself at their home, or unless they get transferred to Weehawken, you will have to return the invitation.โ€

Last year, while I was at an impasse writing my own book, I remember reading Andy the first page of IHTCB,ย then him replying, โ€œI know what you mean. Every sentence is perfect.โ€

Well, this morning I started flipping through it again and came upon the section where she compiles seventy-five of her most favorite household hints. (But not before she ridicules the wholeย concept of household hints up and down and all around, God love her.) And then I saw this one:

โ€œYou can get a small sick youngster to eat more food, more happily, if you serve him an eight-course meal in a muffin tin. Many little bits of things โ€” a spoonful ย of applesauce, a few green beans, a few little candies, etc โ€” are more appetizing than three items in quantity.โ€

Iโ€™m not sure what age she was talking about when she refers to a โ€œsmall sick youngsterโ€ but Iโ€™d be willing to bet that this trick might work nicely for small youngsters who arenโ€™t sickโ€ฆfor small youngsters whose parents would do just about anything โ€” including make muffin-tin tapas (with cupcake papers!) after clocking nine hours at the office โ€” to get their finicky eater excited about trying something new. When Abby was a toddler suffering from her own bout of ingestus particulare, I know she wouldโ€™ve been all over it. Above, I put together a sample selection of what might work in our house: cheddar cubes, broccoli, turkey meatballs, yellow peppers, baby ravioli, apricot halves. But Iโ€™m willing to bet you know better than me what should be in yours. Let me know how it goes.

My battered, but well-lovedย I Hate to Cook Book (open to the tip section), given to me by my Uncle Mike, and, incidentally, winner of a 2011 Dolly Award.

26 Comments

  • Avatar Jessica says:

    OMG. I followed the link in todayโ€™s weekend link post on Cup of Jo, and what a funny coincidence โ€“ I was talking about this book last night with my friends! I donโ€™t have kids yet, so Iโ€™ll file this away for a few more years, but my mom has this book on her shelf, and Iโ€™ve always gotten such a kick out of Peg Brackenโ€™s writing. Iโ€™ve spread the word to my book club friends and to my boyfriend that if they should ever find a copy in a used bookstore, to PLEASE buy it for me (because Iโ€™m sure my mom wonโ€™t part with hers)!

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