ATLANTA - By the time he's driven to the farmers' market, bought the organic veggies, and spent an hour of his time cooking a meal for himself and his wife, Mark Chernesky figures he's spent $30.
That's why today, after fighting rush hour, the Atlanta multimedia coordinator is rushing in to Figo's, a pasta place, for handstuffed ravioli slathered with puttanesca sauce. "I'll get out of here for $17 plus tip," he says.
Crunch the numbers and all across America the refrain is the same: Eating out is the new eating in. Even with wages stagnant, time-strapped workers are abandoning the family kitchen in droves.
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David Hammond wrote:I guess my feelings are that when you take into account preparation and clean-up time (even if you're calculating your time as worth minimum wage), and then the cost of individual ingredients in even something as simple as a hamburger (bun, meat, tomato, etc.), the cost of eating out may actually be LOWER than eating at home.
Yikes!NRA surveys show that diners increasingly view restaurants as extensions of their own homes, and a large percent would like to see table-top TVs installed at their favorite eating joint.
Cathy2 wrote:For not that much more, Americans opting to eat outATLANTA - By the time he's driven to the farmers' market, bought the organic veggies, and spent an hour of his time cooking a meal for himself and his wife, Mark Chernesky figures he's spent $30.
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Josephine wrote:
Bless them, the French are taking this seriously, and their government has developed a program to support the transmission of their culinary culture. While some think this is a bit hysterical and chauvinistic, the fact is that time pressure is not the only thing preventing people from cooking. The erosion of culinary traditions represents a loss of knowledge. How might we address this?
Purple Asparagus is an educational organization dedicated to bringing families back to the table. We plan and promote activities that enable the entire family to learn about and enjoy every aspect of local and global food culture.
Purple Asparagus celebrates the role family plays in raising, making and sharing food, and teaches children about the importance of food and its traditions.
"a non profit organization devoted to eliminating junk food from our public school system. No sodas. No candy bars. No chips. No processed lunch or foods of minimal nutritional value. Let’s ask our public schools to feed both body and mind properly, to take seriously their role as guardians of our children’s health and welfare. It is time to take the corporate profit out of school lunches and replace it with common sense, good nutrition, and the love and care that our children surely deserve.
Christopher Kimball
Founder & Editor, America's Test Kitchen"
Raised for his first 10 years in Italy, Michael was curious to try the things his new American friends' families ate at home. But, (and I swear this is true) over the course of three years in suburban Chicago, he was only once offered something other than delivered pizza. What was the one exception? Spaghetti with jarred sauce. The poor kid has come to dread pizza.
David Hammond wrote:... it almost seems like you save valuable time and money by having your food procured, prepared and served to you by someone else. Hammond
Josephine wrote:For the past two months, I have been without a kitchen, and it's pretty hard to find ANY vegetable other than potatoes at a cheap restaurant. I absolutely refuse to eat the disinfectant-soaked salads that pass for healthy at most places.
Josephine wrote:But time pressures are a reality. This is sad, because it is impoverishing the next generation. It is somewhat unusual these days to meet a child who has tasted beets, cauliflower, turnips, brussels sprouts, and the like. OK, so maybe most people would not choose these foods. But there is a slippery slope here, as illustrated by the experience of one of my young neighbors. Raised for his first 10 years in Italy, Michael was curious to try the things his new American friends' families ate at home. But, (and I swear this is true) over the course of three years in suburban Chicago, he was only once offered something other than delivered pizza. What was the one exception? Spaghetti with jarred sauce. The poor kid has come to dread pizza.
Josephine wrote:the fact is that time pressure is not the only thing preventing people from cooking. The erosion of culinary traditions represents a loss of knowledge. How might we address this?
A lot of the shift in thinking about this has to do with calculating the cost of time for preparation and clean up. Nobody considered this as part of meal cost till relatively recently -- probably because cooking and clean up were largely done by women (as they still are in the majority of American households). It's taken a few generations of women working outside the home for women's time to be considered worth anything.
Bruce wrote:Josephine wrote:
Bless them, the French are taking this seriously, and their government has developed a program to support the transmission of their culinary culture. While some think this is a bit hysterical and chauvinistic, the fact is that time pressure is not the only thing preventing people from cooking. The erosion of culinary traditions represents a loss of knowledge. How might we address this?
MAG is addressing the issue via Purple Asparagus.Purple Asparagus is an educational organization dedicated to bringing families back to the table. We plan and promote activities that enable the entire family to learn about and enjoy every aspect of local and global food culture.
Purple Asparagus celebrates the role family plays in raising, making and sharing food, and teaches children about the importance of food and its traditions.
Christopher Kimball of Cook's Illustrated has started Parents Against Junk Food"a non profit organization devoted to eliminating junk food from our public school system. No sodas. No candy bars. No chips. No processed lunch or foods of minimal nutritional value. Let’s ask our public schools to feed both body and mind properly, to take seriously their role as guardians of our children’s health and welfare. It is time to take the corporate profit out of school lunches and replace it with common sense, good nutrition, and the love and care that our children surely deserve.
Christopher Kimball
Founder & Editor, America's Test Kitchen"
Both are a start addressing this issue.
ToniG wrote:now nearly half of all American meals are eaten in restaurants (1/4 of those meals in fast-food restaurants; this has been true for many years, so I'm not entirely sure why the eating-out story was considered news).
ToniG wrote:I also think that for many women, who continue to do the food-related work in most families, eating out constitutes a calculated choice about how they can most efficiently utilize their time.
jlawrence01 wrote:2) I do not see many vegetables at most reasonably priced restaurant. I used to get them with the entree at Around the Clock but now you have to ask.
LAZ wrote:ToniG wrote:now nearly half of all American meals are eaten in restaurants (1/4 of those meals in fast-food restaurants; this has been true for many years, so I'm not entirely sure why the eating-out story was considered news).
You notice that they led with a man. That makes it more newsworthy.![]()
Your feminist history is quite accurate. However, it's taken a long time for appreciation of the worth of women's time to get beyond feminist dialectic and into the mainstream.
Meanwhile, feminism continues to promote distaste for cooking. Someone recently proposed that a professional women's group I belong to publish a cookbook as a fundraiser. The negative response was immediate: "A cookbook would simply feed into stereotypes we're all still busy fighting."ToniG wrote:I also think that for many women, who continue to do the food-related work in most families, eating out constitutes a calculated choice about how they can most efficiently utilize their time.
I don't know about "calculated." I suspect in most households, things go more on the lines of, "I don't feel like cooking tonight. Let's go out."
Home cooking is moving from a required chore to a lifestyle choice, a hobby performed by those who take pleasure in it. Those who do not will increasingly rely on restaurants and the home meal replacements offered by gourmet shops and grocers for their daily meals.
LAZ wrote:Meanwhile, feminism continues to promote distaste for cooking. Someone recently proposed that a professional women's group I belong to publish a cookbook as a fundraiser. The negative response was immediate: "A cookbook would simply feed into stereotypes we're all still busy fighting."
gleam wrote:LAZ wrote:
Did you see the Colbert Report a couple of days ago? Stephen Colbert had Gloria Steinem and Jane Fonda on. It truly needs to be seen.
Saint Pizza wrote:gleam wrote:Did you see the Colbert Report a couple of days ago? Stephen Colbert had Gloria Steinem and Jane Fonda on. It truly needs to be seen.
Did they talk about food/cooking?
gleam wrote:Saint Pizza wrote:gleam wrote:Did you see the Colbert Report a couple of days ago? Stephen Colbert had Gloria Steinem and Jane Fonda on. It truly needs to be seen.
Did they talk about food/cooking?
They performed the interview at a kitchen set, in a segment called "Cooking with Feminists". He had them making an apple pie.
gleam wrote:Did you see the Colbert Report a couple of days ago? Stephen Colbert had Gloria Steinem and Jane Fonda on. It truly needs to be seen.
Your feminist history is quite accurate. However, it's taken a long time for appreciation of the worth of women's time to get beyond feminist dialectic and into the mainstream.
Meanwhile, feminism continues to promote distaste for cooking. Someone recently proposed that a professional women's group I belong to publish a cookbook as a fundraiser. The negative response was immediate: "A cookbook would simply feed into stereotypes we're all still busy fighting."
eatchicago wrote:Spicy tofu and broccoli. A 1-lb block of tofu and a couple broccoli crowns, rice, and seasonings/marinade will also cover a dinner and a lunch. Total ingredient cost: about $5. Cooking time: 45 minutes. Cost per meal: less than $2.
:LOL:!! that is the BEST!#$!@#$gleam wrote:Did you see the Colbert Report a couple of days ago? Stephen Colbert had Gloria Steinem and Jane Fonda on. It truly needs to be seen.
TonyC wrote:mike, the fact that you call spicy tofu and broccoli a "meal" troubles me. the fact that you'll eat that 'meal' consecutively (an assumption) makes you a better man than i...
eatchicago wrote:Here's another one. Last night I made the chicken thighs with parsley and garlic from" Pepin's Fast Food My Way" (this is my wife's favorite weeknight dish): chicken thighs, a few cloves of garlic, a half-cup of parsley, flour, olive oil, rice, and some frozen peas on the side--total ingredient cost, about $5 for two dinners and leftovers for one.
eatchicago wrote:FYI, Pepin's original recipe calls for boneless skinless breasts, but I use thigh meat for less than half the cost and more than double the flavor.
David Hammond wrote:I guess my feelings are that when you take into account preparation and clean-up time (even if you're calculating your time as worth minimum wage), and then the cost of individual ingredients in even something as simple as a hamburger (bun, meat, tomato, etc.), the cost of eating out may actually be LOWER than eating at home.
Matt wrote:This oversimplifies things, of course (there are probably some other things I would like to do in my spare time that are more valuable to me than cooking), but it does go to show that cooking, for some, is a recreational activity (or, as LAZ put it above, a lifestyle choice/hobby).
David Hammond wrote:However, it was finely crisped, did not require me to mess up my kitchen, take grief from my daughter about how we're eating late (again), or clean up. Instead of cooking, I was chatting with The Wife in a candle-lit gallery of surrealistic artworks enjoying better food than I could make at home for ten times the price of a home-cooked meal but with much more satisfaction -- not sure how you put a price on that.
Hammond