Tuesday, March 15, 2016

Playing with Food


"The toast will be ready in a minute," said Len, suspecting that I was impatient before breakfast this morning.

"I'm just having fun arranging butter and jam on my plate. No rush." I answered.


Playing with food! As I continued buttering my toast and then peeling a tangerine, I thought about how much fun it is to play with food. When you peel the tangerine, you have to pull off all those little white stringy things one by one. It's compelling sometimes. Do you ever smear peanut butter on a graham cracker and then squish it with the other half of the graham cracker? Did you ever microwave cocoa with marshmallows on top and watch them swell up? I hope you didn't set your microwave on fire. Do you think it's fun to whack the catsup bottle? As in the poem The Catsup Bottle by Ogden Nash "First a little/ Then a lottle."

Cooking can be like playing with food, sometimes. Do you like fooling around with the toppings for a pizza? Last night, I spread the sauce with a silicone basting brush and I arranged the toppings in patterns, especially the artichoke hearts. Watching the dough as the flour mixer forms a ball in the food processor is fun. Kneading the dough is kind of amusing too -- some people like it more than I do. (Yesterday was Pi Day, and I didn't think I would have pie but I made a pizza after all.)


During my actual childhood, my mother didn't tolerate a lot of fooling around at the dinner table, but I guess I tried a few things. I used to enjoy mushing up the three separate dishes that composed one of the meals she often made: salmon croquettes, mashed potatoes, and peas (that would have been canned peas; soft, for mushing). I'm sure there were a few other foods or combinations I would have liked to fool around with. My sister probably remembers more.


But I'm a grownup now. I shouldn't play with food. Unless I'm cooking. Like mashing potatoes. The other night, I made twice-baked potatoes. This means I got to scrape the potato out after the first baking, then mash it with butter and browned onions and kefir, then smash the mixture into balls and stuff them into the potato shells, and finally, bake them again, covered with melty cheese. Meanwhile I grated carrots and chopped red cabbage for a side salad, not exactly playing, but almost.

I can think of other things that allow a cook to play with food -- legitimately! Like making tuna salad, egg salad, deviled eggs, or almost anything smushed with mayonnaise, which is a very playful substance as any child knows. Like making ice cream. Like forming a messy meat mixture into meatballs, which you can roll between the palms of your hands. Like the tense moment when you have added flour to white sauce and it forms a smooth paste, not a lumpy mess. It's all play.

10 comments:

~~louise~~ said...

You might already know this Mae but, I LOVE playing with food!!! Who says you can't "play" with your food. It's all part of the creative process. It is one of the rewards we reap since the many many cooks before us followed the rules so we could shake them up a bit.

Oh and that salmon mash up, salmon and mashed potatoes are my very best favorite fishy combination.

Thanks so much for sharing, Mae...

Kitchen Riffs said...

Love tangerines for breakfast! They're a regular at this time of the year, with a hard-boiled egg. Should probably add toast. So I can play with my butter and jam! Fun read -- thanks.

Jeanie said...

Of COURSE you should play with your food. And who wouldn't want to? The most creative cooks got there by playing and the best parents got there by letting their kid discover a funny face on the bagel with fruit and jam! This was a delightful post and I couldn't agree more!

Beth F said...

Peeling an apple all in one long spiral! Love playing with food. Fun post.

Claudia said...

Oh yes, making a smiley face with ketchup on my eggs, slapping that bread dough around. Love Jama's posts for that reason - such fun. We're adults too, so we can't get scolded.

Deb in Hawaii said...

My favorite way to play with food lately is with a spiralizer. It's fun making veggies and harder fruits--carrots, apples, sweet potatoes, beets, etc. into 'noodles' and turning them into a tasty dish and even more fun to turn the handle and watch the piles of colorful spirals come out. ;-)

Carole said...

P,laying with food - fantastic way to describe any inventive cook. Cheers from Carole's Chatter!

Laurie C said...

This post made me think of the scene from ET when the boy plays with his mashed potatoes!

Vicki said...

I love this post!! And yes, it is fun playing with food.

(Diane) bookchickdi said...

This is a unique post, I never thought about playing with food.