Mother Knows Best
Our mothers are both 70-something. They both wore shoulder-padded silk blouses to their full-time jobs in the 80s; they’re both skeptical of salt that is not iodized and turkeys that are heritage; and both made it clear when we were growing up that family dinner – which, yes, was centered on an old-school Italian repertoire, and supplemented by a little Stouffer’s now and then -- was a given. They taught us well: In case you couldn't tell, prioritizing a shared meal at the end of the day with our kids (only without the frozen Salisbury Steak) has stayed with us. What other kitchen wisdom did Jody* and Emily* impart? In honor of Mother’s Day, here is a partial list.
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Set a Proper Table
Sure, most of us expect a little linens and a spray of roses on our holiday tables, but what about the other 363 days of the year? Sitting down to a meal with placemats, cloth napkins, and sometimes even fresh-cut flowers -- as Emily does most nights -- says to everyone at the table: This is a ritual that matters.
A Warm Dinner Plate is a Right, Not a Luxury
Our moms hail from an era where a good, hot meal was the elixir for just about anything – soccer loss, minor cold, catatonic depression. (Actually, maybe we do, too.) So why, Jody would like to know, would one serve a hot meal on a cold plate? She stacks her plates and warms them in the oven at 200°.
Call the Next Day
Gone are the days when people sent handwritten thank-you notes, via snail mail, after dining in someone’s home. But gratitude? That never goes out of style. It’s a lot of work to have people over for dinner, and we can’t remember a time when Emily didn’t pick up the phone the morning after to thank her hosts for all they had done. (Note: Texting or emailing a thank-you counts, too, but Emily has no idea what texting is.)
Keep Your Secrets
Fennel Seeds in the meatballs. Challah for the French toast. Peaches and blackberries in the cobbler instead of apples. Fresh bread for every meal. Cinnamon in the chili. Every family has their own “secret” food traditions, and it is our jobs to sustain them.
Serve Just Enough
Jody is famously stingy on the portions. (If we had to pick one story among thousands: In high school, she served my 220-pound line backer boyfriend a burger that fit in the palm of his hand. Okay, one more: she once had a single pint of ice cream for a party of nine.) It’s never been about calorie control – its that the idea of waste kills her. And yet she taught us something without even realizing it: Eat what you want, just don’t go crazy. Our one exception is entertaining. When people come over, you want the opposite. You want bounty.
Salad Does Not Need Lettuce
Emily was famous for her chopped (pronounced around the house as CHOP-id) salad. She had one of those low-fi, rotating choppers, and she would use it to dice red peppers, onions, carrots, cucumbers, celery, and whatever else she had in the vegetable drawer. Toss that with some Wishbone Italian? That right there is some crunchy goodness, and a dish we've updated and served to our kids countless times.
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Finish the Meal with Fruit
Jody is 100% Italian, which meant that she wasn’t afraid of churning out some breaded chicken cutlets, meatballs, and lasagna. It also meant that after any carb-and-ricotta-fest, we didn’t need much more than a bowl of strawberries or sliced melon for dessert. It helped that Jody was a world class fruit-selector -- squeezing, sniffing and shopping only in markets where she knew she could get the ripest melons and the juiciest apricots. (Coming next month, our fathers’ mantra: Finish the Meal with Chocolate.)
*Jody=Jenny’s mom; Emily=Andy’s mom
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This is our “Providers” column for the May issue of Bon Appetit. Head over there for a modern take on Emily's CHOP-id salad (hold the Wishbone), and while you're there, check out these Nine Mother's Day Gifts for Moms Who Already Have ALL The Pans. Photo credits: George Marks/Stringer (Vintage Mother Setting Table); Alex Lau (Chopped Salad)
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What about you? What's the best cooking advice you've received from your mom?