"Would you like a homemade waffle? " This is what I was asked
every other morning at the Inn where I spent the last week of my
vacation. Hmmm, homemade? Well within seconds-and I mean seconds, a
steaming, perfect waffle would appear! Maybe they meant 'freshly made?'
It turned out that they were making them to order, from a commercial
mix. They were cake-y and dense, though the spread offered wasn't
butter, and the syrup was the usual thick corn syrup. I had one with
jam, but after that passed on the 'homemade' waffles.
What does
homemade even mean anymore? So much of what we see advertised, or called
out by local places are phrases like 'baked on premises' and 'baked
daily'. Even places that sell artisan bread often bring it in par-baked,
then finish it off in the store. Shows like Sandra Lee's 'Almost
Homemade' annoy me! How hard is it to cook your own chicken for Pete's
sake? I guess if you heated it up on your premises it's homemade.
For the past few generations cooking and food have gotten complicated and please excuse me for using this word-fancy. People
think they need to be turning out restaurant quality food from their
kitchens, after a long day of work, and if faced with the choice of that
daunting task, or frozen tortellini with jarred sauce, most would go
for the tortellini! But it's all a lie! You don't need to create a
masterpiece of culinary extravaganza to do some fine home cooking!
If
you want real homemade food though, you're probably going to have to
make it yourself! Steer clear of any box or jar that claims it tastes
homemade, because it's a big fat lie! I bet
you've forgotten what homemade sauce tastes like, or how much better
your own roasted chicken tastes than that over-salted, over-cooked
rotisserie chicken from your local supermarket. This isn't about fat and
calories, it's about real food, made in your house with the ingredients
you added, not the flavor enhancers, and texturizers added by some food
factory cranking out tons of food a day.
Did you see your mom (or
dad) cook? If you watched them cook you learned how to do things in the
kitchen. Your children may not know to ask, but you owe it to them to
be able to watch you cook. They need to see you make simple easy stuff
that your family can eat. They need to see what homemade looks like.
Knowing how to make a meal for yourself and your friends and family is
an important life skill, and unlike the dying art of cursive
handwriting, eating real food made by real hands in a real kitchen is
important. Knowing how to do that is important.
Commercial food
producers, and chain restaurants have made a mockery of the word
homemade, and it's time to take it back! Progresso used to have an ad
that proclaimed "Make it Progresso, or make it yourself!" I say we take
them up on that! Bring back the true meaning of homemade!
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