| Cooking
with children (January 2009)

My daughters' school is
in the process of starting up an after school cooking
club and they were looking for volunteers to help run
it. Yes, I know I already run the gardening club but
this sounded so up my street I just had to volunteer for
that too.
This week I, along with
another volunteer, was sent on a training course for the
club. That turned out to be a fun day in which we made
our own elevenses and lunch, mostly based around
modifying a basic scone recipe to make scones, "bread"
and pizza bases. It was a good simple way to make a
variety of different foods using just one recipe and the
food tasted great. I had to admit, however, that when I
got home my stomach felt as if I'd eaten rather too many
scones!
I'm
always enthusiastic about food but after the course I
felt inspired and very keen to try some of the recipe
out with my children. As it happened my eldest invited
herself over to a friends house the next afternoon so
this presented me with the perfect opportunity to do
some one to one cooking with my youngest. It is easy to
always treat children in relation to their position in
the family rather than by their actual age - I always
treat one as the eldest and able to do lots of things
and to have responsibility, and the other as the
youngest, not able to do so much and in need of more
help.
This is, of course, the
genuine situation but sometimes I have to step back and
think what was my eldest able to do at the age of my
youngest. My youngest is five years old now - still very
little but also able to do more than I probably give her
credit for. One of the things they had talked about on
the course was taking health and safety into account but
teaching the children how to do "dangerous" things such
as chopping and cooking safely.
So I told my youngest
she was going to make some biscuits and I was just going
to help her with reading the instructions. She was
surprised when I told her that she was going to turn the
oven on and was going to use the hob to melt some
butter. She was even slightly anxious about it but I
explained that she would not be burnt if she did what I
said and was careful.
The recipe for oat
biscuits was beautifully simple and it took her only
half an hour to make them. I had to stop myself jumping
in a couple of times to help speed things along or to
make the biscuits a tidier shape. And what pride she had
when the biscuits were finished. She excitedly told her
sister all about it when she got home and told Daddy he
was only allowed to eat one and not the whole boxful!
After this my eldest was
keen to have a similar one to one experience and this
suited my just fine as I was equally as keen. She had
received a box of recipe cards for Christmas and this
morning she searched through it, having difficulty
deciding what she would like to make as so many recipes
appealed to her. We selected an apple flapjack recipe
straight away to make for Daddy and I said she could
choose something else to make her and her sister.
I helped her narrow down
her choice by removing cards that required ingredients I
didn't have. Finally, she decided on a Victoria sandwich
cake as she is studying the Victorian Era at school at
the moment. This pleased me as it meant I could use the
two new sandwich tins I had bought earlier in the week
in the sales and I could use up another small jar of my
homemade seedless raspberry jam.
My eldest was also
equally as anxious about switching the oven on and using
the hob to melt the butter for the flapjacks but she was
keen to peel and chop the apples. In fact, we were in
the kitchen for about 3 hours, including tidying and
washing up and she really enjoyed herself and asked me
if there was anything else she could help me make. I
suggested we make some coleslaw for dinner. Coleslaw was
one of the recipes we had made on the course as it gives
plenty of opportunity for the children to learn grating
and chopping skills.
Unfortunately, I didn't
have a beetroot in the fridge for the coleslaw and I had
to nip to the allotment for it. It is nice to see the
allotment again, newly emerged from its snowy blanket. I
have missed the colour green in the last fortnight! But
soggy doesn't even begin to describe what it was like
round there. Very wet clay soil and foliage that has
collapsed under the temperate and weight of the snow.
Icky!
I emptied the kitchen
compost caddy into the compost bin then grabbed a few
small beetroots and some leeks before heading over to
the brassica bed to inspect the plants. Earlier in the
week I had been idly staring out of the girls' bedroom
window at the snow-covered allotment only to spot a fat
wood pigeon sat amongst the sprouting broccoli, gorging
itself on the purple buds. I know I like to feed the
birds but there are limits! So it was no surprise to
find no flower heads left today. I picked some more
Brussel sprouts then pulled a large sheet of galvanised
netting over as much of the brassica plants as I could.
Back home my daughter
had settled down on the sofa to watch TV and wasn't
enthusiastic about making coleslaw anymore. I'd clearly
missed the moment but there was no point nagging - I was
feeling pretty tired of being in the kitchen myself by
then. Still, whilst I was still in the allotment mood, I
put a little bit of potting compost into a tray and
planted 7 peanuts into it. At least now I feel the
growing season has started even though I shall have to
wait a few more weeks before tearing open the seed packs
that arrived in the post this week. Patience...
patience... |