Food is more than just a part of
life. Dinner is a time to gather around the table to spend time with family and
to indulge over the food one just prepared. Cooking is just one way to enjoy food
in one’s life. I associate food with my family: the way we gather around the
table, share cooking secrets, and give food to others. Food’s significance in
my life appears in different cultural, social, familial, and geographical ways.
Meals are times to spend with
family and discuss what went on during the day. The American culture has
changed over time from gathering around the dinner table to grabbing food on
the go or eating in front of the television. These shifts are seen from both
sides of my family. My mother grew up in a very traditional household where
dinner was served at a specific time each night and all were in attendance. My
father, on the other hand, rarely had organized meals with his family during
his teenage years. Between sports and other activities my grandmother was
either in the kitchen or driving around my dad’s four siblings. I grew up the
way my mother grew up: gathering around the dinner table and discussing how our
day was at school. We juggled around schedules with my sister and I both in
activities but always managed to share dinnertime together. This is extremely important to me. Food is a
means for my family to get together and share the important details about how
our day was. Whether it is laughter, stories, or just enjoying the food
prepared in front of us, family meals are cherished when we are all together.
Sharing dinner together is just one
of the traditions that I associate with food. Many of these traditions are
surrounded by the holidays. Every Christmas Eve my family eats dinner
overlooking the mountains at Keystone Lake. Our traditional meal is honey-baked
ham, ready-to-go mashed potatoes, and vegetables; the altitude in the mountains
makes cooking very difficult—hence, instant mashed potatoes—but without flaw,
we always delight in the same meal. Before we head up to the mountains we make
Rice Chex, Wheat Chex, Corn Chex mix (a family favorite); this helps prepare us
for the sixteen-hour car drive from our house to the mountains. Even though
these traditions are surrounded by food, the important things are the memories made
and time spent together as a family.
My mother started sharing her
baking secrets with me when I was very little. The first experience I remember
is spreading flour all over the floor and myself while making homemade pizzas
and baking chocolate-chip cookies. My family is famous for our banana chocolate
chip bread and hot chocolate mix; mainly my friends just remember that we are
the family with Tupperware containers solely for Nestle chocolate chips (normal
and mini sized!). The love for chocolate started with my grandfather and has
been passed on since. When my mother and sister went overseas to Europe they
brought back real Swiss chocolate that melted in your mouth. This love for
chocolate will not end with my sister and I but will be passed on through
generations.
Anything baked with chocolate makes
the perfect present. One year for Mother’s Day I saw a hunk of dark chocolate
and immediately bought it for my mother; this chocolate was not used to take a
bite off of but more to bake with. The thought of giving her something to make
her laugh and enjoy was the most important. Our chocolate recipes are not just
for my family to enjoy, but to share with friends. I bake my friends a loaf of
banana chocolate chip bread whether it is to celebrate their birthday, to
comfort them during a loss of a family member, or purely for the enjoyment of
seeing a smile on their face. Food is meant for celebration, comfort, or just
simple enjoyment.
During the summer, my family
constantly stops by a farmer’s market to gather fresh vegetables to cook on the
grill or berries to serve over ice cream. Once in a while we will head to the downtown
Minneapolis farmer’s market for a much larger selection of flowers, vegetables,
bread, honey, and many sweets. Indulging in fresh locally grown food is very
important to my family. We prefer buying food that travels little distance to
get to us. Unfortunately, by living in the Midwest, we have to buy fruit during
the winter that traveled long distances.
Food’s last main significance in my
life is to relieve stress. When cooking dinner or baking bread I am able to
eliminate all other distractions—homework, sports, application deadlines…— and
focus on the things that I love to do. When baking, I focus on what is in front
of me rather than what outside thing needs to get done.
Food carries much significance in
cultural, social, familial, and geographical ways. I associate food mainly with
my family; we cook together and spend time talking about our day at the dinner
table. Eating dinner together may seem of little importance to others but to me
it is a way to spend more time with my family. When I am away at college I am
unable to have these family moments so I enjoy them all the more when we are
all together. The flavor and texture of food I eat is important, but I am
much more grateful for whom I am with than what I am eating.
We use tupperware for our chocolate chips too! And we have a stock of nestle bags in our pantry to refill them.
ReplyDelete