My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

AIBU?

To think I might be alone - I don't cook

36 replies

badbadcook · 23/12/2016 13:23

I don't cook, or bake, or anything really.

This is not a stealth boasty "ooh I have better things to be doing" and the children DO eat well. They have porridge, toast, bananas, things like that, for breakfast. I make poached egg on toast. I bung corn on the cob in the microwave. I use a George Foreman grill for fish, I boil carrots and potatoes and broccoli and things.

But I don't COOK. I don't know, for example, how to make a roast, or pie, or lasagne - even simple fairy cakes are beyond me. I keep reading of Mumsnetters who make mince pies and biscuits for Rudolph and the like.

I'm sure I could but I don't know where to start and how do you do it with children marauding about?

OP posts:
Report
BiscuitCapitalOfTheWorld · 23/12/2016 13:39

Len Deighton- 50 Cookstrips

Robert Carrier- Great Dishes of the World.

Report
NavyandWhite · 23/12/2016 14:01

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

KatharinaRosalie · 23/12/2016 14:04

Jamie Oliver Ministry of Food. It has step by step guide and a lot of helpful tips.

You can also find a lot of videos online if you are not sure how exactly something should be peeled or cut

Report
MommaGee · 23/12/2016 14:06

How old are DC? Get a really easy recipe off the internet and get the kids to help. They need to read every direction to know what they're doing so it will cover up not knowing what you're doing and it'll be fun whatever the outcome.

Roasts etc just again, good Cook book and follow the instructions.

Report
hollinhurst84 · 23/12/2016 14:06

This is the worlds easiest beef stew. You basically add things, then shove it in the oven and ignore it. I find it doesn't take as long in the oven as it says
There is no browning the meat etc, just fry some veg and then tip other stuff in
I tend to add some pancetta cubes (ready chopped as I'm lazy!), chopped mushrooms, and an oxo cube
http://www.jamieoliver.com/recipes/beef-recipes/beef-and-ale-stew/

Report
hollinhurst84 · 23/12/2016 14:08

Also hobnob biscuits. Just involves stirring really and melting some butter. No rolling out etc
http://mymakedoandmendlife.com/2013/02/19/homemade-hobnobs/

Report
harderandharder2breathe · 23/12/2016 14:08

Student cookbooks tend to be good for not assuming extensive skills.

If you want to learn then the internet is your friend, you can find millions of recipes on there.

If you don't want to learn then that's fine

Report
pudcat · 23/12/2016 14:10

Buy a slow cooker and you can cook wonderful stews just by throwing in loads of veg and meat.

Report
Liiinoo · 23/12/2016 14:14

No-one is born knowing how to cook. if you want to learn to do it you can do. I learnt from Delia Smiths Complete Cookery Course book and I am a v good cook now. But it's not compulsory - you sound like you are doing just fine as you are.

Report
badbadcook · 23/12/2016 14:15

I'm a vegetarian!

I've got a slow cooker. It's just too, well, slow Xmas Grin

I wondered if I was alone Blush as cooking and baking seems to be what people do a lot?

OP posts:
Report
hollinhurst84 · 23/12/2016 14:16

Not alone Grin I cook sometimes but mainly I assemble. And do easy stuff like fish with roasted veg. Sometimes I bake but maybe 2/3 times a year

Report
Greenteandchives · 23/12/2016 14:18

You are not alone. I don't cook. DH likes it, so does it all, including bread and cakes.

Report
JenLindleyShitMom · 23/12/2016 14:19

You do more than I do. I have on occasion taken advice and bought some cookbooks but my DC are picky and I am not up for that fight. I make what I know will be eaten.

Report
TiredMumToTwo · 23/12/2016 14:19

You cook more than I do! Fortunately my DH is a very good cook so kids eat well and have school dinners during the week so I know they're getting a healthy varied diet but pizza in oven is about the sum of my skills!!

Report
NicknameUsed · 23/12/2016 14:19

All you need is a few really good recipe books that explain the how and the why.

Delia Smith is brilliant for this. I defy anyone not knowing how to make a meal after reading her How To Cook series of books, unless you are dyslexic.

Student recipe books contain simple recipes. YouTube is brilliant for demonstrating cooking techniques. Also, there are so many cookery shows on TV that show you how to make delicious meals.

There is also nothing wrong with using a few short cuts for things you don't have the confidence to make - shortcrust pastry, Yorkshire puddings etc.

Report
TwentyCups · 23/12/2016 14:20

I can cook very well humble but I can't bake for shit. I'm vegan, used to be vegetarian and I think it's easier cooking these meals as far less chance of poisoning everyone!

There's a big difference between cooking and baking - baking is more an exact science or it won't work. My kind of cooking is much more a bit of this, dash of that. Doesn't work so well when using bicarbonate of soda Xmas Grin

Report
Bluntness100 · 23/12/2016 14:21

You just follow a recipe, it's step by step, it's really not hard and it's how many of us learn. You can't say you can't cook if you haven't tried. I think everyone can cook, you've just got to buy the ingredients, follow a recipe and voila you cooked.

Report
cosytoaster · 23/12/2016 14:21

I can cook, after a fashion but I don't bake at all- I've tried a couple of times but with rubbish results, shop bought cakes and biscuits are much better than anything I could make.

Report
badbadcook · 23/12/2016 14:23

I definitely think baking might be a tad beyond me, although I do love the IDEA of it!

OP posts:
Report
AnArrowToTheKnee · 23/12/2016 14:29

Do you actually want to cook? I love cooking, but I know a lot of people just see it as a chore. If you want to learn, I started with Delia Smith for the basics and internet recipes once I knew what I was doing. Be prepared for some trial and error when you try a new recipe, mine never come out right the first time round!

Roast dinners look daunting, but it's literally putting stuff in the oven at the right time. Some people like to make it seem more complicated than it is Smile

As for the children thing, a lot of people say you should get them to help, but I prefer them to stay out of the kitchen. DS1 plays in his room while I do dinner, and DS2 is generally asleep (he's only 6 weeks old). Even DH isn't allowed in when I'm cooking, but that's just me, I don't like other people in my workspace.

Report
TheSconeOfStone · 23/12/2016 14:29

I can do basic baking cooking and baking but I hate crafts and can't knit or sew. You don't have to do everything. My mum taught me to make sponge cakes and pastry. She is a very good cook. A big Delia fan in the seventies. My kids aged 6 and 9 are picking up baking from me. I find it easy because I've done it since I was their age.

Report
amicissimma · 23/12/2016 14:29

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

badbadcook · 23/12/2016 14:29

Well, I see that a lot of people suggest baking with the children as an activity, but don't they get bored and make a mess?

OP posts:
Report
Oysterbabe · 23/12/2016 14:31

No one is born knowing how to make a pie. Just follow a recipe the first few times. It really isn't hard.

Report
SpeakNoWords · 23/12/2016 14:33

Baking is easier than cooking sometimes, as it's more precise. If you follow a recipe exactly then it will work. Mince pies would be particularly easy. Shortcrust pastry can be made in a food processor in moments and nearly everyone will use shop bought mincemeat. If you're baking with children, you do a child friendly recipe that is quick and you do the harder processes yourself as the adult. Mostly children just like to decorate and ice things though! Gingerbread men is a good place to start, as you can make the biscuit dough and they can cut out shapes and add the raisins.

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.