KAREN WIGHT -- No Place Like Home
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The other day my friend Stacy gave me a copy of an article that ran in
the San Francisco Chronicle. It is a delightful essay by Adair Lara
called “The Cat Years” and it talks about children and their changing
habits as they go from childhood through the teenage years and their
eventual metamorphosis into human beings.
The synopsis of the article goes something like this: In their younger
years, children are friendly and outgoing, eager to please and generally
fun to be around, much like a dog.
As they enter their teenage years their personalities become much more
catlike, aloof and, well, kind of snotty. If you are a patient parent and
handle the changes with alacrity, your cat will eventually become more
canine again and your world will once more be filled with enthusiastic
approval.
The article certainly rang true with the moods in our house. With one
daughter firmly entrenched in her “cat years” and a son teetering on the
edge of his, I have had to search for ways to handle their changing moods
and lifestyles.
The one variable that I can always hook them with is food. Any kind of
food. Meals, snacks, drinks, as long as it is consumable, I have
leverage.
Now before I begin to sound like Betty Crocker let me throw in a
caveat: I always take the easy way out, always. I would certainly rather
take a little extra time in the garden or with a good book than stand in
the kitchen. But when it comes to finding a “hook” to keep my kids coming
back for more, it’s always food that does the trick.
Do you have a Crock-Pot that’s still in a box from your wedding? Pull
it out. If you aren’t crazy about the pink and blue flowers that are
dancing on the sides, buy a millennium model with a stainless steel
exterior. Even Crock-Pots can be cool.
Throw in some Italian sausages, pour a jar of marinara sauce over the
top, turn it on low and head out to the beach. By the time your cats come
home for dinner (all at different times of course) dinner will be ready
at their beck and call. Have some rolls and a salad ready and they’ll
come home for dinner.
This simple equation works with almost any meat. You can use beef ribs
and barbecue sauce; chicken and gravy; pork chops and vinaigrette. The
meat is amazingly tender after it has cooked all day and dinner is warm
and ready when your family is hungry.
A few years ago I would have balked at this concept. I still like to
have a sit-down dinner with all five of us, but reality dominates. With
athletic schedules, work and school activities, I need to be ready for
any and everything.
Another old kitchen standby that has worked its way into my heart is
my mother’s old electric skillet.
Actually, I shouldn’t even call it my mother’s. My mother can count
the meals she has cooked in her life on one hand. But one long ago
Christmas she received a very large electric skillet from one of our baby
sitters, I think it’s circa 1961. It’s huge and it’s cool.
This old skillet can make four huge pancakes at once, fry close to a
pound of bacon or make a mother of a frittata in no time at all. Then,
you can turn it on low and keep it warm and tasty until the family makes
an appearance.
I know -- you’re tsk-tsking at me. You have your Viking range; you
have your takeout file, what else do you need?
Some times the old ways are the best ways. You need some of these
mainstays to keep your modern life in check and your family coming home
for dinner.
Like the saying “a way to a man’s heart is through his stomach,” I
just translate it to include my man and all other members of my
household.
Or should I say my cats and dogs.
* KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column runs Saturdays.
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