Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious what cuisines he eats, if any, besides Lebanese?
That's the thing. The men I know (my husband included) who grew up with mommy's traditional home cooked food that takes all day to make usually have high expectations in a proper meal is. My husband would rather starve than make himself a sandwich. They are used to having a woman spending hours in the kitchen and keeping the fridge full with a variety of dishes. My MIL still gives us dozens of frozen containers of food every time we see her. She also forces me to peel bags of onions and chop veggies for hours when she comes visit. But that's another story...
All of this. I don’t think the average American truly gets how labor intensive and all-consuming some ethnic home-cooking is. Every single holiday and get-together revolves around intricate dishes. These families don’t run a Turkey Trot 5k after Thanksgiving, they don’t go to restaurants for Mother’s Day brunch. Yes, it can be a beautiful and delicious testament to love for family but it is not really a modern way to live.
DP. Wow. Stereotype much? That's a lot of cultural bias.
It is lived experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious what cuisines he eats, if any, besides Lebanese?
That's the thing. The men I know (my husband included) who grew up with mommy's traditional home cooked food that takes all day to make usually have high expectations in a proper meal is. My husband would rather starve than make himself a sandwich. They are used to having a woman spending hours in the kitchen and keeping the fridge full with a variety of dishes. My MIL still gives us dozens of frozen containers of food every time we see her. She also forces me to peel bags of onions and chop veggies for hours when she comes visit. But that's another story...
All of this. I don’t think the average American truly gets how labor intensive and all-consuming some ethnic home-cooking is. Every single holiday and get-together revolves around intricate dishes. These families don’t run a Turkey Trot 5k after Thanksgiving, they don’t go to restaurants for Mother’s Day brunch. Yes, it can be a beautiful and delicious testament to love for family but it is not really a modern way to live.
DP. Wow. Stereotype much? That's a lot of cultural bias.
Anonymous wrote:I'm 43 and attractive, in shape, and dating. Lately all of the guys I've gone out with have asked right away if I like to cook. I don't. The guy I'm dating now gets homemade meals delivered from his mom weekly (supposedly for his kids, but he eats it too). Is this going to be a problem?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious what cuisines he eats, if any, besides Lebanese?
That's the thing. The men I know (my husband included) who grew up with mommy's traditional home cooked food that takes all day to make usually have high expectations in a proper meal is. My husband would rather starve than make himself a sandwich. They are used to having a woman spending hours in the kitchen and keeping the fridge full with a variety of dishes. My MIL still gives us dozens of frozen containers of food every time we see her. She also forces me to peel bags of onions and chop veggies for hours when she comes visit. But that's another story...
All of this. I don’t think the average American truly gets how labor intensive and all-consuming some ethnic home-cooking is. Every single holiday and get-together revolves around intricate dishes. These families don’t run a Turkey Trot 5k after Thanksgiving, they don’t go to restaurants for Mother’s Day brunch. Yes, it can be a beautiful and delicious testament to love for family but it is not really a modern way to live.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious what cuisines he eats, if any, besides Lebanese?
That's the thing. The men I know (my husband included) who grew up with mommy's traditional home cooked food that takes all day to make usually have high expectations in a proper meal is. My husband would rather starve than make himself a sandwich. They are used to having a woman spending hours in the kitchen and keeping the fridge full with a variety of dishes. My MIL still gives us dozens of frozen containers of food every time we see her. She also forces me to peel bags of onions and chop veggies for hours when she comes visit. But that's another story...
All of this. I don’t think the average American truly gets how labor intensive and all-consuming some ethnic home-cooking is. Every single holiday and get-together revolves around intricate dishes. These families don’t run a Turkey Trot 5k after Thanksgiving, they don’t go to restaurants for Mother’s Day brunch. Yes, it can be a beautiful and delicious testament to love for family but it is not really a modern way to live.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious what cuisines he eats, if any, besides Lebanese?
That's the thing. The men I know (my husband included) who grew up with mommy's traditional home cooked food that takes all day to make usually have high expectations in a proper meal is. My husband would rather starve than make himself a sandwich. They are used to having a woman spending hours in the kitchen and keeping the fridge full with a variety of dishes. My MIL still gives us dozens of frozen containers of food every time we see her. She also forces me to peel bags of onions and chop veggies for hours when she comes visit. But that's another story...
Anonymous wrote:Curious what cuisines he eats, if any, besides Lebanese?
Anonymous wrote:I don't know...she might be onto something with the cultural thing...I'm Indian-American (woman) and I am a decent cook. I cook daily, though I don't enjoy it. My mom (local, retired) often cooks things and brings it over to us...she'd happily do it daily if I let her (I don't, because I want her to relax) - its usually time consuming things that I don't have time/interest to do. But the kids really love her cooking so that's why it happens - not because I can't function in the kitchen. Maybe it's the same thing with this guy - grandmothers often show their love in the kitchen.