Nathan
SF VIP
- Location
- High Desert- Calif.
Do you still cook?
I like eating, so I cook.
Do you still cook?
I do a little actual cooking once in a while. But, anymore I'm too tired to care and it's just me. I can live with prepared foods. I will sometimes make a box cake or brownies. I got the sugar free ones so I sometimes bake those up. Once in a while I make sloppy joes or spaghetti with ground beef. Mostly I just don't wanna eat leftovers for a week.I live alone, and cooking is not a fun thing for me, so I nuke frozen dinners. My brother dices, chops, sautés, broils, bakes, etc. No way am I doing all that. So, do you still cook? What do you mean by "cook"?
is that an unusual thing there ?...Every person in the UK has had an automatic kettle for decades.....I think the last time I saw a stove top kettle was when I was a kid...No, not an option due to severe arthritis from head to toe and digestive issues.
I love salad. I miss salad. I can no longer eat salad as anything high in fiber makes me physically and severely ill and, no, I'm not going to go into gruesome detail. Just cannot eat as healthy as I wish I could. Enough said.
The arthritis means I can't stand long enough. You can buy stools to sit at counter and stop top height but it's really not the same and you have to lean forward more so kind of negates the saving on your spine though it does your hips on down to your feet. If I chop, dice, stir, etc., etc., etc, the numerous tasks cooking involves with my arthritic hands - yikes! So not worth it.
I don't cook. Stouffeur and Marie Callender cook. I don't.
I'm also high risk for heart attack/stroke so I kind of like things like the microwave and toaster that stop and turn themselves off. If I actually use stove top or oven, I live in dread that I'll keel over before the food is done. I even use an electric kettle to boil water for tea that turns itself off.
we have super hard water here, which destroys kettle and immersion heaters..water tanks.. etc...so it's very normal to have to replace kettles every 2 yearsI think the auto-shutoff hot water pots have been around for a long time, they just didn't get popular and common until a couple of decades ago. I hang onto stuff until it dies, and I'm on my 3rd one.
You can freeze the chic peas, I do so because I don't need the whole can sometimes. Just use what you need and put the rest with the liquid in a container and freeze itForgot to mention...I also add croutons to the broccoli salad. If I could find chic peas in smaller cans, I'd add them too..
Congratulations, you are the first person I heard of that will go through such an "ingenious" way to make a whole meal for themselve!!! and not just eat out and or junk foodI was a bachelor all my life. I loved to cook if where I lived had a full kitchen, but for 33 years I lived in one room with a hot plate. I would eat in during the work week, and out on weekends. My cooking then was what I called phased cooking.
First I would make a salad to eat while watching TV. Then I would boil the potato until the first commercial. Then I'd boil the veggies until the next commercial. Then cook the meat slowly and turn it at a few successive commercial breaks. I'd eat each phase while watching TV as the next phase cooked. You have to do this when you only have a one burner hot plate to cook on. But, I had a full dinner each night. You just have to be a little creative in your cooking and eating habits.
To cut down on the dishes since I had no kitchen sink, but only the bathroom one I would eat out of the pot I cooked in. I suppose this sort of cooking would be roughing it to most others. But, I discovered something interesting - if you cook and eat slowly by stretching the meal out for about an hour you don't get the hungries later and then snack on treats. Works great for the waistline.
I'm like you Fuzzy...I hate to cook. I've found prepared meals that I like, mostly from Costco and Walmart, but one must watch the sodium content. I try to choose ones that have the lowest. Since I will have to start following a renal diet (to stave off further progression of renal failure), I'm going to have to rely on them a lot less and do more cooking from scratch. I am not looking forward to that !
I consider myself a lazy cook, but I'm a good cook. I plan to see a nutritionist soon and will likely follow her prescribed diet as best I can. One of the easiest meals I make is salad made with frozen broccoli, microwave steamed and cooled. I add chopped egg, pickled beets or mango chunks (from frozen) and homemade Russian dressing. The dressing is easy...ketchup, mayo and a little filtered water.
We have water softeners here to take care of hard water. Do you have them there?we have super hard water here, which destroys kettle and immersion heaters..water tanks.. etc...so it's very normal to have to replace kettles every 2 years
Until recently. It seems to be catching on. Especially as there's an option between the traditional looking ceramic ones - I noticed when I went looking that there seemed to be a lot in the UK and nothing new - and really mad ultra modern looking all glass and chrome.is that an unusual thing there ?...Every person in the UK has had an automatic kettle for decades.....I think the last time I saw a stove top kettle was when I was a kid...
BTW..you won't be surprised to learn I too have OA..and digestive issues..![]()
Don't make me hungry like that. Two of my favorite foods and I sure can't eat like that anymore. Bummer.I'd enjoy a cheeseburger again. Or a cheesy, meaty lasagna, maybe made with spicy, high fat Italian sausage.
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