Eating Alone – Definitely worth it!

I am passionate about food and cooking, some may say obsessed. I eat alone, and I eat with family and I eat with friends. I am happiest when I cook and eat my own food. Admittedly I have not lived alone for many years, but I have done in the past and there are occasion when I am the only one in the house requiring a meal. I like to experiment with food and create my own recipes, but I also use many recipes from cookery books and magazines. I frequently find myself cooking a new dish which is recommended as a dinner party dish. Well, for a start, to me the recipe looks good enough for a family meal, and also it is a good idea to test out recipes. One important piece of advice I picked up from studying Home Economics ‘A’ Level at school was never to cook a new, complicated recipe for the first time for an important dinner. Much better to have a trial run.

Over the years I have talked to many people who say that they do not cook much because they live on their own. ‘It is not worth cooking just for me.’ ‘Since my divorce I haven’t cooked very much.’ ‘I don’t look forward to entertaining because I am so out of practice.’ I have never quite been able to grasp the concept of not cooking ‘because it is just me.’ Just me! What an outrage! I don’t think that the ‘just me’ sits very well with the modern idea of independence and not necessarily relying on other people for your well-being. After all, people buy houses, do the gardening and pay the bills when it is ‘just me.’ So why not cook? I do think one advantage of eating alone is that one can do slightly odd recipes which others might not want to try!

Of course there are all sorts of arguments including the fact that some food items come in larger packs than is required for one person. This should really only matter if you are considering fresh fruit, vegetables, meat and fish. Dried and canned goods can easily be stored. I do find that even though I am a supermarket shopper, there is numerous choice when it comes to buying loose fruit and vegetables. Meat and fish counters are good for having exact amounts weighed, and even packaged meat and fish is fairly flexible in terms of quantities. There is always the option of the freezer for over-flow.

Many cookery books and magazines are really helpful nowadays with ideas for using up your left-overs, and even recipes devised for making a batch of stew or sauce to be turned into two different recipes. I enjoyed using Delia Smith’s One is Fun in my student days. Save with Jamie although not a cookery book specifically designed for solo dining, does have some great ideas for cooking a joint of meat, chicken or a whole salmon, with several recipe ideas using up the left-overs. They are the kind of recipes that make you want to cook extra to make sure of having left-overs. Scaled down, many of these recipes would work well for one person. In one of Jamie’s other books Jamie’s Dinners he also has a chapter called Family Tree, which takes one base recipe with some different ways of using the base, such as pesto or slow-cooked shoulder of lamb.

I enjoy listening to The Food Programme with Sheila Dillon, and the recent feature of programmes on the theme of How we Eat is really interesting. In fact, it was on hearing the first in the series Eating Alone that I decided to write this article. The theme has been buzzing in my head for years. I really identified with Anna del Conte in her 90s, widowed and still enjoying cooking for herself. I hope that I’ll be still enjoying cooking when I am widowed and in my 90s!

I do think that in my own case it is definitely a matter of upbringing and a reflection of the importance of family meals when I was a child. My mother always cooked proper meals for us, and we always ate together as a family. I grew up in a family of five, with two older brothers . At home, if one of us was late home and not to eat with the rest of the family, a portion would always be set aside to be heated up later. No-one was expected to hunt in the fridge or freezer for food if he or she had not eaten at the usual time. Indeed, hunting in the freezer would probably only unearth ice-cream, bread-crumbs or a piece of frozen lamb! My mother used to buy a whole lamb from the butcher’s and bag it into meal-sized portions. Forty years later, and my freezer is in a similar state. It does not actually contain a jointed lamb, but it certainly does not contain any quick meal options such as pizzas or burgers.

Although it was always my mother who cooked the meals (my father had a few specialities such as omelettes and marmalade), she instilled in all of us a love of home-cooked food. Matthew, my brother, lives on his own and has always loved cooking.

I decided to turn once again to my Archers Appreciation friends and ask them their views. I was particularly interested to hear from people who eat alone and do not cook from scratch, but more importantly, from those whose habits change when they cook for others. In a way, if people live alone and use a lot of take-aways and ready-meals because they have never had the cooking bug, to me that is sad but understandable. However, my aim is not to judge people for their choices and habits but just to make observations.

Here then is a selection of comments from my friends on their eating habits. I find this a fascinating insight into modern life.

Alison Monk – Lived on my own for many years. No money so cooked from scratch. Then had a partner and cooked for us both and really enjoyed it. Now back on my own and sadly do a mix of scratch and ready meals. Hate both as I am not a good cook! Wish I could eat out every night

Sj Mitchell Perfectly happy with good ready meals (like M&S calorie counted ones), occasionally had a whirlwind baking or cooking bash to try new recipes, but find it a huge chore after a day at work. having spent 10+ years in Asia where street food is great and kitchens are tiny, why would I cook if I don’t have to? not my thing!

Jo Morris I live alone and have a mixture of home cooked and ready meals/quick foods. I love cooking but not really just for me, as it takes the pleasure out of it, mainly. I would definitely cook from scratch more if I had someone/people to share it with.

Helen Brace I live alone when the kids aren’t home from school/uni. When possible I batch cook, so I will make 4 potions, eat one and free 3 (we probably eat two given the size of by backside!)

I will often eat nice simple things like smoked salmon, with fresh bread and a salad. I’ve very partial to the mussels in white wine from Lidl, which is a quick indulgence meal. Pasta with anchovies and capers is a good one. And baked potatoes. I also make nice stuff for lunch.

Jane Walker I don’t exactly live alone but when I am alone I cook as if I were cooking for other people and when with other people I cook what I might make if I were cooking just for me. In other words I always cook from fresh ingredients and make fairly simple healthy wholesome stuff. EG if someone gave me a load of celery from their allotment I might make Delia’s celery, apple and tomato soup which is rather complicated and takes over an hour to make, even if just for me, because it is healthy and delicious. I like the way cooking is an activity which punctuates the day. Conversely I hate food shopping. (Jane, I can completely identify with you, although I don’t quite follow the not liking shopping aspect!)

Ian Williams I lived alone for many years. Maybe of interest, both as an active alcoholic and later sober. In the final stages of alcoholism I batch cooked tomato sauce and ate pasta more or less when I wasn’t in an alcoholic coma. Otherwise I always cooked lavishly at about 11pm and enjoyed a proper three course meal around midnight, followed by cheese; two bottles of wine and a bottle of port in earlier times; Badoit and espresso after I’d sorted myself out. Unless I had lunch out, this would typically be my only meal of the day. But I always cooked from scratch with fresh ingredients, and usually in the French style; occasionally I’d do a stir fry and less occasionally a full roast. After I got sober my doctor intimated that it was probably the cream and butter in my French sauces and sticky puddings that saved my life. I’m married now; I still cook a proper meal but usually only a main course and served at around 7pm. ‘Pudding’ these days is usually a White Magnum. (I really appreciate Ian’s honesty. This is particularly fascinating to me, as I have lived with an alcoholic who had little or no interest in food).

Joy Atkins Live alone and eat a mix of ready meals or l batch cook stews, curries, casseroles etc and freeze in portions. Either way l add fresh vegetables to the evening meal. Sandwich lunch.

Hilary Athey I live alone, enjoy cooking and experimenting with cooking from scratch. The nearest I get to ready meals is batch cooking food for the freezer.

I’ll do something really special if I’m entertaining but day to day, I consider that I’m worth making as much effort as I would if not a solo. (Hear, hear! I totally agree with you Hilary!)

Kim Stabler Live alone, but see partner at the weekends. Always cook from scratch (and have lost 7stone in the last 18 months, so cook healthy things). I enjoy cooking so try a lot of new recipes, but usually cook for 2 nights at a time. Eat at the table for breakfast; dinner often but not always in front of the telly. (That is amazing Kim. I wonder if I would put on weight if I ate ready-meals – not that I want to find out!)

Sarah Gough I live alone and have done so for the last 20 years. I’ve moved my eating habits from junk food eaten in hotels and my desk – I had a job where I lived away from home in a hotel. Eating out every night was a no-no so it was burgers or cold food every night sitting in a hotel room. Pity me! I now work from home but loathe cooking with a vengeance, while trying to eat properly. So eat ready prepared veg heated/cooked in the microwave with anything that can be cooked on my George formby (Yes, I know it’s George Forman but I do only use it when I’m cleaning windows) Grill.

Helene Crawford I cook properly but I don’t eat at the same times as when I had a family to cater for. I eat whatever I like whenever I feel like it! Most of my food is one pot stews, curries, soups, dhal, ratatouille etc etc. I love living alone!

Jennifer Ruth Lopez Since my husband died just over two years ago my diet has gone to hell, sometimes, rarely, I cook a proper meal but mostly I don’t, after a lifetime of cooking for others, and being thought of as a good cook I seldom bother, I know this is bad for me, I buy things to cook and then they go off, my meat stays in the freezer. I know about good dietary habits, but somehow can’t make myself bother. If family come to stay I revert to my previous cooking habits.

Sally Hayward I began living alone a year ago after my 20 year marriage ended. I hardly ever cook for myself. I tend to eat salad, cold quorn sausages and lots of beetroot! But always a cold meal. Not sure why I don’t cook a hot meal for myself. Part of the unbearable process of the past year. Guilt, regret and all the swirl of emotions have affected me, and I do wonder whether I feel I don’t ‘deserve’ a proper cooked meal. Interesting!!

Cherry Waters I just can’t be arsed to cook for one. When I was mum in a family of 5 I did about half of the cooking and found it tedious (although I like baking and jam making). Then when all had flown the nest I found I often couldn’t be bothered. Growing my own and keeping chickens meant I have had weeks of broccoli omelettes (on the days I didn’t make do with crisps and chocolate). Now I split my time between looking after my octogenarian parents, and being on my own. When catering for parents I quite enjoy trying out new meal ideas (using Jamie O’s latest), but back home alone I seem to have become a teenager again and just open cupboards eating whatever is to hand. Whenever a chick returns I enjoy going into nurturing mode and making nice meals for them.

Jude Jones When I lived alone my cooking was no different from cooking for two or four just less of it or freeze the left overs. Singles are not sadoes. (Hear hear!)

Lucy Bucknall Late to the party, but keen to contribute.
I left my 11 year marriage 18 months ago and live in a shared house with two foreign PhD students in England. While I was married I lived in France with my. French farmer husband in his farm. He ate a huge amount, hunted fanatically in the season and had a herd of beef cattle. We also had a large veggie garden + bounteous amounts of wild fruit, nuts, mushrooms etc, which he gathered in abundance (figs, plums, apples, peaches, quince…). I cooked a three course meal at lunchtime every day for the entire marriage – even if wasn’t going to be there because of my job. There were often additional mouths to feed, but basically it was just for him. At the weekends in the winter we almost always had a shoot going on at the farm, so I regularly prepared lunch for up to 12 men, and often their wives would pitch up for a meal in the evening. All in all tons of cooking, which I enjoyed, plus jam, chutney making, bagging up meat for the freezer, skinning hare, rabbit, plucking every sort of game bird etc.
I now just cook for myself – bliss – but never ready-meals. I freeze leftovers and sometimes just have porridge if I feel like it. Very occasionally eat with the housemates. Altogether very happy, but miss the wonderful ingredients from the farm! (Very best wishes to Lucy! I must admit that in another life I’d definitely be married to a farmer. Maybe though I am too romantic and have listened to The Archers too long for my own good! I’d be Jennifer or Jill, rather than Ruth!)

Dave Wolfskehl I live alone and cook for many, vegan and for a budget of around £22.00 for stores and five for energy. I grow, scavenge, and forage from the wild for veggies and buy in flour, pulses, some fruit, nut milk and coffee. (the oil, flour, pulses, pasta I purchase in bulk every four months) If I lived with others nothing much would change, except maybe I would do less washing up.

Although I have not been able to include all of the interesting feedback I had from my friends, I am pleased that from my straw poll very few people who are not motivated to cook when they are alone.  Out of 108 comments from my friends, about 75% of people definitely think it is worth cooking good food if they are alone. This is only a rough figure, as some of the feedback was mixed; some people had not fully made their minds up!

Thanks to my friends for all their contributions; this is far from a scientific study, but interesting nevertheless. Another cookery writer recommendation for lone eaters is Nigel Slater. Many of his recipes are simple and quick, and he often gives quantities for 2 people, which does make scaling recipes down much easier. The 30 Minute Cook is particularly good for finding easy-to-cook recipes which use fresh ingredients.

 


Are we Tourists or Travellers?






Some Roman Bridge or other in Alghero with a bit missing

Whenever we drive right into the middle of a city along a cobbled street which looks as if it should not be accessible to cars I always say, ‘oh well we’re tourists!’ Not that anyone has ever challenged us. We once famously drove right under the aqueduct in Segovia, Spain, completely unintentionally. Although there seem to be fewer pedestrianised streets in Southern European cities than in the UK, driving under the aqueduct was not meant to be an option! We think that locals are so bemused by seeing a UK registered car in such unlikely places, that generally they take no notice and do not challenge us!

Anyway, back to my original question. I decided that my best place for research would be amongst my Archers Appreciation friends on Facebook. They are such a lovely, witty, intelligent and friendly bunch of people that I often turn to them for ideas. Okay, I am a librarian by profession and know about the value of reliable research and what a wide range of sources there are. However, this article, like most of those on my blog, is meant to be fun and light-hearted. I shall not be referencing using the Harvard system.

At the end of July, the beginning of our long summer holiday, I asked them: ‘What is the difference between a tourist and a traveller?’ I agreed that I would quote their comments and mention them by first name. These are some of the responses I had. I shall then decide whether on balance their responses can prove definitively whether Paul and I are indeed tourists or travellers!

‘Travellers are nice people like us, tourists are other people.’ (Andrew)

‘A traveller is a pretentious tourist.’ (Jean)

‘Delusion.’ (Gina)

‘I travel, you are a tourist, he is a day-tripper.’ (Kate)

‘A traveller thinks they are better than tourists and thinks they are keeping it real! Travellers may wash less often – unless I am travelling! (Niki)

‘We like to think of ourselves as travellers – probably a bit pretentious I know – because we tend to travel for long periods and get close to the lives of real people as we go, rather than just going to see some attraction. I usually take the trouble to learn at least a little of the language if possible.'(Les)

‘A tourist is someone else, making the crowds bigger and the queues longer; a traveller is me, not part of the crowd or queue, just caught up in them.’ (Jamie)

‘A tourist pays for their holiday, a traveller has it paid for by their parents.’ (Dinsdale)

Reply from Helen: ‘Even in middle/old age?’

Reply from Jamie: ‘Oh god no, those yoof backpackers are decidedly tourists.’

‘A tourist takes a photo every 5 minutes, a traveller is content just to look.’ (Joan)

‘Travellers never stay at all-inclusive resorts, they are strictly for the tourists.’ (Louise)

‘I would say a tourist wants to look at places, and a traveller wants to experience places.’ (Sarah)

‘We are travellers; they are tourists. Probably working class. Or American.’ (John)

‘Tourists go where they are led. Travellers go where they will. Tourists seek comfortable situations. Travellers put up with whatever comes their way.’ (Di)

‘I spent 7 days in Petra and visited the site 5 times from different angles and loved talking to the Nabataean; they realised I wasn’t going to hire their donkey so used to just chat about life and drink mint tea.’ (Rachel)

‘Round here, travellers set up their caravans in the local park and leave mountains of rubbish and human poo behind when they depart several weeks later.’ (Deb) – As Les pointed out, this could be the wrong sort of traveller!

Thanks for all the helpful suggestions and contributions from my lovely Archers’ friends. In a way I think that Andrew, Kate, Jean, Gina and Niki have hit the nail on the head. I don’t like to think that we are better than other people. Paul and I talk about ourselves being ‘travellers’ in a jokey way. I do like to visit the attractions of the city, the places that everyone else wants to go to. For instance, when we arrived in Bilbao at the beginning of our journey, we spent several hours in the Guggenheim museum.  According to Joan, I am definitely more of a tourist than Paul, as I do take a lot of photos. For our 4 week holiday this year, I have probably taken about 1000 photos, and it is going to take a long time to sort them out! I also like to do silly things, such as standing in the same pose as a statue and getting Paul to photograph me!

Flowery Dog outside the Guggenheim

Sarah with Garibaldi in Palau

We do like to plan our holidays, and always book accommodation in advance. We wash every day, and always eat in restaurants or I cook proper meals in our villa. We do not eat street food or walk around eating – something to do with my upbringing I daresay! I actually love the look of street food, but just want a table and chairs to complete the experience! The planning is partly because we like home comforts, and partly because we often travel at peak times – getting decent accommodation in August last minute is not easy! We also like self-catering, and this is really not practical or even possible to book last minute.

Louise points out that a traveller would never stay at an all-inclusive resort. Okay, at this point I had to make my confession to my friends that we did do this for our honeymoon in Cuba! (July 2004)To be honest, I think that most of the hotels in Cuba are all-inclusive, and it may have been difficult to do otherwise. We did love the holiday, but it is the only time we have ever stayed in a hotel for 2 weeks and not done any cooking at all! I am not sure we’ll ever do it again, although one of my ambitions is to go on a cruise; my dream holiday is a world cruise for several months! If Paul reads this, there is a great one advertised in the back of the Radio Times – 120 nights departing in January 2019. Passenger 1 pays from £15,999 and passenger 2 goes free!

Rachel’s comments about her experiences in Petra sound very much like our idea of making the most of a place. We often return to a favourite city, and sometimes just wander the streets, not visiting any museums or cathedrals. My favourite activity is to sit in cafes and restaurants and watch the world go by. When we went to the Alpujarras a few years back, we went to Granada several times at different times of the day; once we went early morning, and another time we went in the evening just for dinner. On another visit we did go to the Alhambra Palace, although the intense heat nearly defeated me!

However, when it comes down to it, I know that I am more of a tourist than Paul is. I adore tourist shops and buying souvenirs and gifts to take home. I send about a dozen postcards to friends and family whilst we are away. Paul is in his element when visiting archaeological sites, and has a particular passion for Visigothic sites (okay, my little joke! I believe there are not actually that many Visigothic sites world-wide!) I am convinced that an interest in the Visigoths is not common among tourists! This summer there were many interesting archaeological sites to visit in Sardinia, and I do enjoy these experiences, just not in the heat! Paul very kindly found places for me to rest and amuse myself whilst he went exploring. Luckily he was usually able to find me a beautiful beach with crystal clear sea, and my favourite activity on holiday in August (yes, it even comes above going to the shops!) is swimming. Now, would you consider swimming to be a tourist activity? Certainly on our travels, we came across very few UK visitors, and we did not see another GB registered car for many weeks (not until we reached Chamonix). However, there did seem to be a lot of local tourism.

Les makes a really good point about learning the language. I do feel less of a tourist in France because I speak French (could be fluent if I made the effort!) In fact, I was very pleased to interview our host at our final hotel in France, conducting the entire conversation in French (watch out for my future blog post about Maison Ailleurs). Paul also speaks French (not as well as I do!) and has a smattering of Italian. We both speak a few words in Spanish and can just about manage menus in Italy and Spain. We picked up a bit of Portuguese too, last year. Sometimes I get utterly confused and have spoken short sentences partly in French, Italian and Spanish!

Our mode of travel is probably unusual to some. We very rarely fly (I cannot remember the last time we went on an aeroplane – maybe 7 years ago?) This year we went on 5 ferries – Portsmouth to Bilbao, Barcelona to Sardinia, Sardinia to Corsica, Corsica to Genoa and finally Caen to Portsmouth. On ferries 2, 3 and 4 we were the only UK travellers as far as we could make out! Ours was certainly the only GB, right-hand drive car on these ferries, something which did confuse some of the ferry staff! Now, I ask you this, would a tourist travel all that way by 5 ferries and hundreds of miles of driving?! My daughter came to join us in Sardinia for a week, taking the more conventional route from Heathrow to Olbia!

So, what do you think? Are we tourists or travellers? Does it really matter?!

GB Car Spotted at our Hotel in Chartres!