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120: Katie Wahlman: Finding A Creative Outlet In Baking

April 27, 2016 by Gabriel Leave a Comment

Katie Wahlman of Butterlust on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to keep posted with her.
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Katie Wahlman of Butterlust on The Dinner Special podcast talking about being driven by finding a creative outlet in baking.

Butterlust

Katie’s blog, Butterlust, allows her to combine her love of food with the need for a creative outlet. She is open and honest about everything she makes on her blog and believes that she could quite possibly be the messiest cook on the planet.

I am so thrilled to have Katie Wahlman of Butterlust with me here on the show.

On a Dish That’s Special to Her:

I would go back to that zucchini bread recipe that I was talking about because it is my grandma’s recipe and my mom grew up eating it and then I grew up eating it. Even my mom, who, like I said, isn’t a big cook, isn’t a home baker, isn’t a home cook, it’s one of those things that even neighbors growing up and my best friend’s moms and everybody would get so excited when my mom would bring over a loaf of zucchini bread.

It really is the first baking memory from scratch that I have. You have to grate all the zucchini – that would be my job. Then my mom would let me pour in the oil and do all the stirring. It doesn’t require a mixer. It’s a really simple quick bread. But it does have a lot of memories attached to it for me as well.

The Pressure Cooker:

Which food shows or cooking shows do you watch?

I don’t have cable. My boyfriend and I recently cut the cord and we don’t have a cable service, so I don’t watch a ton of food TV, but I do watch a couple food shows on Netflix. The Great British Baking Show is on Netflix now, and I’m still on season 1, but it’s absolutely adorable and I’m kind of obsessed with it. Everybody is so happy and supportive of one another, and they make really amazing things and you learn so much from it.

Sometimes while my boyfriend and I cook dinner, we watch Chopped reruns. It’s kind of an inspiration while we’re trying to make something out of what’s in the refrigerator. So we’ll do that. And my favorite thing that I rave about to anybody who will listen, is Chef’s Table on Netflix. The six-part series documentary is about some of the best chefs in the world. The cinematography is just so stunning. I’ve probably watched each of the episodes three to four times; I love it.

What are some food blogs or food websites we have to know about?

I follow like 200-plus blogs. There are so many inspiring bloggers out there. A couple of my go-to’s that I will check every once in a while if I’m in need of inspiration or just want to see what these girls are up to, I love Hummingbird High, Michelle Lopez.

Two Red Bowls, which is Cynthia. She makes these amazing beautiful dishes. And then My Name is Yeh. She’s Molly Yeh of North Dakota. She makes the most fun, just happy type of desserts, so she’s really an inspiration too.

Who do you follow on Pinterest, Instagram, or Facebook or Snapchat that make you happy?

Some of my favorite Instagramers are probably @ladyandpups. Her stuff is absolutely beautiful. Again, a lot of Asian inspired food but her photography is just really stunning. Beth Kirby of @local_milk. She’s kind of just exploded in the last few years. I can’t even understand how she can take such beautiful photos. They’re just absolutely stunning. And then I guess probably Eva Kosmas Flores from Adventures In Cooking, who I know that you’ve also had on the podcast. Her stuff’s beautiful as well. I love how moody and Pacific Northwestern it is. The lighting is just absolutely stunning.

What is the most unusual or treasured item in your kitchen?

Does a couch count? I feel like my living room and kitchen are just basically like one big room. I don’t really have anything super unusual. I would say my most treasured items would be I have this antique teal-blue Pyrex bowl that belonged to my great-aunt Aggie who lived to be 102. So I have that, and I’m like, “Don’t touch it.” My boyfriend tries to use it to cook in and I’m like, “Don’t! If you break it, I’ll die.” Probably also my KitchenAid mixer. As a baker, your KitchenAid mixer is your best friend.

Name one ingredient you used to dislike but now you love.

This doesn’t necessarily apply to baking as much, but I used to hate, despise broccoli, and now I love it. I eat it everyday. It’s my favorite vegetable.

What are a few cookbooks that make your life better?

Well, like I said, I don’t have a lot of room for cookbooks. My collection is pretty slim currently, but the, Baking: From My Home To Yours by Dorie Greenspan is probably my favorite baking staple.

I also have this cookbook called, Vintage Cakes by Julie Richardson. She apparently found a box of old vintage recipes in the attic of a bakery that she bought or something like that, and tweaked them to make them a little bit more modern and created this vintage cakes book out of it, which kind of goes with the scheme of me really loving these simple, really rustic skillet cakes. A lot of the stuff in there is along those lines, and everything I’ve made from it has been totally spot on. So I actually really love that one too. I’ve been baking from it a lot lately.

What song or album just makes you want to cook?

Probably anything shamelessly poppy. I have a wide variety of likes when it comes to music, but when I’m baking, I want to dance around and have a good time in the kitchen. So, probably Taylor Swift’s, 1989. I think when that album came out, for the next three months, that was the only thing I listened to while I baked. I find myself listening to a lot of Hall & Oates and old pop music which is a lot of fun. So yeah, anything that I can dance around to and have fun with.

On Keeping Posted with Katie:

Katie Wahlman of Butterlust on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to keep posted with her.

I’m probably the most active on Instagram, so my Instagram handle is @butterlustkatie.

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Filed Under: Podcast Tagged With: Adventures in Cooking, Baking, Baking: From My Home to Yours, Beth Kirby, Butterlust, Chef's Table, Chopped, Dorie Greenspan, Eva Kosmas Flores, Food Blog, Food Blogger, Hall & Oats, Hummingbird High, Julie Richardson, Katie Wahlman, Lady and Pups, Local Milk, Michelle Lopez, Molly Yeh, My Name is Yeh, Taylor Swift, The Great British Baking Show, Two Red Bowls, Vintage Cakes, Zucchini Bread

016: Renee Byrd: Learning to Cook With Food Sensitivities

March 23, 2015 by Gabriel Leave a Comment

Renee Byrd of Will Frolic for Food on The Dinner Special podcast talking about the idea behind her blog.
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Renee Byrd of Will Frolic For Food on The Dinner Special podcast on Learning to Cook With Food Sensitivities

Will Frolic for Food

Renee is a writer, photographer, recipe developer, and chocolate maker. She eats a wheat-free, dairy-free and vegetarian diet, and her blog is a reflection of this. On Will Frolic for Food, you will find recipes for creative, savory vegetarian dishes and occasionally more healthful versions of something indulgent.

I am so happy to have Renee Byrd of Will Frolic for Food here on the show today.

On The Idea Behind Her Blog:

Renee Byrd of Will Frolic for Food on The Dinner Special podcast talking about the idea behind her blog.

I think the main idea for the blog came from just cooking in my daily life. I am bored very easily so I make a lot of weird, interesting recipes at home, and my now husband, then fiancé, was just really… I would make meals and he would say, “You really need to start a blog about this because people need to know these recipes. You can’t just keep them to yourself. It’s really not fair in a way.”

From my side, I was like, “No, I mean that’s so much work. I don’t want to. I don’t know.” Finally I was just like, “This is probably worth my time to share this with people,” and it totally has been. The community is a major reason I keep going.

I often have recipes that take me over eight hours to do. All in all, like recipe development, making the recipe, photographing the recipe, editing the recipe, post processing, writing; all things that go into it.

It’s so much. I love every second of it, but it’s not easy technically.

On Her Interest in Cooking and Food:

Renee Byrd of Will Frolic for Food on The Dinner Special podcast talking about her interest in cooking and food.

I’ve pretty much always been interested in it. I have a natural affinity towards natural foods and wanting to feel healthy and feel great.

I’ve always associated food with feeling good and being happy. I am sure the majority of that is that my mother is a fantastic cook and taught me how to make a lot of interesting foods and interesting meals out of nothing; out of like, “What’s in the fridge?” “I don’t know. We don’t have anything in fridge. I guess we’re going to make a pizza out of stuff.” She really had a good understanding of flavors and flavor combinations and how to balance meals. From that perspective, I learned all of that from her.

A lot of my inspiration has come from friends who are just passionate about food, from my friends who were basically in this little vegan, raw foods, commune situation in college, because I am just sort of hippy at heart and all my friends are like that. I love the way that they eat.

That was very inspiring to me to be with those people because they were just making these incredible curries, chutneys, and raw date brownies and it just blew my mind; so those people, and of course my mother, who gave me the foundation thankfully. I am very thankful for that.

Beyond that, so much of my inspiration comes from incredible bloggers on Internet who have been doing what they do for so long.

On Her Food Sensitivities:

Renee Byrd of Will Frolic for Food on The Dinner Special podcast talking about her food sensitivities.

I ignored most of it. Well, the dairy thing I ignored. Funnily enough, everyone in my family is allergic to dairy; allergic, not lactose-intolerant. Most of them just kind of ignore it and the wheat thing I developed a sensitivity to in my early 20s in college.

I started getting really painful stomach aches and was having really terrible digestive issues; it just hurt. I didn’t know what it was, didn’t understand it and it turned out to be a combination of sensitivity to peanuts and wheat.

I didn’t get officially diagnosed with those things but I essentially cut both of them out, and then suddenly, “Wow. Eating is fun again and doesn’t hurt me anymore.”

I just decided that I didn’t want to feel sick when I ate, and in my life, and I wasn’t going to compromise about that and I did for a long time. I basically was like, “I’ll eat wheat here and there. I’ll eat dairy here and there,” but then I was just feeling sick. It just got to a point where I was like, “I don’t need these things.”

I do eat goat dairy because it doesn’t have the same sugars and proteins as cow dairy. I am able to digest that fine, so you see a lot of that on my blog. You see a lot of chevre and goat cheese, goat yogurt. I think it’s a wonderful food, personally, so I do feature that relatively often.

On Learning To Cook with Food Sensitivities:

Renee Byrd of Will Frolic for Food on The Dinner Special podcast talking about learning to cook with food sensitivities.

There are tons of resources. There are some books that I really, really love that are really on point for teaching you how to make exact recipes. Inspired Vegan is amazing. I love that book. I think it’s Bryant Terry, and it’s so wonderful. Obviously all of the Ottolenghi books, anything that’s naturally wheat-free in there is incredible.

Getting yourself out there and volunteering to help people cook big meals and for gatherings and things is another great way to learn.

Obviously blogs are fantastic resources. I’ve got a massive blog roll of people who are constantly teaching me with their process and their way.

I just have so many things going through my brain right now. I’m allergic to dairy, so the lactose and the casein that I’m allergic to but I eat Ghee. Ghee is amazing. A lot of people aren’t very familiar with it and a lot of people with sensitivities aren’t very familiar with the fact there is something that’s derived from cow dairy that they can eat.

Ghee is a wonderful clarifying food that is good for the joints, it’s good for the skin and helps support the nervous system. You can actually put it on your skin and it’s very calming and moisturizing. It’s an incredible food. I love it. I eat it a lot. I make it at home so that’s something that I use often that I feel like I am probably preaching about a lot.

Ghee is clarified butter.

To make it at home, I get a really nice organic butter. If I can get it from a farmer that’s local — that’s fantastic as well — that I trust and then I boil it over medium-high heat. I skim all of the froth that comes to the top, all of the lactose and casein off of the top. I discard that.

You just keep doing that until all of that frothy stuff is gone. Then you strain it and you pour it into a heat safe jar and you can use it. Generally a very clean organic butter, you’re going to be able to turn it into ghee relatively quickly and then you have this wonderful food that you can keep on your counter. You don’t even have to refrigerate it. It lasts for years — literally years — and it makes everything taste better.

Tips for Cooking Gluten-Free or Dairy-Free for the First Time:

Renee Byrd of Will Frolic for Food on The Dinner Special podcast talking about gluten-free, dairy-free and vegan cooking for the first time.

Trust simple recipes. Starting with that, if you’re cooking for somebody who has allergies, trying to start out with doing a complicated baking recipe especially if you don’t have all of the ingredients and aren’t willing to follow all of the directions exactly, it’s going to be very frustrating.

I just remember back to when I was first learning how to do gluten-free cooking a couple of years ago how angry I was. These recipes weren’t working for me but I always want to try something that is more complicated because I want to be the best at it right now, but I don’t know what I’m doing.

Trusting simple recipes and finding a recipe developer that you really trust and that you really respect. I feel like I sorted through blogs and authors for years before I found people that I felt like I could trust their recipes. I wish I had a list of bloggers that I think are awesome and that I really trust their recipes. Actually I do have a list of inspiration on my blog of a bunch of different blogs that I love; not all of them are gluten-free but I definitely trust all of them. It’s just under the inspiration tab.

The Pressure Cooker:

Which food shows or cooking shows do you watch?

I don’t really watch a lot of cooking shows but I could tell you that I want to watch a really cool cooking show that is all about seasonal eating but it’s fun and there’s traveling involved.

I don’t have anything that I watch regularly. I watch YouTube videos of folks sometimes doing their thing. Green Kitchen Stories has some really cool videos.

What are some food blogs or websites that we have to know about?

Oh my god. Yeah, hundreds of them. That’s a terribly hard question but what pops in my mind, let’s see. Two Red Bowls — super awesome, gorgeous photography; hilarious and just wonderfully inspiring recipes.

Dolly and Oatmeal, I love Lindsey Love’s recipes. They all are gluten-free, they are generally dairy-free, too; very creative and beautiful photography as well. I take a lot of inspiration from her recipes, so I just have to stress that.

Let’s see, so many of them. Obviously, Local Milk. I mean do I even need to say it? She’s the best ever that ever existed. I want to be her.

Eva Kosmas Flores of Adventures in Cooking has the most gorgeous photography in the world ever.

I am trying to think of other gluten-free bloggers here. I am always super in love with My New Roots. Everything is great on My New Roots, and Green Kitchen Stories, and Sprouted Kitchen. If you do not read those, you’re a crazy person. They’re just so good.

Who do you follow on Pinterest, Instagram or Twitter that make you happy?

Also a very hard question. Instagram, I follow a lot of people, a range of folks who do everything from food to really wonderful landscapes and stuff. Again, Eva Kosmas Flores has a wonderful Instagram.

What is something all home cooks should have in their pantry?

Coconut oil, quinoa, always gluten-free pasta is a go-to for sure, and fantastic quality olive oil and sea salt are better than anything. I actually use JQ Dickinson sea salt which is a West Virginia sea salt which is very flaky. It is a little bit lower in sodium and has of mineral quality to it. I love it. When I’m out of it, I cry a little bit.

Olive oil, I use Zoe’s because it’s really affordable in large amounts and it is really good, just delicious. I just feel like with good oil and salts you can make anything taste good.

Name one ingredient you cannot live without?

The JQD sea salt pretty much. I bring it with me everywhere.

Pretty much anytime I say coarse sea salt, I’m talking about that salt.

What are a few cookbooks that make your life better?

Plenty by Yotam Ottolenghi, Inspired Vegan, BabyCakes Covers the Classics by Erin McKenna is the foundation of gluten-free desserts in my mind. She is such a genius with gluten-free desserts. I pretty much owe that cookbook everything. My basic understanding of how gluten-free baking works and what you need to make it work. I’ve definitely branched off from that but that’s the foundation for sure.

What song or album just makes you want to cook?

Everything by Kishi Bashi. His most recent album, I can’t remember the name of it. Yeah, I just want to dance around my house and cook.

Keep Posted on Renee:

Renee Byrd of Will Frolic for Food on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to keep posted with her.

Other than following my blog, at willfrolicforfood.com, I am always posting on Instagram and Twitter. My handle is @FrolicChocolate. I have a Facebook page, too, but definitely Twitter and Instagram are the best ways.

Have One of Renee’s Delicious Soup Recipes Sent to You Now: 

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    Filed Under: Podcast Tagged With: Adventures in Cooking, BabyCakes Covers the Classics, Bryant Terry, Casein, chocolate maker, Dairy-Free, Dolly and Oatmeal, Erin McKenna, Eva Kosmas Flores, Food Blog, Food Blogger, Food Photographer, Food Sensitivities, Food Writer, Ghee, Gluten-Free, Green Kitchen Stories, Inspired Vegan, Kishi Bashi, Local Milk, My New Roots, Plenty, Renee Byrd, Sprouted Kitchen, Two Red Bowls, Vegan, Will Frolic for Food, Yotam Ottolenghi, Zoe's Olive Oil

    Lazy Day with Biscuits and Such, Adventures in Cooking and Dula Notes

    March 7, 2015 by Gabriel Leave a Comment

    Lazy Day with Elena Rosemond-Hoerr of Biscuits and Such, Eva Kosmas Flores of Adventures in Cooking, and Nicole Dula of Dula Notes on The Dinner Special podcast share their favourite things.

    Lazy Day with Elena Rosemond-Hoerr of Biscuits and Such, Eva Kosmas Flores of Adventures in Cooking, and Nicole Dula of Dula Notes on The Dinner Special podcast share their favourite things.

    Lazy Day is a weekly series for those relaxed weekend mornings or quiet evenings where you finally have a break from the crazy work week.

    Each week, I gather some of my food hero guests’ favourite things to make it easier for you!

    Whether it’s a cookbook mentioned on the podcast, TV shows they tune into, interesting goodies to YouTube or Google, or awesome food blogs to follow, you’ll find many of the things mentioned on their episodes here.

    The Internet has always been a mixed blessing for me. There’s so much information but I often times get lost in it. Hopefully, this series will help you navigate this crazy Internet thing.

    Elena Rosemond-Hoerr, Biscuits and Such

    Elena Rosemond-Hoerr of Biscuits and Such on The Dinner Special podcast talking about keeping posted with her.

    If you missed Elena’s episode, you can find it HERE.

    You can also catch her World Ending, Last Meal on YouTube HERE, it’s filled with her birthday favourites.

    Elena's Cookbooks:The No Time To Cook! Book
    The American Cookbook: A Fresh Take on Classic Recipes
    The Meat Cookbook
    Some Food Blogs We Have to Know About:Nothing in the House
    Not Without Salt
    People To Follow on Instagram:Hey Natalie Jean
    Cookbooks That Make Her Life Better:Date Night In
    Think Like a Chef
    Ratio

    Eva Kosmas Flores, Adventures in Cooking

    Eva Kosmas Flores of Adventures in Cooking on The Dinner Special podcast talks about cooking and her family's Greek restaurant.

    Catch Eva’s episode and the highlights of her show HERE.

    If you’re curious what she would have for her World Ending, Last Meal, and what her plan for the end of the world is, find out HERE.

    A Food Show She Enjoys:Barefoot Contessa
    Some Food Blogs We Have to Know About:Call Me Cupcake
    Two Red Bowls
    People to Follow on Instagram:Linda Lomelino
    Cookbooks That Make Her Life Better:The Art of Fermentation
    Artisan Cheeses at Home
    A Song or Album That Makes Her Want to Cook:Django Reinhardt

    Nicole Dula, Dula Notes

    Nicole Dula of Dula Notes on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

    Nicole’s show highlights and episode (in case you missed it) is up HERE.

    Find out who she’d like to prepare her World Ending, Last Meal HERE.

    Food Shows She Enjoys:Cook's Country
    America's Test Kitchen
    Lidia Bastianich
    Some Food Blogs We Have to Know About:Take A Megabite
    Hungry Girl Por Vida
    My Name Is Yeh
    Bon Appetempt
    Someone to Follow on Pinterest:Wit and Delight
    Cookbooks That Make Her Life Better:Donna Hay's cookbooks
    Jamie Oliver's cookbooks
    A Song or Album That Makes Her Want to Cook:Huey Lewis and The News

    That’s it! I hope this has been helpful (and fun).

    As I mentioned above, the Internet for me is a total mixed blessing. Sometimes, there’s just too much stuff and it’s overwhelming. The idea behind Lazy Day is to help narrow things down a bit.

    Don’t forget to subscribe to The Dinner Special podcast on iTunes HERE, so you don’t miss a single episode every Monday, Wednesday and Friday.

    Have more cool stuff to add? I want to hear about it! Leave a comment in the section below or email me at thedinnerspecial (at) gmail (dot) com.

    Talk soon!

    Gabriel

    Filed Under: Lazy Day Tagged With: Adventures in Cooking, Biscuits and Such, Dula Notes, Elena Rosemond-Hoerr, Eva Kosmas Flores, Nicole Dula

    Gabe’s Journal 001

    March 1, 2015 by Gabriel Leave a Comment

    Gabe's Journal 001 The Dinner Special podcast

    Hi Everyone!

    I just wanted to post a quick video to share a couple of super exciting things with you!

    We’re six episodes in!

    Thanks to my amazing first six food hero guests, the podcast has been downloaded over 350 times in the last week, with listeners from all over the world – from here in Canada and the US, the United Kingdom, to all the way in Australia, Cambodia, Iran, India and Hong Kong.

    I’m overwhelmed by the support. So, really, thank you.

    I was so nervous this last week to let my food hero guests know that The Dinner Special podcast was live and website was up. My head was swirling with thoughts like: What would they think? Would they like it? What if they think it’s horrible? Then what?

    But, I was so relieved when I started getting emails congratulating me and really nice comments like, “This podcast is exactly the kind of food podcast I love.”

    “I’m really excited to see my episode so I can share it with everyone!”

    “I’m rekindling my love of podcasts thanks to you!”

    So nice. Thank you.

    I’m sharing all this not to brag, but really to say thanks to my first six food hero guests: Claire Thomas of The Kitchy Kitchen, chefs Cyrus Todiwala and Tony Singh of The Incredible Spice Men, Jordan Reid of Ramshackle Glam, Elena Rosemond-Hoerr of Biscuits and Such, Eva Kosmas Flores of Adventures in Cooking, and Nicole Dula of Dula Notes.

    Thank you so much for sharing your stories, tips and excitement for cooking and food!

    Of course, I want to thank YOU too for listening! Wherever you’re listening from.

    There are some awesome food hero guests coming up this week, so make sure to catch their episodes. The easiest way is to subscribe to The Dinner Special on iTunes, it can be a bit confusing so I wrote a step-by-step how-to HERE (scroll to the bottom of the page).

    Also, if you enjoy the show, please rate and review The Dinner Special podcast on iTunes. This will help share the show with as many people as possible. Again, I’ve posted a how-to HERE (scroll to the bottom of the page).

    Thank you for an awesome first week! Talk soon!

    Filed Under: Gabe's Journal Tagged With: Adventures in Cooking, Biscuits and Such, Claire Thomas, Cyrus Todiwala, Dula Notes, Elena Rosemond-Hoerr, Eva Kosmas Flores, Jordan Reid, Nicole Dula, Ramshackle Glam, The Incredible Spice Men, The Kitchy Kitchen, Tony Singh

    005: Eva Kosmas Flores: How To Make Shrubs And What They Are

    February 25, 2015 by Gabriel Leave a Comment

    Eva Kosmas Flores of Adventures in Cooking on The Dinner Special podcast talks about how to keep posted with her.
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    Eva Kosmas Flores of Biscuits and Such on The Dinner Special podcast on How To Make Shrubs And What They Are

    Adventures in Cooking is a dramatic feast for the eyes.

    Eva shares her love of homegrown food and features honest recipes in a way you’ve only seen in the most luxurious of cookbooks.

    I am so psyched to have Eva Kosmas Flores from Adventures in Cooking joining me on the show today.

    On Starting Her Blog, Food Styling and Food Photography:

    Eva Kosmas Flores of Adventures in Cooking on The Dinner Special podcast talking about staring her blog, food styling and food photography.

    I graduated from college back in 2009 which, if you remember, was a really rough year for the economy. So, I was unemployed for a while, a couple of months after graduation.

    I had a lot of time.

    I’ve always loved to cook. My family had a Greek restaurant for about 30 years, so I grew up in the restaurant helping. My parents both cooked a lot at home. I was always cooking, just during college, after college.

    All my family and friends would always ask for the recipes that I was making, so I really just started it as a platform to share my recipes with just my friends and family who’ve been asking for all these recipes.

    Then I got really into the food blogging world and community, and I got really into the food photography and food styling, and that’s when it really took off.

    The images now are so much better than when I first started.

    I went to university and studied film production and sociology. I wanted to do documentary filmmaking, but that’s really hard to get a job in. There’s not a lot of jobs for that, and so I ended up looking into producing.

    I worked for a line producer at NBC Universal for a little bit. I was doing my blog at the same time that I was working there, and the more I worked there, the more I just wanted to go home and write about food or edit photos. I just looked forward to the weekends when I’d be able to shoot and style.

    I ended up realizing that this is what I really wanted to do full time, and so I quit my job and just started doing that, and I haven’t looked back since. It’s been amazing. I totally just fell into it.

    I had the technical knowledge from studying film production like video photography, a lot of the technical stuff is really similar, but I had no food styling experience. I just kind of picked that up from looking at other food blogs that I loved like Call Me Cupcake or What Katie Ate, and just learning from them.

    On Cooking and Her Family’s Greek Restaurant:

    Eva Kosmas Flores of Adventures in Cooking on The Dinner Special podcast talks about cooking and her family

    I used to get so excited to help my mom cook. I was so small, we’d have to get a step stool so I could reach the pot to sprinkle spices in. I’ve been cooking since I was really little, so for me it’s almost like breathing. It’s so intrinsic and natural.

    I think probably the first thing I did in the kitchen was peeling cucumbers, because they had a Greek salad. They were doing so much Greek salad. Peeling cucumbers is such a monotonous thing, but super easy, so I would do that. I’d also help my mom take tickets up at the front. I’d clean the tables and stuff. I just helped with whatever.

    I love to cook Greek food. My dad’s from Greece. My mom’s American. They both were never afraid to use spices, so I always use tons of spices when I’m cooking and lots of olive oil rather than butter if I can, lots of vinegar too. My dad was really heavy-handed with vinegar, which I think is in me.

    On Shrubs:

    Eva Kosmas Flores of Adventures in Cooking on The Dinner Special podcast talks about shrubs.

    I love that sour-sweet combination like Shrubs. I don’t know if you’ve ever had Shrubs before?

    It’s like a really cool cocktail mixer.

    Basically, you just mash together fruit, sugar and vinegar, and you let it sit in a bowl overnight. It’s usually best in the fridge. Then the next day you strain out the pulpy bits, and basically what you’re left with is the sweet and sour, fruity cocktail mixer that’s super good.

    Back in the day before they had refrigerators, that’s how they used to make fruit juice, because the sugar and vinegar would preserve the fruit flavor.

    It’s like drinking vinegar, some people call it that. You can have it by itself, but what I like to do is I’ll just mix it with an alcohol and maybe some club soda so it’s a little sparkling.

    It’s just super good, especially in the summer when it’s hot. It’s really nice and tangy.

    On Things Not Going As Planned:

    Eva Kosmas Flores of Adventures in Cooking on The Dinner Special podcast talks about how not everything always goes as planned on her blog.

    Yeah, that happens. That has definitely happened.

    I wouldn’t say it happens a lot, but it does happen. Actually, today, I’m making these waffles for my blog. I’m topping them with toasted coconut flakes, and I’m toasting them in the oven. You’re only supposed to have them in there for a couple of minutes, and I just kept getting side-tracked with other stuff, and so I burnt two batches in a row, of coconut flakes.

    I had the last bit of my bag. I was like, “Okay, I really have to pay attention now, because if I burn this I have to go back to the store.”

    Luckily, I put the timer up on my phone and didn’t forget this time, but, yeah, that totally happens. It’s super normal. You just have to roll with the punches.

    Sometimes it stinks because you’ll make a recipe that tastes super good, but it’s just really ugly, and you’re like, “I don’t really want to put this on my blog, because the photos aren’t going to look great,” but really, it’s super tasty.

    Mac and cheese can kind of tread that line, because all mac and cheese is delicious, but it’s a weird looking thing. It can be hard to photograph, so there’s always ups and downs with that.

    The photography usually wins for my blog because I don’t want to put it up there if I feel like the photos didn’t turn out. Sometimes if I think the photos are okay, but not great, I’ll put it up and have a little disclaimer like, “This isn’t the prettiest dish, but it tastes really good,” and just let people know not to judge it by its cover.

    On Her Process For Getting Ideas Onto Her Blog:

    Eva Kosmas Flores of Adventures in Cooking on The Dinner Special podcast talks about her process for getting ideas onto her blog.

    I don’t practice. The ones that end up on my blog are usually the first time I’m making that recipe unless it’s an old family one that I’m sharing.

    I have a Google calendar that I basically plan out a week or two, to a month out in advance, of what I want to make. I have all these color codes. I’m also writing a cookbook right now.

    My cookbook recipe is coded with one color and my blog recipes I’m developing are another. The date they’re going to go up is color coded and everything. My Google calendar is absolutely insane looking.

    That’s basically the process, and then once I get an idea for what I want to make, I’ll do research on similar recipes. That’s fun because sometimes I’ll find inspiration like, “Oh, they use that ingredient. Well, this is similar, and I think that might taste even better. So maybe I’ll use this instead and put a fun spin on it.”

    Then I’ll just start making it. Of course, you always have to taste as you go, because sometimes it just needs a little bit more, and you don’t know that until you taste it. Like, “Oh, this is kind of bland. I’ll add a little bit more salt, or maybe I’ll add chili powder.” Something like that.

    The Pressure Cooker:

    Which food shows or cooking shows do you watch?

    Barefoot Contessa.

    What are some food blogs or websites that we have to know about?

    I would say Call Me Cupcake. It’s my number one, love her. Two Red Bowls is great too. Those are probably my top two right now.

    Who do you follow on Pinterest, Instagram or Twitter that make you happy?

    I probably have to go with Linda Lomelino. Once again, she’s the girl behind Call Me Cupcake.

    Her Instagram feed is crazy, and it’s super, super beautiful.

    Then on Pinterest, I follow this girl, Catherine Crawley, and she pins a lot of beautiful stuff too.

    What is something all home cooks should have in their pantry?F

    I would say Fleur de Sel. That’s a great finishing salt, and it’s a good texture too.

    Name one ingredient you cannot live without?

    I would probably have to go with rosemary.

    You can use it in desserts and in savory stuff. It’s awesome.

    What are a few cookbooks that make your life better?

    I really like The Art of Fermentation. That one’s really fun. I got a fermentation crock recently, and so I’ll be fermenting.

    Then, Artisan Cheeses at Home. That one’s really cool because it tells you how you can make all these crazy sounding cheeses in your own kitchen.

    What song or album just makes you want to cook?

    Django Reinhardt. He is a jazz guitarist from the 1920s or ’30s.

    If you Google it and you listen to a song, you’re like, “Oh, yeah.”

    All the music kind of sounds the same but it’s just very peppy and happy, and just makes me feel like I’m in an old world kitchen making some stuff from scratch, like rolling out dough.

    I don’t know. It just has this awesome feel to it, so I would have to go with Django.

    Keep Posted on Eva:

    Eva Kosmas Flores of Adventures in Cooking on The Dinner Special podcast talks about how to keep posted with her.

    My Instagram handle and my Twitter handle are both EvaKosmasFlores. My Pinterest handle is the same.

    If you want to find me on Facebook, you can just look up Adventures in Cooking, and that’s where I am.

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      Filed Under: Podcast Tagged With: Adventures in Cooking, Artisan Cheeses at Home, Barefoot Contessa, Call Me Cupcake, Django Reinhardt, Eva Kosmas Flores, Food Blog, Food Blogger, Food Photography, Food Styling, Greek food, Linda Lomelino, Shrubs, The Art of Fermentation, Two Red Bowls, What Katie Ate

      Has Cooking Become a Chore? 28 Food Heroes Share Ideas on How to Make Cooking Fun Again

      February 24, 2015 by Gabriel Leave a Comment

      The Dinner Special podcast 28 Food Heroes Share Ideas on How To Make Cooking Fun Again

      The Dinner Special podcast 28 Food Heroes Share Ideas on How To Make Cooking Fun Again

      I know exactly what I’m making for dinner, each and every night.

      Why is this a bad thing?

      Well, it’s not necessarily, but I’ve found that, for me, cooking has become more of a chore than something that’s fun and enjoyable.

      Especially after a long day, the last thing I want to do is have to think about what to make for dinner.

      Sure, I could:

      • search online for new recipes to try
      • or find inspiration in new food blogs to follow

      but most of the time, I just stick with the tried and true.

      The funny thing is, I love food and I love to cook.

      And yet, every Sunday, when I go to the grocery store, I pick up the same ingredients because on Mondays, it’s pasta, Tuesdays, pork and potatoes, Wednesdays, stir-fry with rice… and the weeks just pass by.

      I totally get that the routine is boring, but it’s so easy. I know exactly how long it will take to make and how it will taste.

      But, I want to break out of this cooking rut.

      I want to have fun in the kitchen again. I want to get excited about making dinner. Maybe not every night, maybe not even once a week, but every now and then, I want to try new herbs, spices and ingredients, and be an inspired home cook!

      This is one of the reasons I started The Dinner Special podcast.

      Every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, I chat with my food hero guests about their fondest food memories, favorite things inside and out of the kitchen, and a dish that is special to them.

      I also ask them questions like, “For those of us where cooking has become a chore, how can we make it more fun.” Things that I truly want to get some answers and ideas on.

      From time to time, I’ll put together all their answers into a post like this. I hope this makes it easy for you to turn to.

      If you have any burning questions you’d like answered, please send them to me at: thedinnerspecial [at] gmail [dot] com.

      You’re a huge part of The Dinner Special and I’m sure lots of people have the same questions they want answered.

      (Sorry for getting sidetracked.)

      When I asked my food hero guests, “For those of us where cooking has become a chore, how can we make it more fun,”

      Here’s What 28 of Them Had to Say:

      Marisa McClellan of Food in Jars:

      Marisa McClellan of Food in Jars on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

      For people who think it’s a chore, I simply say try something easy.

      Learn to scramble eggs really well.

      I don’t think everybody has to love cooking, but we all have to eat.

      I think the best advice I can say to someone is just to keep it simple. Your first meal doesn’t have to be a five-course extravaganza. Like I said, learn to make really good scrambled eggs, or pancakes, or French toast, and that will take you far.

      Amy Kritzer of What Jew Wanna Eat:

      Amy Kritzer of What Jew Wanna Eat on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

      I think you have to start with some good music, pour yourself a glass of wine, make it like a whole experience.

      Then, start with something easy that is impossible to mess up and I think that will build your confidence and it’ll make it more fun for you.

      I’m not opposed to people who take things that are pre-made and tweaking them a little bit.

      If you bought some pre-made chicken to add to your matzo ball soup, instead of cooking your chicken, that’s fine.

      Whatever makes you happy and makes it work.

      Jordan Reid of Ramshackle Glam:

      Jordan Reid of Ramshackle Glam on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

      I think just finding your basic technique.

      Like, with a slow cooker, it’s just meat and some liquid and vegetables. And so it’s like, once you get that basic thing down, you can have fun and you can say like, “Oh, I have some sriracha in my fridge. Let me throw that in. Let me try it with soy sauce on the side, let me try it with red wine instead of…”

      I tried Dr. Pepper in a pot roast and it was really good.

      And so I think that’s how you can have fun. Stick to the basics that you know in terms of technique and then you can improvise from there.

      Chef Tony Singh of The Incredible Spice Men:

      Get somebody to help you, because lots of people are time pressured and it is a chore if you’ve got a million and one things to do.

      If you can get your children involved, it’s a great family experience and you’re teaching them life skills. Get somebody to peel the onions or peel the carrots or stand there and start to wash up for you.

      Get people involved and that makes it much, much better.

      The Incredible Spice Men on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

      Chef Cyrus Todiwala of The Incredible Spice Men:

      What I always tell people in my classes is, when they look at a recipe, let’s say they look at a recipe in our book and they find something which looks very daunting, I always tell them to read the recipe first as if they’re reading a novel.

      Then, shut the book and put it away and come back to it in a couple of hours. The recipe will automatically fall into place and will not look as dangerous.

      The most important thing is unclutter your mind. Just de-clutter it and become creative.

      Just become creative because all you will end up doing is creating something new.

      Elena Rosemond-Hoerr of Biscuits & Such:

      Elena Rosemond-Hoerr of Biscuits and Such on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

      I think, especially during the weekdays, we totally get into a rut.

      One of the things that I like to do is try and dabble with new ingredients or new cuisines.

      So dabbling in things outside of your comfort zone is a good way to sort of bring the fun back into the kitchen.

      And starting really small.

      Trying to make something that you love to eat out, but that you hadn’t even thought that you could make at home, like a burrito bowl and then go from there.

      Jodi Moreno of What’s Cooking Good Looking:

      I think involving people always makes it more fun.

      If I don’t want to sit at home by myself, I’ll just invite a bunch of friends over, casually set the table, give them a job to do and this way we’re not going out to eat ’cause in New York that’s very easy to do.

      So, I think involving people, and if you have a spouse or children, that makes it even easier. My husband likes to cook too so the two of us will do it together and I think we kind of motivate each other to cook at home more often.

      Eva Kosmas Flores of Adventures in Cooking:

      Eva Kosmas Flores of Adventures in Cooking on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

      Try to think of ways to make it more attuned to your personal taste. So, if you’re trying to just make something from a cookbook, know that you don’t always have to follow it to a T.

      You can always change it up and add something else that you really like.

      If you’re okay about onions but you love leeks, you can totally swap those two out. The same goes with most vegetables. If you hate cooked carrots, but you love brussel sprouts, switch those up, because roasted brussel sprouts get all caramelized and delicious.

      My main thing would be, don’t be afraid to change it up and make it more in tune with what you actually like to eat.

      It’ll be a lot more interesting to you if it’s something that you enjoy, rather than if you’re just almost following guidelines. That’s a lot more boring.

      Courtney Chun of Fork to Belly:

      Courtney Chun of Fork to Belly on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

      It’s just about doing recipes that really inspire you, and that you really enjoy.

      Before I started the blog, I would try to make healthy dishes. It would get repetitive. I’m making the same chicken breast, the same salmon with broccoli, and brown rice in it. It’s not like I didn’t enjoy what I was making but the process gets repetitive. It’s just not really fun.

      I started doing cakes or making Japanese dishes because I really enjoy Japanese food. That just really helped to push me along and make me really enjoy what I was doing.

      I think just with anything, you need to find what you love to do.

      Megan Voigt of Hint of Vanilla:

      Megan Voigt of Hint of Vanilla on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

      One of the things that I do whenever I bake or cook, or just when I’m in the kitchen ever, is I put on some music, and I kinda dance a little bit. I’m a terrible dancer, and I’m a terrible singer, but I will actually dance and sing as I’m cooking.

      It’s something that you see in movies and you’re like, “Oh, that’s so cheesy.” But you know what? I do it, and I really enjoy it.

      It’s just injecting a little bit of fun.

      Have a recipe that you’re comfortable with, that you know is pretty good for a weekday dinner, so you’re not stressed. Then, on the weekends, you can kind of do a bit more research and try something that you’ve never tried before and maybe do something that has a little bit more time and effort put into it.

      Jonathan Melendez of The Candid Appetite:

      Jonathan Melendez of The Candid Appetite on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

      I would say turn on music while you’re cooking. That’s like the one thing I always do as I cook, always.

      Right before I start cooking, I will turn on music, I’ll have it on shuffle, and I’ll just listen to music the whole way. And then it feels like you don’t even think about it anymore, because you’re listening to these songs that you really enjoy, and you are in the kitchen.

      And it doesn’t become a chore anymore, because there is something there to distract you.

      Cristina Sciarra of The Roaming Kitchen:

      Cristina Sciarra of The Roaming Kitchen on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

      I think the best thing is just to make it to the market, pick something that looks good to you and go home and search (for example) broccoli recipes. The websites I really rely on, if you type things into Food52, you will have great results with a recipe that will work for you.

      Karen Chan of HonestlyYUM:

      Karen Chan of HonestlyYUM on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

      I would always say start by making sure you have just the basic correct tools, and I think at the very minimum you just need a really good knife. A really good or really sharp knife, because if you’ve got to sit and cut an onion with a crappy knife, I wouldn’t even want to do that.

      You just need the basics and you need really good basics.

      For example, a really good pot. Like a very good cast iron pot, for example, or for me I use a mortar and pestle all the time. Especially if you’re going to be doing a lot of ethnic cooking, those are just so handy to have.

      But aside from that, music. I almost always listen to music when I cook. It lets you settle into it more and kind of focus on the chopping. It’s a little meditative because you just kind of zone out there listening to music.

      A glass of wine doesn’t hurt. I always have a glass of wine and some music playing and just have fun with it.

      Start with manageable things, have equipment and tools that are good and that will help you. I always say, seriously, a good knife goes a really long way and alcohol…

      Skye McAlpine of From My Dining Table:

      Skye McAlpine of From My Dining Table on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

      In my mind, what makes cooking a chore is the mess.

      I love cooking. If there are times when I don’t feel like cooking, it’s pretty much always because I cannot face cleaning up the kitchen.

      So, I would say, maybe try and choose dishes where you use fewer saucepans, just to get you started.

      Maybe dishes that don’t require a whole load of equipment. And clean up as you go along, because it’s really easy to wash up as you go along. But if you leave it all until the end, that sort of sets the trap.

      The other thing about cooking is it’s all kind of confidence and practice. The more you do it, the more you are going to enjoy doing it. Go out and buy a really inspiring cookbook full of easy dishes that don’t require lots of washing up and just jump in the deep-end.

      And also, I genuinely believe that cooking for people rather than just cooking for yourself or yourself plus one is so much more fun.

      Nicole Dula of Dula Notes:

      Nicole Dula of Dula Notes on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

      My best advice for that is like what we were talking about before, to kind of put a piece of yourself in it because it becomes more personal and it’s more rewarding in the end.

      So if you like, say quinoa, just try to experiment with different things you can put on like a quick sauté of vegetables or vegetables and meat, put it over your favorite grain and just experiment with flavors until you find a dish that’s super easy to make, super adaptable, no matter what’s in your fridge.

      Just have a stand out dish that you can make at the drop of a hat whenever you’re hungry, and then it will just make you feel better about yourself.

      Cindy Ensley of Hungry Girl Por Vida:

      Cindy Ensley of Hungry Girl Por Vida on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

      Some days you just have to get dinner on the table, so it’s more about what recipes you have in your arsenal. But if you can throw something new in there every week, maybe, or even every couple of weeks, I think that makes it fun.

      Or use a new ingredient. A couple of years ago, my husband and I weren’t really big fans of fennel, so we started implementing it into our meals and now we love it.

      So I think that trying a new ingredient or trying a new recipe, but not going overboard and trying to do it every night of the week. I think that gets daunting.

      There are lots of different ways you can use ingredients and just trying them out a couple of different ways, I think, is also key.

      Phi Tran of Princess Tofu:

      I think you should do it with someone who loves to cook.

      I like cooking with other people. I think if you cook with somebody who likes to share their food and also their skills, it’ll make it more fun.

      It’s nice to do it with someone else every once in a while. And if it gets charred then you have someone else to share pizza with.

      Alanna Taylor-Tobin of The Bojon Gourmet:

      Alanna Taylor-Tobin of The Bojon Gourmet on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

      Wine or maybe a cocktail or something. Put on some fun music, pour yourself a drink, and just try to relax and make it a treat for yourself.

      Also having someone to cook for, I think, is really important. So invite someone over who super loves food and is really fun and encouraging.

      Ileana Morales of A Little Saffron:

      Ileana Morales of A Little Saffron on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

      Try not to overthink it. It doesn’t have to be fancy.

      Our weeknight meals tend to be pretty simple. I use canned chick peas all the time and I just do that with some sautéed kale and some bacon. That’s it, that’s dinner. So I would say, don’t overthink it and don’t be so hard on yourself.

      I like to think of a recipe like a guideline, because if you’re out of something, it’s fine, it’s usually not essential. Just work with what you have.

      Katy Atlas of Sugarlaws:

      To make it more fun, two things.

      Don’t do it by yourself if you can avoid it.

      Lots of people think they always have to go out for dinner with friends but actually staying in and cooking is a fun activity to do with friends too. My husband will always keep me company. He’s not a great cook but he’ll help out and hand me cans and do little things to keep me company while I go.

      Put on some music.

      Cooking is sort of a wonderful activity because it’s a great way to just kind of be really active and engaged with it. Your mind isn’t wandering as much as our thoughts tend to wander. You can just focus on it and sort of enjoy the experience of it even if it’s not your favorite thing and can be a tough thing to find time to do everyday.

      We just focus on being present and try to have company for it.

      Renee Byrd of Will Frolic for Food:

      Renee Byrd of Will Frolic for Food on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

      Trying new things is always fun.

      For me personally, I like trying new spices, new herbs or trying something that’s a little bit weird or that’s a little bit strange.

      I like to play with herbs in sweet things, like muffins, “I don’t really like muffins, muffins are boring,” put something in it that’s different, that has a new texture, that has a new flavor. Like cocoa nibs have the crunchy bitter thing going on and then you have sweet orange zest that is really aromatic.

      These things are very fun for me. I don’t know if it’s fun for everybody. That’s sort of how I have fun in the kitchen.

      Half of my time, I feel, is spent in the process of the mediation of chopping and looking out of my window and experiencing what I’m doing.

      I really am very tactile so I love to touch things and have it in my hands. That’s really pleasurable for me and being able to create something that in my mind is artful out of that is so much fun.

      Meike Peters of Eat in My Kitchen:

      Meike Peters of Eat in My Kitchen on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

      It’s like with everything else, you have to go through this time where you fail, where it’s not always fun, and where the results can be quite frustrating.

      You just have to stick to it and cook and cook and cook.

      What I like to do is because we always cook in the evenings, just open a bottle of red wine, have some cheese, some nibbles, and put on some nice music.

      Because for me, what I love about food is, it doesn’t start when it’s on the table and when I eat, it starts already in the kitchen. I create a nice atmosphere in the kitchen and that definitely helps.

      One shouldn’t take everything so seriously. If it doesn’t work out it doesn’t work out, and you try it again.

      Phoebe Lapine of Feed Me Phoebe:

      Phoebe Lapine of Feed Me Phoebe on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

      I really think that this strategy, cook on Sunday or Saturday, whichever afternoon you have free, and eat all week long, is a nice way to do it.

      You’re not rushed, and once you have those building blocks in your fridge, then ten to 15 minutes of cooking becomes less burdensome on a weeknight.

      I feel like dedicating your afternoon that way is a nice time to grab a buddy or your loved one to tag team and divide and conquer.

      Emily Hilliard of Nothing in the House:

      One of the things that has been nice for me is getting a CSA or farm share.

      That’s really nice because I’m not necessarily someone who can go to the store and have an idea. But, when I have a set framework of like onions, broccoli and potatoes, I think that adds a limiting factor, so you don’t have to start from scratch.

      Another thing I like, I really like cooking with other people. That’s always been present in my life with family and just having friends over and cooking together.

      I also like having music or the radio on while I cook.

      Kristan Raines of The Broken Bread:

      Kristan Raines of The Broken Bread on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

      I would say just to not worry about a thing and to enjoy the process. I think whether you’re baking or you’re cooking, the process can be the most reviving thing in the world.

      My favorite thing is to just make it communal, grabbing whatever’s in the fridge and not worry if it’s going to come out great.

      For me it’s turning on the music, and if it’s dinner time having a little glass of wine, and taking it slow and making it more of an adventure than a chore.

      That shift in your perspective can aid you in like – “Okay, work day’s over, we can make food and enjoy the food because it’s nourishing and fun to do together”.

      Becky Rosenthal of Vintage Mixer:

      Becky Rosenthal of Vintage Mixer on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

      Turn on some music, keep it relaxed. Don’t try anything too difficult at first, and cook things you know you’ll enjoy.

      If you’re trying something new, maybe just have a back up in the fridge just in case it doesn’t turn out.

      But, don’t be too hard on yourself and just stick to the things you know you’ll enjoy.

      Chef Adrian Richardson:

      Chef Adrian Richardson on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

      I suppose if you can teach people some simple dishes they can do, and how to make the dishes they’re already cooking even more enjoyable with things like seasoning and herbs and switching things around, I think this can be monumental.

      Luisa Weiss of The Wednesday Chef:

      Luisa Weiss of The Wednesday Chef on The Dinner Special podcast talking about how to make cooking more fun if home cooking feels like a chore.

      I think a lot of people think cooking is no fun because they secretly don’t think they’re good at it.

      I’m as lazy as the next person, I will take a short cut if it’s offered to me, I never make my own pasta.

      There are many many really simple recipes out there that if you make them three times, you’ve memorized them by heart, but if you make them, you’re eating really good food.

      That’s what I try to instil in my blog and that’s what I would tell someone who says “I hate to cook”, I’d say, “you know what, I bet you don’t, you just think you’re not good at it, and that’s why you don’t like it.” But actually, if you had some successes in the kitchen, you’d start to like it.

      Awesome tips and advice.

      Thanks food heroes!

      I hope you enjoyed this post. I was actually thinking of only including ten or so responses to keep it short and sweet, but I honestly feel like we can get something from each food heroes’ thoughts.

      Whether it’s a tip, some advice, or simply knowing that they get stuck in cooking ruts too, I find it encouraging and inspiring to hear their thoughts. I hope you do too!

      Let’s get excited about cooking again!

      Check out The Dinner Special podcast here and subscribe to get food and cooking inspiration every Monday, Wednesday and Friday.

      How do you keep it fun in the kitchen with a busy schedule?

      I’d love to hear your thoughts!

      Let me know in the comments below.

      Know someone who’s in a cooking rut? Share this post with them by clicking on a share button.

      Let’s do this together!

      Gabriel

      Filed Under: Cooking Tagged With: A Little Saffron, Adventures in Cooking, Alanna Taylor-Tobin, Amy Kritzer, Becky Rosenthal, Biscuits and Such, Chef Adrian Richardson, Chef Cyrus Todiwala, Chef Tony Singh, chore, Cindy Ensley, cooking, cooking rut, Courtney Chun, Cristina Sciarra, Dula Notes, Eat in My Kitchen, Elena Rosemond-Hoerr, Emily Hilliard, Eva Kosmas Flores, Feed Me Phoebe, Food in Jars, Food52, Fork to Belly, From My Dining Table, fun, Hint of Vanilla, HonestlyYUM, Hungry Girl Por Vida, ideas, Ileana Morales, inspiration, Jodi Moreno, Jonathan Melendez, Jordan Reid, Karen Chan, Katy Atlas, Kristan Raines, Luisa Weiss, Marisa McClellan, Megan Voigt, Meike Peters, Nicole Dula, Nothing in the Houe, Phi Tran, Phoebe Lapine, Princess Tofu, Ramshackle Glam, Renee Byrd, routine, Skye McAlpine, Sugarlaws, The Bojon Gourmet, The Broken Bread, The Candid Appetite, The Incredible Spice Men, The Roaming Kitchen, The Wednesday Chef, Vintage Mixer, What Jew Wanna Eat, What's Cooking Good Looking, Will Frolic for Food

      Hello! I'm Gabriel Soh, home cook, food enthusiast and your host of The Dinner Special podcast.
      Everything here on The Dinner Special is an experiment, just like with cooking. Thank you for listening and being part of the adventure.

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