Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Why would you need to cook everyday? Take turns. Send a dad out for doughnuts. Tell the kids to eat cereal.
It’s not rocket science.
I don’t eat doughnuts for breakfast. Also, remember, we are in the middle of forest. There is no Starbucks around corner.
I hate to cook so I can understand that part. We have a cook at home even though I’m a SAHM.
Breakfast and lunch are so easy. Why can’t you just make a little extra to share?
I just can’t understand.
Where are you from? Was your mom like this? Did she teach you not to share food?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Why would you need to cook everyday? Take turns. Send a dad out for doughnuts. Tell the kids to eat cereal.
It’s not rocket science.
I don’t eat doughnuts for breakfast. Also, remember, we are in the middle of forest. There is no Starbucks around corner.
I hate to cook so I can understand that part. We have a cook at home even though I’m a SAHM.
Breakfast and lunch are so easy. Why can’t you just make a little extra to share?
I just can’t understand.
Where are you from? Was your mom like this? Did she teach you not to share food?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m beginning to get an impression that all women here do is cook brunch after brunch.
We actually go hiking, swimming.
The only time I cook for large groups is holidays and when we host dinners. And that’s a lot of work. I’m not doing this on my vacation, sorry. Bring your own bacon.
Making bacon, eggs and toast is literally the easiest meal to cook. My ten year old can make bacon and eggs.
Again: this thread is making white millennials look really, really bad. [/quote]
I am really not convinced OP is a white, American millenial.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Why would you need to cook everyday? Take turns. Send a dad out for doughnuts. Tell the kids to eat cereal.
It’s not rocket science.
I don’t eat doughnuts for breakfast. Also, remember, we are in the middle of forest. There is no Starbucks around corner.
Get a big box of aldi's just add water pancake mix and make pancakes or waffles. Done. Cheap.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. And I don’t want to spend my vacation days in the kitchen cooking brunches. Maybe it’s a SAHM thing.
Anonymous wrote:The title of this thread is making me think of those inns from the 1600s when a bunch of people would pile in and sleep on reeds on the floor, sometimes next to livestock. That's the only scenario I can think of in which I was travelling with people I was afraid were going to steal my food. Bizarre.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Why would you need to cook everyday? Take turns. Send a dad out for doughnuts. Tell the kids to eat cereal.
It’s not rocket science.
I don’t eat doughnuts for breakfast. Also, remember, we are in the middle of forest. There is no Starbucks around corner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Why would you need to cook everyday? Take turns. Send a dad out for doughnuts. Tell the kids to eat cereal.
It’s not rocket science.
I don’t eat doughnuts for breakfast. Also, remember, we are in the middle of forest. There is no Starbucks around corner.
Okay. Replace “doughnuts” with whatever low calorie bar you eat. Same difference. Bottom line: it’s not rocket science.
Anyone going into a vacation with a chip on their shoulder and a complete inability will be voted off the island or sent down the river (or whatever saying fits your “forest” vacation best).
I wonder how many men actually cook communal meals? I have seen zero from my vacations. They’re smart.
It’s a woman thing. They can’t stop servicing, being caretakers. Sorry, I’m not a maid. I would rather be hiking than cooking large meals for groups of people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Why would you need to cook everyday? Take turns. Send a dad out for doughnuts. Tell the kids to eat cereal.
It’s not rocket science.
I don’t eat doughnuts for breakfast. Also, remember, we are in the middle of forest. There is no Starbucks around corner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Why would you need to cook everyday? Take turns. Send a dad out for doughnuts. Tell the kids to eat cereal.
It’s not rocket science.
I don’t eat doughnuts for breakfast. Also, remember, we are in the middle of forest. There is no Starbucks around corner.
Okay. Replace “doughnuts” with whatever low calorie bar you eat. Same difference. Bottom line: it’s not rocket science.
Anyone going into a vacation with a chip on their shoulder and a complete inability will be voted off the island or sent down the river (or whatever saying fits your “forest” vacation best).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are sharing a house and there's just one kitchen, you have to assume there will be some informal sharing of food regardless of the "agreement". If you're cooking bacon, everyone will want some. So either plan a little extra to share, or take the same dry boring stuff that everyone else will have - cold cereal, toast, bananas. Don't taunt people with a house smelling like bacon but not offering to share, that's just cruel.
Why can’t you bring your own bacon? Is it hard?
Okay, I’ll bring my own bacon. And I’ll secretly hide your frying pan and refuse to share mine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are sharing a house and there's just one kitchen, you have to assume there will be some informal sharing of food regardless of the "agreement". If you're cooking bacon, everyone will want some. So either plan a little extra to share, or take the same dry boring stuff that everyone else will have - cold cereal, toast, bananas. Don't taunt people with a house smelling like bacon but not offering to share, that's just cruel.
Why can’t you bring your own bacon? Is it hard?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Why would you need to cook everyday? Take turns. Send a dad out for doughnuts. Tell the kids to eat cereal.
It’s not rocket science.
I don’t eat doughnuts for breakfast. Also, remember, we are in the middle of forest. There is no Starbucks around corner.