by John Donohue
Man with a Pan
Culinary Adventures of Fathers Who Cook for Their Families
edited by John Donohue
Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill
Published by
Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill
Post Office Box 2225
Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27515-2225
a division of
Workman Publishing
225 Varick Street
New York, New York 10014
© 2011 by John Donohue. All rights reserved.
Published simultaneously in Canada by Thomas Allen & Son Limited.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Man with a pan : culinary adventures of fathers
who cook for their families / edited by John Donohue.—1st ed.
p. cm.
eISBN 9781616200640
1. Cooking—United States. 2. Male cooks—Family relationships—
United States. 3. Cookbooks. I. Donohue, John, [date]
TX652.9.M36 2011
641.5973—dc22 2011007190
To Sarah,
who makes my cup runneth over:
you are my wellspring of love, support, and inspiration.
What woman wants, God wants.
—Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin
Contents
Introduction by John Donohue
Weeknight Chicken Parmigiana
Not-So-Basic Black Beans
JACK HITT
Putting Food on the Family
Really Good Chicken
In the Trenches: Glen Payne
Miso Cod
New Mexico Chili and Beans
MANNY HOWARD
Stunt Foodways
Jos’s Curry, or The Old Man’s Shiva Curry (Untouchable-Style)
Dum Aha (Fried-Potato Curry)
In the Trenches: Jack Schatz
Applesauce Meat Loaf
Chicken Paprika
Surefire Broccoli
STEPHEN KING
On Cooking
Pretty Good Cake
In the Trenches: Josh Lomask
Milk-Braised Pork
Double-Crispy Roast Chicken
PAUL GREENBERG
Heads Up!
Southeast Asian Catfish
Pan-national Everything-but-the-Kitchen-Sink Fish Cakes
SHANKAR VEDANTAM
The Hidden Brain: Gender and Cooking
Yashoda’s Potatoes
In the Trenches: Adam Bonin
Duck Breasts with Five-Spice Glaze
MARK BITTMAN
Finding Myself in the Kitchen
Pasta alla Gricia
In the Trenches: Christopher Little
Low Country Boil
JIM HARRISON
Chef English Major
Grouse Surprise
Elk Carbonade
In the Trenches: Brett Thacher
Tofu Bolognese
MATT GREENBERG
The Ribbing: A Screenplay
Grilled Burgers with Herb Butter
Beer-Can Chicken
Three-Day Ribs
MANUEL GONZALES
The Pie Guy
Pie Crust
Mexican Chocolate Pie
In the Trenches: Daniel Moulthrop
Pickles
Tomato Sauce
THOMAS BELLER
On Abundance
Grilled Redfish
KEITH DIXON
Alternate-Side Cooking
Roasted Celery Root, Potato, and Cauliflower Soup with Tarragon
JESSE GREEN
Who the Man?
Spinach and Rice Torta
Andy’s Mac and Cheese
In the Trenches: David Olivier
Chicken, Sausage, and Oyster Gumbo
SEAN WILSEY
Kitchen ABCs: Always Be Cleaning
Fish Tacos
Fagioli all’Uccelletto
Pistachio Pesto
MARIO BATALI
If It’s Tuesday, It Must Be Cardoons
Linguine with Cacio e Pepe
Bucatini all’Amatriciana
PETER KAMINSKY
Learning to Cook for Two Daughters
Whole Roast Cow
Chimichurri
In the Trenches: Henry Schenck
Spinach-Basil Pesto
Bruschetta
Broccoli Rabe
MICHAEL RUHLMAN
How Many Parents Does It Take to Roast a Chicken?
Roast Chicken for Two
Roast Chicken for Two (Continued), with Arugula Salad
Herbed New Potatoes
JESSE SHEIDLOWER
Four Legs Good, Two Legs Bad
Bacon-Wrapped Duck Breast Stuffed with Apples and Chestnuts
Mushroom Soup with Pear Puree and Cumin Oil
In the Trenches: Omar Valenzuela
Seviche
TONY EPRILE
A Taste for Politics
Vegetarian Bobotie
In the Trenches: Nir Hacohen
Chocolate Mousse
MOHAMMED NASEEHU ALI
The Way to a Man’s Heart
Kelewele-Spinach Salad
Peanut Butter Soup
In the Trenches: Pat Alger
Lone Star State of Mind Chili
WESLEY STACE
Patience Rewarded versus Instant Korma
Spicy Potatoes
Cauliflower with Shredded Ginger
Cucumber Raita
In the Trenches: Nicola Cetorelli
Simple Tomato Sauce
Carbonara di Zucchine
Quick Fish Fillets in Tomato Sauce
MARK KURLANSKY
Confessions of a Foodiephobiac
Cou-Cou
Baked Sea Bream
Thanks and Acknowledgments
Cartoon Credits
JOHN DONOHUE
Introduction
My wife, Sarah, and I have an open relationship. She opens the refrigerator to take things out, and I open it to put food in. I do almost all the cooking for her and our two daughters, Aurora, age five, and Isis, age three.
I was cooking long before I became a parent, mostly because I’ve always loved to eat. Maybe love isn’t the right word. It doesn’t quite capture the passion, the devotion, the fear, and the panic that I associate with food. Tall and thin, with a type A metabolism, I am constantly hungry. People marvel at how much I can pack away without gaining any weight. I marvel that people can skip breakfast without collapsing.
My mother was born in Ireland, and I am descended from Potato Famine survivors. It’s hard to imagine how anyone with my skin-and-bones frame and insatiable appetite could have lived long enough during those terrible years to pass on his genes. My direct ancestors must have been ruthless or brilliant to have avoided starving. I’m neither tough nor all that smart, so I have no idea how the genetic code that required me to eat two deli sandwiches a night as a teenager (and that compels me to eat a meal before going to a dinner party at a friend’s house) managed to endure. I sometimes think, on those rare occasions when I’m full, about how rich I would be if I wasn’t spending so much money on food. I don’t like to ponder how much I might have accomplished in life if I wasn’t always eating or thinking about what to eat next. I’d get depressed if I considered those things for long, but I don’t have the time—my hunger returns like clockwork.
Some cooks use a lot of equipment to make a basic meal. When I first started cooking for my family, no one used more gadgets and crockery than I did. Back then, to prepare a roast chicken, baked potatoes, and a head of broccoli, I needed to reach for a cutting board, a chef’s knife, a roasting pan, and a steamer, typically, along with a colander, a whisk, a slotted spoon, a set of measuring spoons
, a spatula, a four-quart saucepan, an eight-quart saucepan, a baking pan, an aluminum pie dish, silicone-coated tongs, three recycled thirty-two-ounce yogurt containers, four pot holders, five Pyrex ramekins, a Vacu Vin wine pump, and one rubber toy giraffe. My recipes didn’t require any special equipment, but my company in the kitchen at the time did; Isis was often looking over my shoulder, or I should say ankle, as I worked.
To keep her entertained, I offered her every dull-edged tool within my reach. She was less interested in the Technicolor stacking blocks, glow-in-the-dark teething rings, and myriad other plastic toys (vibrating, blinking, or otherwise) in the next room than in what I was doing. I washed, chopped, and sautéed as my daughter teetered about, investigating the pots, pans, spoons, and other implements I tossed her way. During those preverbal days, when Isis was around, I wasn’t just a cook; I was a juggler and a mime. Never mind a messy counter: the floor was an obstacle course. When I was finished cooking and Isis was finished playing, I often had to wash everything, twice. Our kitchen would have been the cleanest in Brooklyn except that Isis kept licking everything.
Before Sarah and I had kids, I did most of the cooking. Or we’d cook together. Or we’d eat out. Or we’d go hungry. New parents always marvel at all the time they wasted in their lives before children came along—how they can’t remember what they did with those empty Sundays, to say nothing of the vacant mornings and evenings all week long—but I really have no idea what I did before our kids were born. For all I know, we were feeding each other figs and strawberries while lounging on divans. Postmarriage and prekids, it was a heady time of easy freedom and grand plans. Sarah and I came of age after the first wave of feminism. We were swept away by the idea of equal opportunity for the sexes. When we got married, we assumed that we’d split the responsibility of running a house. Sarah devoted herself to her career as a filmmaker, and I devoted myself to artistic pursuits.
I saw this arrangement as a real bargain. With Sarah working, I would not grow up to be like my dad, who had worked day and night as a lawyer while my mother worked day and night at home taking care of five children. With Sarah working, I figured I could avoid growing up at all. Her income would relieve me of worrying about paying a mortgage or saving for college tuition. I would not have to strap myself to the career ladder to hoist my family into the upper middle class. It was all going to take care of itself, or so I thought. And for a while, it did. With Sarah doting on me, I discovered talents I didn’t know I had. I started drawing and painting. My artistic career flourished—I soon started selling cartoons to the New Yorker and other publications.
Then we decided to have children. I was at home for the first three weeks after Aurora’s birth, whipping up potatoes au gratin, roast leg of lamb, and Bolognese sauce for my wife and my firstborn, who at that time was breast-feeding nicely. After I went back to my job as an editor, we started to frequent the fancy restaurants in our Brooklyn neighborhood. Aurora would sleep on my chest in the BabyBjörn as we dined. Or at least that was the plan. She’d often wake just before the entrées arrived, and we ended up spending a lot of money picking wasabi and bread crumbs from her hair while bouncing her on one knee or walking with her outside the restaurant to keep her from crying.
One brisk spring night, in search of a more affordable option, I led Sarah to an Austrian pub that I’d just read about in the paper. It was about twenty blocks from our house, but walking that far seemed easier than figuring out what to cook at home. The restaurant was crowded with attractive young people whose smiles and laughter and glow all said one thing: We’re carefree and having fun. I sat in a drafty corner with Aurora strapped to my chest. She started to wail. The food came and went.
On the way home, I was angry and dissatisfied, and I had two realizations. The first was that I didn’t care for schnitzel. The second was that my life wasn’t working. We’d gone to the restaurant because the refrigerator was empty. Dining out was supposed to be rewarding and convenient, but I was still hungry, short on cash, and miles from home. Looking down at the cold bluestone of the Brooklyn sidewalk, I realized that if I wanted a good dinner when I got home from work, it was going to be up to me.
There didn’t seem to be any choice. Sarah was not interested in cooking or planning meals. It hadn’t yet occurred to me that I should be doing it. No one was doing it in our household. I wasn’t happy with this realization. I was enraged. Enraged to come home from work and stare at an empty refrigerator. Enraged to have to wield a spatula after a long day at the office.
Then we had a second child, Isis, who, unlike her older sister, had trouble sleeping for more than a few hours at a stretch. We became exhausted, emptied, spent, consumed entirely. We were operating on four hours of sleep a night. Our personalities shriveled. My reading comprehension dropped to that of a one-eyed crocodile. Nothing worked to get Isis to sleep better. Out the window went my second career as a cartoonist, Sarah’s fragile prospects as a filmmaker, and all semblance of civility. Waking night after night at 3:00 a.m., Sarah would get out of bed cursing like a drunken David Mamet character. I learned a few choice phrases and started to reply in kind.
Distraught from a lack of sleep, troubled by Sarah’s anger, and dodging thoughts of our financial instability, I ducked into the kitchen. I went in a coward and I came out a conquering hero. Night after night, when I whipped up something delicious that pleased Sarah and fed Aurora and Isis, I felt like I was doing something so right that I couldn’t possibly go wrong. Sarah would occasionally roll her eyes when I told her I was making a three-hour beef tagine with green olives or a rabbit stew with fresh sage. That was OK with me. In retrospect, a different kind of woman would have shooed me out of the kitchen and sent me pounding the pavement to get a better job. Sarah isn’t like that, though, and she was delighted to enjoy my cooking. She’d repeatedly told me that she’d been happy to eat commercial spaghetti sauce and pasta every night before we met. During that same period in her life, she would also take refuge in empty churches in the middle of the day to cry her eyes out for no tangible reason. Could it have been the jar-sauce pasta? Maybe.
I love being in the kitchen. And as a father, I am not alone. The amount of time dads now spend behind a stove is at an all-time high. In 2005, according to John P. Robinson, a sociologist and a coauthor of the book Changing Rhythms of American Family Life, fathers accounted for nearly a third of the time a family spent cooking. These days, the percentage is certainly higher. In 1965, that figure was only 5 percent. That’s quite a rise.
Why are more fathers cooking now than in the past? There isn’t one answer, but a number of trends are pushing dads into the kitchen as never before. Over the past forty years, the percentage of working mothers has doubled, hitting nearly 80 percent of all mothers this decade. With more moms working, someone else has to do the cooking. The restaurant and prepared-foods industry has been quick to recognize this. During nearly the same time period, the restaurant industry’s annual revenue has grown from less than $40 billion to close to $600 billion. That’s more than a tenfold increase, and those figures are in current dollars. At roughly the same time, the percentage of Americans who are overweight has risen from 44 percent of the population to more than 66 percent.
These are unhealthy and unsettling trends. Yet it is improbable that the United States will return to the Leave It to Beaver days of the single-income family. Even if this became a possibility, women aren’t likely to trade their BlackBerrys and cell phones for wooden spoons and aprons. The social consequences of such an arrangement, however, pale in comparison to the potential future economic costs. More young women go to college now than men. Girls achieve higher scores in reading and writing than boys at every grade level. The nation would suffer mightily if such a highly intelligent and educated segment of the labor pool decided to stay home.
What is to be done? The nation could continue eating out more and more and getting fatter and fatter. Or men could cook more. This is happening already: the stories in this
book document it. Chef Mario Batali reveals what he makes around the house. The cookbook author Mark Bittman discusses how he found himself behind the stove. The novelist Stephen King offers tips about what to cook when you don’t feel like cooking, and the screenwriter Matt Greenberg delivers a comic yet harrowing tale of grilling gone wrong. The science journalist Shankar Vedantam uncovers hidden associations in the subconscious that affect how we view cooking. And the memoirist Sean Wilsey gets to the truth behind doing the dishes.
Along with these essays, this book includes interviews with working fathers from across the country—from a biochemist in Boston who talks about how learning to make chocolate mousse influenced his career as a scientist, to a school counselor in Atlanta who grocery shops at 3:00 a.m., to a former public radio host in Cleveland who recalls how he got involved in canning.
What becomes clear is that every well-fed family is well fed in its own way. One important commonality can be found, however: Men who cook for their families are more likely to be happy than those who don’t. Or at least they are more likely to have sex with their wives. Various studies have documented that men who do more work around the house—and that includes cooking—are more likely to have spouses who are in the mood for sex. Oysters have long been rumored to be an aphrodisiac. It is now known among married couples that oysters—along with everything from baked potatoes to stir-fried zucchini—are indeed an aphrodisiac as long as they are prepared by the man.
Which leads me to one of my shortcomings. If anything, I cook too much food, too often. Back when Isis was younger, she typically woke a little after five in the morning, and I used to get up with her and start chopping. I would get as much done as I could before breakfast. On any given morning, I’d have a fine spiced dal going in one big pot, and a smaller pot of rice finished to go with it: lunch for my wife and kids. Plus I’d prep dinner for myself and the kids, which meant letting a pot of Bolognese sauce simmer or readying a chicken for roasting that evening (by leaving it, uncovered, in the base of the fridge, I effortlessly dried out the skin, making it all the more crispy after it came out of the oven). We can’t eat all the food I cook, and our freezer sometimes looks like a Rubik’s Cube, tightly packed with plastic containers of soup, lasagna, sauce, and chicken stock.