Otherwise known as "appliances." Kitchen
appliances in this case. Never in my life would I have thought to write about
such a topic but with a lot of time on my hands, with a new
influx of cooking gadgets, and at thirty years old (i.e. an adult, though
I'm not sure what I'm implying here when I say adult: That adults like me have
far too many unnecessary materials? ), here it goes.
Over the years I have slowly gathered a fine collection of
appliances, though they mostly started out as gifts. In graduate school,
Javier, horrified by what constituted as my cutting board (a ceramic saucer)
bought me a high quality wooden board and shipped it to me in the mail (he also
mailed a power strip as he was equally horrified that I unplugged and plugged
in lamps, my laptop, my toaster whenever each particular need arose).
"That's a very romantic gesture," my friend Joel said at the
time. "He's buying you something you need." I guess Joel was
right. Not only is Javier still in my life, but so is the cutting board.
Once I moved out of the Sarah Lawrence dorms and back to
Tucson, and eventually in to my own place, the need for practical cooking ware
grew, but so did the opportunity for acquiring appliances grow, especially as
how my dad saw it. I've received some surprising appliances from Dad, items I
may not have bought myself, but most of which I use to this day. For
example, the Bella Cucina Rocket he gave me saved me many a time when I was
late to work. I'd blend my yogurt smoothie and then pop out the door and drive
to work drinking my breakfast.
The Rocket! |
My dad also gave me a quesadilla maker which, though I used it rarely, I have to admit was pretty awesome. However, it is because I used it so rarely that in a packing-for-Ohio binge, sadly, it did not make it out to the Midwest.
Pretty red quesadilla machine no more |
A pattern emerges in the timeline of my life with kitchen
appliances, from the blender and egg beater I bought at Goodwill, to the tagine
I asked my sister to bring from Morocco which I prepped for cooking and never
used, to the roasting pan Javier wanted for his birthday that, again, my Dad
gave him. From that roasting pan, to incorporating the cast iron skillets
Javier brought from Chicago into my cooking rotation, the only place to go in
the quality of appliances was up.
As my, and Javier's, cooking ambitions grow, so has our
arsenal of supplies. This arsenal has been bolstered, of course, by getting
married, though it was preempted by a crowning glory in the way of kitchen
machinery: the CuisinArt food processor I received from Javier on my 30th
birthday. Though well used, I haven't even begun to scratch the surface
of what that sucker can do as I've only used it to make dough: from pizza, to
pretzel, to various breads. Addendum: I did use it once to make an entire
pie: from the almond crumble topping to the sliced apple filling.
Back to the wedding-backed influx of arms (err, I mean
appliances. I just read a New Yorker article about
Mexican drug cartels and that diction is crossing over into this post).
Truly believing (and rightfully so) that our house was full of wonderful
cooking toys, Javier and I didn't register anywhere for our wedding. But
then we got asked: What do you want for your wedding? Or, we
were given appliances because, and I take this as a compliment, my reputation
precedes me and people know all I really do now is cook and bake. Or we
received very generous gift certificates and with that free pass dreams of
appliances bloomed in our heads. I guess that's what happens when we have
too much of something good, in this case "free money" at prescribed
locations: we come up with ways to use it.
Once we received the gift certificates (and I saw a
sale at Macy's) suddenly it was vitally important to get a pressure cooker. For
one, I know I won't have much time to spend on meals when I start my doctoral
program. But also, honestly, isn't it awesome to cook beans in the wink of an
eye instead of in a matter of hours? I took the process of selecting a pressure
cooker very seriously: I did extensive internet research to see what materials
reacted with food and which brands came with instruction manuals. I asked my
friends who own pressure cookers what their opinions were, and what meals they
made. I finally settled on one and I'm proud to say I've cut the cooking time
of long grain rice in half!
Javier too was bit by the bug and it became crucial for him
to find a stockpot to better cook hops and malt for the beer he brews. The remainder of the
Macy's gift certificate? Done. New stockpot. Then I decided I really
couldn't stand to eat Kroger tortillas (plus I read how easy it is to make your
own in Bon Appétit) so an Amazon gift card bought us a
tortilla press. Javier lamented that we still had the Goodwill blender ( a
sad piece of equipment, I'll admit: the saucer solution I enacted in grad school
returned: once we lost the blender's top, a ceramic saucer became the
substitute). No more blender? Well, Javier spotted a Ninja Prep Master
box in his Mom's closet and asked if it was for him. Boom. A Ninja traveled
back to Ohio with us in the trunk of our car.
This thing is scary: I cut myself on the blades first thing out of the box |
As I mentioned above, we did receive some tangible appliance gifts. The one thing I knew I wanted ahead of time was an ice cream maker, and my friend Beth obliged. My friend Joon also surprised us with a pretty, retro looking food scale, which has helped enormously when I use recipes out of a British cookbook that is my baking Bible and it switches from cups to ounces.
I don''t know why I'm making this face. I'm truly excited about the berry sorbet about to emerge from the ice cream maker |
Retro style food scale |
This post is definitely not an advertisement for various appliances, though I do name them by name. It is, embarrassingly, an accurate reflection of what has been on my mind as of late (not the only thing on my mind, but still, there it lays before you). At a deeper level, hopefully, is a little bit of commentary of what I mention at the beginning of this post: that someone like me can easily accumulate gadgets and will become swamped with the detritus of consumer desire.
However, I do not plan on our house becoming cluttered with anything, especially machines of steel and plastic. Let my tools of the domestic arts aid and challenge me in my cooking, and whatever else will go the way of quesadilla maker.
1 comment:
Love it!! Thanks for the story Apes. It makes me miss you!!!!
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