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Relationships

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Over reaction?

68 replies

builderboy · 27/06/2013 00:04

(long - sorry)

It's my birthday tomorrow. We bake a fair bit in this family and birthdays are the perfect time to get out the flour and sugar and make a mess. My wife asked if I wanted a cake made (answer yes please!) and what type so that she can get the ingredients during the day. (She works from home).
I'm a night owl so I search around online when she was in bed and find something that looks really nice: quite delicate but very tasty.

Now for background, her cooking philosophy is that you should be pleased with whatever you get because someone has taken the time to do it for you. Although I agree entirely that the effort should be acknowledged and appreciated (and it is - and verbally conveyed) I have a very different approach to cooking. I eat with my eyes just as much my mouth. The look of the food is a huge part of the eating experience. I am the first to admit if something I have made does not meet my own expectations - both in a culinary and visual sense - and am first to admit disappointed in my own fo-pars. If I see a nice picture in a recipie book that makes me want to cook it, I aim to achieve the picture in the book as best I can. (forget Heston's!)
My wife has never really been 'into' food or cooking. Food to her is just a thing we have to do to get us through the day.
(ps. I do most of the cooking at home for me and the 2 kids and have done for years. Wife has her own dietary needs that dont work well for the rest of us)

On previous occasions that my wife has cooked for me (cakes or otherwise), I (we) have honestly been told "that'll do" as it is being served. Not really the kind of thing you want to hear when you receive a 'gift'.
So with this in mind, and it being my birthday and-all, I emailed her the recipe link together with this:

"To convey in the nicest possible way..... I really do eat with my eyes. Can you please do your very best to make them look as perfect as in the photo. They look yummy. ..!!!

Thank you
Love you
X"

She wakes much earlier than me, read the email when she got to her desk, and had at least 20 minutes of me making and eating breakfast later in the morning to comment (good or bad) on the email. Nothing. Kissed wife goodbye and went to work.
As I got in van to come home for lunch (lucky I know), I checked my phone messages and read this reply:

"I really don't understand why you felt it necessary to make that comment. I am offering you a gift of a homemade cake and you are telling me how that gift should be presented - rather than just enjoying it.

I know you think you are being reasonable and that you tried to put it in the nicest possible way - but it comes across as very disrespectful and ungrateful.

I am happy to make you a cake, I want to make you a cake and I will make it as best I can. It is up to you how you choose to show your appreciation. My advice is to be profuse and to avoid any more backhanded criticisms."

OP posts:
Futterby · 27/06/2013 00:42

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Bogeyface · 27/06/2013 00:56

You dont get it do you?

"I know you cant do this, but I am going to ask you to do it anyway, and if you feel like shit when you cant do it that means you should try harder next time"

Double Prat!

wannaBe · 27/06/2013 00:57

are there really people out there who are that pretentious? Eats with his eyes wtf? See now here's the thing, you bake the cake, you ice the cake, you look at it, then you cut it and ... voila, it's gone. If it tastes nice then who the fuck cares about whether it looks like a picture.

I am an excellent cook. In fact in my family there are few who can top that. However my presentation skills are, shall we say, lacking, due to the fact I have been totally blind since birth. But that doesn't take away from my cooking skills though. And really, all this pretention about stuff looking like a picture just makes someone look like a pretentious arse. No really, it does.

ToomuchIsBackOnBootcamp · 27/06/2013 01:01

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Bogeyface · 27/06/2013 01:01

wanna may I ask a question?

I am a good cook too, but various bits of my fingers have ended up in dinners I have served over the years! How do you do it?! I am very very impressed :)

SecondRow · 27/06/2013 01:21

Oh oh oh, you know who you should marry after your wife kicks you out, OP? The poster who regularly throws piles of cakes in the kitchen bin because she deems them not fit for human consumption. She will of course have got rid of her current husband for his irritating habit of trying to eat them out of the bin despite their imperfections... and then the two of you will be very happy together.

Of course, she may have turned out to be a windup, but...

Bogeyface · 27/06/2013 01:26

IS she the one that will only served uncutted up cheese Second? I remember her!

wannaBe · 27/06/2013 01:28

bogey I don't really know. I have of course had my fair share of mishaps with various kitchen implements (who hasn't?), but in general accidents in my kitchen are rare.

My xh took some persuading to buy me a brulee torch though. ;)

K8Middleton · 27/06/2013 01:38

I can remember a friend of my mother describing in detail an iced, baked cow pat that was presented at a birthday party. Apparently it looked absolutely beautiful. Op, if your wife would like the recipe I am happy to give it to her?

Bogeyface · 27/06/2013 01:40

:o I bought a set of Japanese Sushi knives, first use cost me a whacking great lump off my thumb, but at least they were so sharp it didnt hurt! My dad is deafblind and he has no where near as many accidents as me, he says that I am just cack handed. I rather suspect that he is right and that I shouldnt be allowed within slicing distance of anything!

LuisGarcia · 27/06/2013 02:03

OP your wife sounds really lovely.

Numberlock · 27/06/2013 02:16

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May09Bump · 27/06/2013 02:36

lol - you are brave for posting, and at least you have acted on the feedback.

I think I would have baked a sponge cake and added green dye to everything - the sponge, icing & any decorations. I'm quite sarcastic though, so wouldn't have pre-warned you of my displeasure.

BlameItOnTheBogey · 27/06/2013 03:03

Gosh your wife's reply was so remarkably restrained. And you sound like an arse. That you could post this shows that you have no sense of how awful what you said to her really was. Presumably you thought people might agree with you? As I tell my 5 year old, if someone is trying to do something nice for you, even if you don't like it, the only correct response is 'thank you'.

YoniMatopoeia · 27/06/2013 06:26

I have to say, your wife's response is much calmer and dignified than mine would have been.

Mind you I can't imagine my dh ever being as rude and ungrateful as to send me an email like that.

MushiMushi · 27/06/2013 06:49

I too came to giggle at fo-pars.

EhricLovesTeamQhuay · 27/06/2013 07:52

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jessjessjess · 27/06/2013 08:02

You sound ungrateful and pompous. Sorry.

nkf · 27/06/2013 08:07

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TheVermiciousKnid · 27/06/2013 08:23

I would cut out the photo and hand it to you on your birthday. There you go, eat with your eyes.

AWarmFuzzyFuture · 27/06/2013 08:24

Oh, this thread has got my morning off to a great start! Grin

OP, of course YABU, that you need to ask is a bit worrying actually.

perplexedpirate · 27/06/2013 08:50

Could you have a relationship with a man who said 'yummy'?
I couldn't.

waltermittymissus · 27/06/2013 08:57

I agree with pirate

Your use of the word yummy is the most offensive thing on here.

nauticant · 27/06/2013 10:46

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sameoldIggi · 27/06/2013 10:52

I guess someone won't be having sex on their birthday then.