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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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You may know that I'm the mother of two large small boys, 6 1/2 and
almost 5; they are high-spirited, hilarious, sloppy, and not good at fine motor tasks. Meals at my house are therefore messy and chaotic. We eat in the kitchen, which is small and cluttered. The kids are always rambunctious at suppertime and I get frazzled. They behave reasonably well at table in restaurants and grandparents' homes, however, so they aren't completely savage. But the younger one has been refusing to come to the table (???) and was beginning to test me in other ways at supper time. What a hassle. Today the 6 y.o. and I were at Ikea, where he was enchanted by a model dining room; he sat down at a place setting, discussed the arrangements, spent ten minutes organizing and rearranging the plates, chargers, candles etc. He's neurologically atypical and can be quirky about things - he likes lining items up in rows. He just loved that table setting, was delighted by the whole room. A light bulb went off in my head. why not put out placemats and set the table decently at home? For dinner tonight I asked the two boys if they wanted to eat in the dining room: YES! Want to help set the table? YES!!!! Oh boy. They got to choose placemats and plate color, and the four year old found napkin rings and insisted we use them (he'd never seen them used in this house, don't know where he got the idea). THey brought serving dishes in, and carefully laid a slice of cuke and tomato on mom and dad's plates - saving some for us, you know, as they polished off the rest of 'em themselves. They were models of civilized behavior. Furthermore - who would have thought that the 4 y.o., who is obsessed with guns, police, wearing construction worker costumes, nose picking and fart jokes, would turn into such a table-service diva? He pulled out five tea candles - one for each of us and one for the center. He directed the placement of napkin rings. He unfolded the napkin and placed it carefully on his lap. ??? Somehow these children have gotten a taste for civilized dining. God knows they haven't seen much of it in our house lately, but they eat with grandma once a week, and she sets a nice table (but mostly in her tiny kitchen, not all this folderol of candles and such). I have resolved to eat dinner in the dining room every night. It causes such good behavior (and we like looking out the window at the sunset reflected on our roses) Furthermore, the civilized atmosphere makes the food taste better. Ob Food: Tonight was pot roast in the pressure cooker, a simple recipe with red wine, diced tomatoes, onion and garlic. I should have put in celery and carrot but I just forgot...ANyway, you can bet that the father of the household was happy to come home to well-behaved children, a lovely dining room (most of the kid clutter had been swept elsewhere) and a nice pot roast (and me, smiling serenely in the candlelight). Here's to the finer domestic niceties. Leila |
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