Pollan on the Death of Home Cooking

I’m still in Mexico, and will be posting about that in a bit (once Peter leaves and I’m left to my own devices in the evenings).

In the meantime, don’t miss yet another fantastic article by Michael Pollan: Out of the Kitchen, Onto the Couch.

As usual, he manages to say everything I’ve been saying, but without ranting or getting depressed. The real tragedy of the current state of home cooking, in my mind, is that people who now want to learn to cook have virtually no home cooks to learn from–only fancy chefs. Home cooking is a very different skill set from restaurant cooking, and not nearly as intimidating as TV cheffery makes it seem.

I also love his point early on about the transubstantiation that’s central to cooking. It is a small art, and a small miracle, to transform ingredients. I talk about this a bit in the early parts of mine and Tamara’s cookbook, Forking Fantastic! (out Oct. 6, as if I’d let you forget).

More practically, cooking is perhaps the best arts-and-crafts project you can undertake–it’s done in an hour, and you don’t have the results cluttering up your house. But you still have the satisfaction of having completed something substantial, of having made something–which unfortunately is a feeling that’s very rare in a lot of our workdays.

2 comments

  1. Christina says:

    One of the things I appreciate so wholeheartedly about Pollan’s writing is that he isn’t naggy. He may say some of the same things over and over; he may point out our weaknesses as a culture (but he ALWAYS make suggestions for improvement–if you’re going to explain what’s wrong, explain why it is wrong, and what to do about it–he does that so well); he may get quoted by annoying people. But, he’s not annoying. He’s constructive with humor and realism, and I feel so lucky our culture has him.

    You don’t rant, at least not in an unfunny or snide way. I can always come to this site to find good food, good humor, and good fun. I never go away disappointed.

  2. Zora says:

    Aw, thanks, Christina!

    I always feel better after reading Pollan–and I think it’s because of just what you say: He’s constructive. Much more than I often feel.

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