Thats funny we use next day spaghetti and cook it in a small frying til crispy. Throw it on italian bread, and you got youself a meal.
Trying not to eat white bread, bunless grilled burger, whole tilapia and homemade coleslaw last nightâŚ
We make the left over into sandwiches for the next day out hunting.
Now that look good! Love fish
My breakfast the majority of âmornings.â The guac is fresh made, the bacon applewood smoked and thick cut. Sadly the eggs and onion are a bit over done, yet still delicious! YEA!
Those farmed fish look delicious.
Haha, my mom forced me to learn to cook too! Also, all the other stuff that comes with taking care of yourself. We still had home ec when I was a kid and that is where I learned to bake.
Chocolate cinnamon carrot cake with cream cheese and pecan frosting.
Way too fkn rich for me lol! Deluxe.
Loaded bake potato soup
Then marinara on texas toast
And more texas toast with bbq beef
O amd some links
Mine too, and I was freakinâ lucky she did. I baked my first scratch cake when I was about 10, with her at my shoulder making sure I did it all properly. It was a success. Her motivation was that I might end up being single for most or all of my life and so Iâd better be able to keep myself together. She taught me to do all kinds of simple household stuff, like basic cooking, ironing, basic sewing, etc, for which I will forever be in her debt.
As it turned out, being able to cook has been a huge benefit to my personal life. Iâm 74 and have been in four long term relationships in my life, 6, 9, 9 and (currently) 28 years. Being able to cook simple, tasty and nutritious food was a major influence as to why each of those women choose me as a partner. Of course, I also try to be a decent person towards others.
Home Ec was taught in high school when I was young too. I never took the class because of my mom training me in those same skills. Full truth be told, I also took a Chef Training class in my senior year of high school, however, as a HSDO (High School Drop Out) I didnât complete the class. Honestly, it only sharpened the skills Iâd learned at my motherâs side.
For any guy whoâd like to have a serious partner-type relationship, cooking can be a real feather in your cap. (For those who may be unfamiliar with that saying, itâs a good thing.) Women, and perhaps other guys, I wouldnât know, appreciate that a man knows how to do some simple household stuff.
For sure. Iâm only in my mid-fifties, but have cooked for myself and my partner the whole time, she can barely boil water.
I started washing dishes in the fanciest restaurant in town when I was 14 and was cooking for them before I finished high school. I left for the military after school and that was it for my kitchen career.
I love to cook as much as I enjoy growing plants, keeps me grounded.
Spent much of my life single and raising a couple daughters, they can cook like a chef as well. I didnât teach them how to iron thoughâŚ
My mom canât cook to save her life. My dad worked as a sous chef. Haha. I love cooking. Itâs so relaxing. I worked as a fine dining server for years and got to mess around with the chefs before we opened and on tasting days and whatnot. It was a blast honestly.
Ground chicken onion pepper carrot teriyaki with garlic green beans and hash browns⌠pretty much random meal from food in the fridge
Buncha fuckinâ stoners around here.
Pumpkin seeds are crazy good. One of the team moms for an AAU team of mine would always do pumpkin seeds when it was her game and I loved them. I need to make some myself. Thanks for the reminder!!
We always get a pumpkin to carve for halloween and I get the seeds toasted⌠Thereâs never enoughâŚ
Cheers
G