I always hear people say โIf you can read, you can cookโ or โAs long as you are organized, you can get dinner together.โ I believe both of these maxims to a certain point, but the older I get and the more I hear from parents struggling to get dinner on the table every night, the more I feel like weโre ignoring a bigger obstacle in the kitchen. And no, Iโm not talking about the two-year-old pulling on our skirts as we attempt to boil water, though thatโs certainly legit. Mostly, Iโm talking about confidence โ or, more to the point, the lack of confidence that holds so many of us back.
I know from lack-of-confidence. Wow, so many stories to choose from here to support that claim, but I think Iโll use this one:
When I was in college, I sat in on a political science class in the beginning of the semester to see if it was up my alley. It was during that first-week period when students are allowed to shop around before committing, and I found out pretty quickly that the course was exactly what I was looking for. It was an American Politics 101 type deal, so would fill my plentiful knowledge gaps, and the professor was a natural storyteller. I felt if anyone could find a way to make terms like โunitary executive theoryโ amusing, this was the guy. It was settled โ I would officially enroll. But then, just as he was wrapping up class, he dropped the hammer. โOh, one more thing. You wonโt get away with not talking. Class participation is most of your grade.โ
I signed up for an art history survey class instead.
Class participation โ those two words scared the living daylights out of me. I had a crippling fear of public speaking that could be sourced to one feeling and one feeling alone: Why does anyone care about what I have to say?* Iโd look at people talking in meetings or at conferences or giving toasts at weddings like they were superheroes who had cracked some mysterious code. How do they have the confidence to just get up there, offer their thoughts, and not turn fifty shades of magenta like me? How do they get up there and not allow the anticipatory dread of public speaking to upend their lives?
I thought about all this last month when I was speaking at a conference in Chicago. There were about 200 people in the room and I had typed up my notes on the flight only a few hours before I got up on stage. The topic was something I had spoken on before, but still, I donโt think there was a minute where I was thinking what I used to think in these scenarios: I just want this to be over so I can have my appetite back.
So what changed? How did I get over it? And what does the heck does this have to do with cooking and those crazy looking meatball sliders up there?
The short answer is, I had no choice but to get over it a few years ago when my first book came out. Much to my horror, I found out quickly that writing a book was not only about typing away on my laptop while sipping Americanos in the local cafe. (Actually writing a book isnโt at all like that.) Apparently, once the writing part is done, there are readings and conferences and, if youโre โlucky,โ media appearances and parties where toasts and speeches are required. I am not complainingโฆexcept I am. The excitement of publishing Dinner: A Love Story was almost overshadowed by the anxiety I had about getting up to speak at these events. Almost.
Iโm not going to shatter anyoneโs world by revealing what cured me, but my solution was a) to prepare like mad and b) to do it. And screw up. And do it again. And screw up. And do it again. I learned something small every time I got up there (not a good idea to write complete sentences on your reference cards if you donโt want to sound like a robot; that thereโs no shame in having a half glass of wine beforehand if at all possible) but I also took away something big: I was judging myself way more harshly than anyone else was.
Over the past few weeks Iโve been reading and cooking from Mastering My Mistakes in the Kitchen, a cookbook by Dana Cowin, the editor in chief of Food & Wine who writes on page one: โIโm going to be honest. I am not a great cook.โ She then sets about learning how to become more confident in the kitchen with the help of a few friends named Thomas Keller, David Chang, April Bloomfield, Eric Ripert, and pretty much every other major luminary of the restaurant world. (To butcher Mel Brooks a bit: Itโs good to be the queen.) Along the way, she chronicles her mistakes as well as the chefโs solutions to those mistakes, from the very basic (using acid in a cast iron pan is going to impart bitterness to whatever youโre cooking in that pan) to the very cheffy (curry pastes from Thailand or Malaysia are best) to the downright revelatory (donโt truss a whole chicken when roasting, more air will circulate and the chicken will cook more evenly). The tips are all great, as are the recipes, but what I love most about this book is that itโs addressing something else beneath the surface: The idea that we all feel like frauds on some level and that the quickest way out of this is to just put yourself out there. In her words: โI discovered a bigger lesson โ something more important than the perfect friend chicken or no-fail souffle. And that is to be honest about what holds you backโฆand face it head-on.โ
In this way, those of us who want to learn how to cook should feel grateful for the relentlessness of cooking for our kids, right? Think about it: They demand to be fed every single night. Thatโs a lot of nights to figure out when to recognize that the chicken should come out of the pan when itโs firm to the touch but not rock hard; to figure out that wow, smoked paprika is a lot more powerful than regular paprkia; to realize that replacing dried canellini beans with canned is generally going to be fine, but replacing fresh green beans with its canned counterpart generally is not; to learn that your kid will eat black bean burritos if you leave out the black beans; to learn that maybe next time you have four people over for dinner, you donโt cook one ginormous bunch of farm-fresh spinach that wilts down to approximately one cup of farm-fresh spinach; to get over feeling like a fraud.
Itโs a lot of nights to screw up, and learn, andย acquire an instinct, so you canย do it right tomorrow.
*Yes, the blogger recognizes the irony of this statement.
Giveaway! Comment below to be eligible to win a free copy ofย Mastering My Mistakes in the Kitchen. Contest ends 11/11 at 8:00 ET. Must be a US resident to win. (But obviously anyone can comment!) Good luck! UPDATE: The winner has been chosen (bearsmama, #124). Thanks for playing everyone.
Pork Meatball Sliders
What did Cowin learn from The Meatball Shopโs Daniel Holzman? That the higher the percentage of lean meat to filler, the denser the meatball. Soย adding bread, cooked rice, or another filler helps keep them light and tender.ย Active Time: 30 minutes Total Time: 1 hour Makes 15 sliders
FOR THE MEATBALLS
Three 1โ2-inch-thick slices day-old white sandwich bread, crusts removed, bread chopped into small pieces (11โ2 cups)
1โ3 cup whole milk
1 large egg, lightly beaten
2 tablespoons finely chopped flat-leaf parsley
2 tablespoons finely chopped basil
2 tablespoons finely grated Pecorino cheese
1โ2 teaspoon kosher salt, or more to taste
1โ2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper, or more to taste
1โ2 pound ground pork
1โ2 pound sweet Italian sausages, casings removed, sausage crumbled
FOR THE GIARDINIERA SPECIAL SAUCE
1โ2 cup mayonnaise
1โ2 cup finely chopped giardiniera (pickled vegetables, available jarred or at the olive bar at supermarkets and Italian markets)
11โ2 tablespoons giardiniera pickling liquid
11โ2 tablespoons ketchup
TO SERVE
15 soft slider buns
11โ2 cups roughly chopped arugula
1. Preheat the oven to 425ยฐF. Line a large rimmed baking sheet with parchment paper.
2. Put the bread in a large bowl, add the milk, and let the bread sit until itโs softened, about 2 minutes. Scrunch the bread with your hands so that it almost forms a paste. Add the egg, parsley, basil, Pecorino, salt and pepper and mix until uniformly combined. Add the ground pork and sausage and knead gently to combine.
3. Fry a little tester patty in a skillet and adjust the seasonings as necessary.
4. Use a small (2-tablespoon-size) ice cream scoop to form the pork mixture into 30 small meatballs. Gently roll each meatball in your hands until smooth. Line them up on the prepared baking sheet, leaving a little space between them.
5. Bake until the meatballs are just firm and an instant-read thermometer inserted in the middle of the meatball in the center of the baking sheet registers 150ยฐF, about 15 minutes.
6. Meanwhile, put all the ingredients for the sauce in a small bowl and stir together.
7. Top the bottom of each slider bun with 2 meatballs and some arugula. Add on plenty of giardiniera sauce and the tops of the buns and serve.
Fantastic post!
I love to cook. I wish that every time I cooked for others that things would turn out better than they tend to. Hereโs to practicing over and over again โ with confidence!
Love your comment about screwing up but ultimately learning to try it again tomorrow. Iโve had the thought for years that if I learn from a mistake then it wasnโt necessarily a mistake. Thank you for the opportunity to win Dana Corwinโs new book.
Thank you for bringing this book to our attentionโฆhadnโt heard of it yet.
I love Dana Cowin! Sheโs always one of my favorite guest judges on Top Chef.
Iโve definitely become a better (home) cook since having a small person. Itโs forced me to produce a healthy meal at approximately the same time every day. Iโve certainly become much better at improvising and refining some of our favourites, just due to the amount of practice. Like most any other skill, doing it every single day is one of the easiest ways to improve. Iโm definitely not making โgourmetโ meals or learning fancy techniques, but for the basics, there is a sense of greater ease in the kitchen.
(not a US resident, so not eligible for the contest)
This is great. Iโm still in those learning stages where mistakes are common but itโs all part of the fun in my book!
Iโve enjoyed reading danaโs column over the years I canโt wait to see what she is up to with this talent crew of chefs!
I look forward to seeing the list of the 65 chefs! Thanks for all your good work.
^^ @Melissa above , me too! we moved from a good size metropolitan area to a small town in Mississippi for a few years and that is when I learned to cook! otherwise it was 1.5 hr down the interstate to the nearest bigger city w good ethnic cooking etc. necessity is the mother of invention after allโฆ i love Dana Cowin as well and her book looks great!
So much truth right here! The scariest part is always taking that first step because you havenโt built up the faith in yourself to do the task at hand!
Loved this post and the book looks awesome!
Iโm so glad to see a post about this book! I love the premise โ and what an opportunity to learn from the best.
I have cooked with confidence for my family for nearly thirty years, but still get nervous, if not downright panicked, when cooking for new guests (especially good cooks). Would love this book!
As a newly wed, Iโm getting lots of practice and making tons of mistakes right now! Hereโs to hoping weโve got a few meals down pat before babies come along.
This definitely looks like a book I need to spend some time with! ๐ Thanks for letting me know about it.
This post was so human, even if you dropped names like Eric Ripert.
well said! what happens to that innate confidence weโre born with (that enables us to take our first steps and make words out of letters and sounds) as we grow older? too bad it takes so many years to win it back! this cookbook looks like a great way to win it back in the kitchen!
Yes and yes! I am someone who needs to know why, then I can do it with confidence. Love this!
Great picture on the coverโฆDana looks like she is having fun!
Yes, please!
There are so many things in the kitchen I have not attempted because I am scared of screwing it all up (like kneading bread dough and using a deep fryer). I should just get over it.
Confidence is huge. I forget that I now have 20 years of experience and am trying to pass some of it along to my kids by having them help out in the kitchen as well. If for no other reason that to teach the picky eater that if you know how to cook, you can make what ever you want EXACLTY THE WAY YOU WANT IT. Sheโs 8, weโll see how that plays out in the futureโฆ
hear, hear!!!
heard Dana on radio cherry bombe and she was such a delight and great storyteller. Would love her book!