Anthony Bourdain has asked this question. Here is my answer!
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There are basically three types of people whom I've encountered. The type of people who read the question "why cook well?" and scoff because the answer is so obvious. There are the people who wouldn't know a good meal if it came all over their tongues. And then there are the people who just legitimately have no idea where to begin.
I fall into the first group. I don't associate with people in the second group (as being a member of the first group, I can be considered a "food snob" despite the fact that my favorites are not fancy schmancy). The last group are all too often lured into the false idea that only people like Sandra Lee and Rachael Ray have easy and attainable recipes.
I fall into the first group. I don't associate with people in the second group (as being a member of the first group, I can be considered a "food snob" despite the fact that my favorites are not fancy schmancy). The last group are all too often lured into the false idea that only people like Sandra Lee and Rachael Ray have easy and attainable recipes.
For those people: fucking up is part of the curve! You try things. If they suck, you don't do them again. And sometimes even fucking up is cooking well. Because at least you're doing it.
Seriously. Cooking something delicious and cooking up a big pile of shit take the same amount of time. They cost the same amount (I'd argue cooking poorly costs so much more). They are virtually identical in all aspects except that with the former I am satisfied. Happy. Even giddy. With the latter I am just pissed off and still hungry.
But hey, maybe that's just me. I personally don't like to come home from work, eat a sub-standard dinner with a glass of corked wine, watch a terrible movie and then have mediocre sex. Like with everything else, if I'm going to do it, it's going to be good. Because I'm selfish. Plus, there is no reason for it not to be delicious.
Mind you, I cook every night. I live for the smells, the textures, the flavors, the creativity. I am of Greek and Cajun descent after all, and my family's love of food is no secret. So I know what things taste like. I know what they should taste like. Cooking (and therefore eating) well brings me back to reality after my day churning out corporate bullshit and being worked up over things that have no actual effect on me. Whereas I've noticed a direct correlation between the quality of a meal and the level of bliss that I feel in a given day. So knowing this, why wouldn't I do everything in my power to make it return? I am not, after all, a masochist.
So many of us go through each day repeating the same old shit. There is no real variation in schedule, work or even entertainment. Our assembly-line mentality shouldn't apply to our food. We all need to earn a living, so there are some things with which we just have to suck up and deal. Food is not one of those things. With a single meal, we can transform the daily doldrums into something not only tolerable, but enjoyable. Or, we can sit on our fat asses and whine.
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I submitted this. So vote for me dammit!
http://bourdainmediumraw.com/essays/view/249
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I submitted this. So vote for me dammit!
http://bourdainmediumraw.com/essays/view/249
This is epic. And totally in the Bourdain spirit. I voted for you!
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