Cooking something delicious is really more satisfactory than painting pictures or making pottery. At least for most of us. Food has the tact to disappear, leaving room and opportunity for masterpieces to come. The mistakes don't hang on the walls or stand on shelves to reproach you forever. It follows from this that the kitchen should be thought of as the center of the house. It needs above all space for talking, playing, bringing up children, sewing, having a meal, reading, sitting, and thinking. . . . It's in this kind of place that good food has flourished. It's from this secure retreat that the exploration of man's curious relationship with food, beyond the point of nourishment, can start.
Jane Grigson, Good Things
More about Jane Grigson here.
This is a wonderful quote! Thank you for sharing! xo
ReplyDeleteI'm so pleased you liked it.
DeleteAs someone who loves to cook, I think this is a great quote! Thanks, Nan. And, I love the hollyhock photo. At first, I thought it was a hibiscus!
ReplyDeleteIt is my little miracle hollyhock - that it came back.
DeleteLes, please see my reply to Penny below. YOU gave me the cookbook where I found the quote!
DeleteAnd the hollyhock photo is just perfect!
ReplyDeleteAlways so happy to see your name in my comments!
DeleteLove this - now I'll be looking into reading her book(s)! Thank you. And your header pic is just wonderful!
ReplyDeleteMary
I want to read more from her, too.
DeleteFantastic! I just copied this into my Commonplace book! Thank you.
ReplyDeleteI actually noted this quote when I wrote a review of a cookbook - https://lettersfromahillfarm.blogspot.com/2011/01/lost-recipes-by-marion-cunningham.html
DeleteWhat a lovely reminder of Jane G. I read her column in the Observer for many years and, along with Elizabeth David, she taught me to cook, mainly I think, because their books were such a delight to read. Rather than a list of ingredients and the method of putting them all together, these women made me long for the food they were writing about. More a way of life than a recipe. xx
ReplyDeleteFascinating reading about Jane Grigson--have you read or used any of her cookbooks? I love cookbooks more than I love cooking.
ReplyDelete