Cooking burnout: have you hit the wall?
April 20, 2020 by DarcieMany of my like-minded food loving friends have recently confessed that they have become tired of cooking. Some say they don’t want to have to think about what recipe to try next, others are worn down by the physical act of cooking three meals a day for a large family, and a few are tired of doing so.many.dishes.
Judging from the memes I see on social media, my friends aren’t the only ones feeling a cooking burnout. If people who love to cook are tired of it, imagine how difficult it must be for those who view it solely as a chore. One person reported that they drove over 50 miles just to get takeaway so they did not have to cook one more meal.
Until I saw all of these posts, I didn’t think much about having to cook every meal, even though I used to go out to eat regularly. I started to wonder why I was not suffering the same amount of cooking burnout as those around me, and it took me a while to understand the reason. Most of us eat out with some frequency, and this is likely the first time people have not been able to easily get a meal outside of their homes for more than a day or two. For me, this situation has thrown me back into a rhythm of cooking that is so familiar I did not even notice the transition.
I grew up in an extremely rural area in the upper Midwest. When I say extremely rural, I mean 50 miles to the nearest stoplight and 100 miles to the closest chain restaurant. The small town where I lived only had two tiny restaurants with limited menus. Our family went out to eat only on the rarest occasions, perhaps for a birthday or other noteworthy event. Therefore cooking every meal at home did not strike me as strange because it was how I lived for a long time. While the pandemic and resulting abrupt shift in our lives remains disconcerting and worrisome, I am thankful that I have not experienced a cooking burnout and that I still look forward to both looking for and making new recipes.
To that end, these past few weeks have allowed me to make several new dishes that I thoroughly enjoyed, and to make use of cookware that had been neglected. Remember a few weeks ago when I confessed that I had an oval Staub Dutch oven that I had never used? I broke it in this weekend by making Chicken en cocotte with apricots and shallots from Milk Street: Tuesday Nights (photo above), which was excellent.
How about you – have you experienced cooking burnout? If so, what strategies are you using to ease the situation?
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