Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of a sudden… Ugh! I’d inquire as to what changed.
Also, maybe suggest he cook. Or simply cook for yourself.
We just got married. We lived together while engaged but he was gone most weeks for work. He‘s in a different job and now we eat dinner together every night.
He can’t and doesn’t care to cook. He has no interest in ever trying.
Too bad. He needs to learn how to cook. Why are you doing all the cooking, assuming you are employed, too?
Anonymous wrote:What does he not like about your cooking? Is your technique bad? Is the food under seasoned? Overseasoned? You like Midwestern comfort food and he likes more varied stuff?
Second thing is…cooking is a life skill. He needs to have at least 5 dishes he can cook because, well, life. It can be simple stuff - spaghetti with jarred sauce and roasted veggies, burgers and salad, air fryer chicken, etc. Him not cooking will piss you off over time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of a sudden… Ugh! I’d inquire as to what changed.
Also, maybe suggest he cook. Or simply cook for yourself.
We just got married. We lived together while engaged but he was gone most weeks for work. He‘s in a different job and now we eat dinner together every night.
He can’t and doesn’t care to cook. He has no interest in ever trying.
This is a very bad sign in the relationship. Cooking is an expression of love, and if he doesn’t have any interest in trying at least to help you cutting vegetables, start preparing the exit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of a sudden… Ugh! I’d inquire as to what changed.
Also, maybe suggest he cook. Or simply cook for yourself.
We just got married. We lived together while engaged but he was gone most weeks for work. He‘s in a different job and now we eat dinner together every night.
He can’t and doesn’t care to cook. He has no interest in ever trying.
Anonymous wrote:Did he have specifics? DH and I have some different tastes so sometimes we cook our own things. Sounds like you rarely cooked for him when you lived together. Do you cook with a certain spice he doesn't like? Bland? Food he doesn't like?
I think it's fine to have input. It's not fine to have a blanket "I don't like what you're cooking" statement. Have him start helping you. Take a cooking class together.
Anonymous wrote:What does he want to do, OP? If he doesn’t like your cooking and doesn’t want to cook, what does he want? Is he accustomed to take out and frozen meals and wants to eat that? Or is he asking you to cook differently?
I married a man who is a terrible cook and has no interest. His taste buds were pretty hooked on fast food when we got married, and I had to basically say I wasn’t going to good heart attack on a plate every meal, and I didn’t want to eat take out every meal. So he agreed that not everything he ate had to be his favorite. Sometimes food could be just for nutrition, and he didn’t have to love it. That opened the door to more vegetables, etc.
He never said he didn’t like my cooking, so maybe it’s a different issue, but I think what your husband may be missing is that it’s okay to not love dinner. Love the cook, love the company, and the food can just be food.
Anonymous wrote:Can you be more specific? Is the issue that you aren’t cooking meals he enjoys or that he likes the meals but not your version?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of a sudden… Ugh! I’d inquire as to what changed.
Also, maybe suggest he cook. Or simply cook for yourself.
We just got married. We lived together while engaged but he was gone most weeks for work. He‘s in a different job and now we eat dinner together every night.
He can’t and doesn’t care to cook. He has no interest in ever trying.
Anonymous wrote:First: You were taken "aback".
Second: This is a tale as old as time, on your part and his. He pretends to like your cooking because he loves you. Finally he can't stand it anymore, so he confesses. You are hurt. He is sorry he hurt you. You learn to cook more to his liking over time. It's a process. No one screwed up here.