Meals that nourish my soul
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It’s a good thing that my kids are back in school. The
Newport-Mesa Unified School District intervened just in time to
prevent permanent emotional damage. Both from child to parent and
parent to child.
Maybe it’s the same way in your house. The end of summer rolls
around and the whining takes on a fevered pitch.
“Where can we go?”
“What can we do?”
“WHAT’S FOR DINNER?”
It’s that last question, “What’s for dinner?” that sends me over
the edge of sanity.
First of all, let’s do a number game. During the summer I fix
three meals a day, seven days a week for the family. OK, sometimes
there will be a child absent due to their good fortune, but for the
most part, that’s 21 meals per week for a family of five.
Take the 21 meals and multiply them by the 11 weeks of vacation
and you’ve got 231 opportunities for nourishment, and that doesn’t
include snacks.
And by the way, if you haven’t figured this out, Tuesday follows
Monday, Wednesday follows Tuesday and so on. There is no break in the
action, brothers and sisters. Are you with me? I wanna hear an
“amen.” Thank you.
So, bitter maternal unit that I am, I was resolved to stop the
madness, turn the tides and create order out of chaos. I delegated.
Creating a new system actually took more time initially than
cooking the meal. However, I’m going for long-term rewards. Rome
wasn’t built in a day.
The kids are past the star-chart system, but nonetheless, a chart
was a great start. I decided to make each underage person in my house
responsible for one dinner a week. Just one meal. But ground rules
apply. First, the meal has to be prepared at home (no fast food).
Second, it has to be healthful (no ice cream sundae dinners). Third,
they have to plan ahead and give me a list, or go to the store
themselves and purchase the ingredients. Fourth, they have to come in
under $20 for the meal. They can use anything I stock in the fridge,
freezer or pantry, but their grocery trip has to be covered by an
Alexander Hamilton.
They must cook, serve and clean up (no hoisting a terrible mess on
a sibling).
Welcome to my world.
As I presented my decree I could see the wheels turning inside
their almost-hollow-by-the-end of-summer heads. They immediately
tried to find loopholes (nice try) or come up with caveats (no way).
I have to give the kids credit. They approached the idea as an
opportunity, not an obstacle. The first meal of the new reality fell
on the shoulders of the 13 year-old son. Do you smell a failure? Not
a chance. In fact he set a very high standard for the girls to
follow. We had tacos, refried beans and fruit salad for dinner. He
made a cake from a mix and slathered it with chocolate frosting and
sprinkles. He struggled a bit (I was conveniently unavailable) then
asked for advice from his older sister, and sailed through the
challenge.
Mary Rose followed his act with Italian Sausage (crock pot style),
garlic bread and salad. Annie came through with shredded beef
sandwiches, fruit and ice cream. I still fix dinner three nights a
week (I have first dibs on take-out), and the husband barbecues on
Sunday, but I am now looking forward to three nights of
no-strings-attached dining.
Even though I started this regime merely to save myself from
imploding, I think there are going to be some benefits. Through no
altruistic motive, this plan may actually end up to be a great
learning experience. If nothing else, I think the kids will
appreciate what it takes to feed a family.
What am I having for dinner tonight? Soul food. Amen.
* KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column runs
Sundays.
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