Entry tags:
Demographics of Dreamwidth, in nutshell
What Dreamwidth does not have as a field on its user profile: "Tumblr Username"
What Dreamwidth does have as a field on its user profile: "Ravelry Username"
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Oh, Dreamwidth. Never change. Keep on living that dream. width
What Dreamwidth does have as a field on its user profile: "Ravelry Username"
...

Oh, Dreamwidth. Never change. Keep on living that dream. width

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I DON'T REALLY UNDERSTAND THE SUDDEN POPULARITY AMONG HIPSTERS OF EITHER
AND YET I FEEL THIS UNCOMFORTABLE SOCIAL PRESSURE TO PRETEND I'M INTO BOTH
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I knit. But I suck at it -- almost as much as I suck at social networking. Or socializing of any kind, really.
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Of course, I can't really cook either. In fact I pretty much live the pathetic do-nothing-yourself existence of the American wage slave, with all the high-fructose corn syrup and plastic waste that implies. But I don't have a Facebook! Something in me objects to the notion of any of my acquaintances having my contact info and being able to contact me and put the onus on me to either refuse to answer them or let them in, and by something in me I think I mean "my desire to ever be anonymous for a second ever again."
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On the other hand, when I can't write (which is, uh. Usually), spending the time making something can help satisfy some of my productive/creative urges.
But cooking is the best bang for one's buck, budget-wise and creatively. If only my stove and oven were more than baseline functional...
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For one, the whole beginners' cooking culture is totally Western-centric. I didn't grow up with the same KIND of food when I ate at home at all than a lot of people in cooking communities, so when I hear the same old advice of "buy the Joy of Cooking!" I don't know how to say, well, I'm lactose-intolerant, I don't particularly like meat or sweets, and I grew up on East Asian cooking. The fact is, the kinds of grocery stores my family had access to growing up (on the West Coast) just don't exist where I've lived in recent years (on the East Coast) so my "go-to" simple childhood comfort foods that I do know how to make are just not as simple when I have to think for a moment where to even get the right kind of kimchi. Sure, I know I could drive 25 minutes out of my way to do so -- or I could pick up a chicken sandwich from a drive-thru and some coffee or something else that's promised to reap instant blood sugar rewards. Point being, beginning cooking and cookability and simple cooking communities are great for white Americans reared on white Americana, but their idea of diversity tends to be, "ooh, I picked up some curry powder from Whole Foods." Which... yeah, so, hey, drive-thru, about that chicken sandwich!
More complications: I wasn't really raised on home cooking at all. I was a latchkey, more or less, and one of my biggest taste memories of childhood is Kraft Mac & Cheese; I doubt I'm the only one who doesn't have much knowledge or experience of cooking, kitchen cleaning, how and when to use fresh produce, and all that jazz but a lot of knowledge and experience of what fast food chains are open late and what ingredients you can miss in box processed food and still not be missing much, when you could just add extra skim milk instead of the butter, that sort of thing. I wonder if people who grew up on potlucks and family cooking traditions realize that they gained a lot of knowledge that people who didn't utterly lack and are not easy to learn.
Aside from that, there's more stuff like the fact that if you don't use ingredients you're wasting them and cooking as a beginner holds an element of risk and possible waste that prepared food doesn't... but at the same time, despite all that, I know I should cook more, so I am always thinking about it. I dunno.
... "so what are my thoughts on cooking" err yeah sorry about that, THAT WASN'T MEANT TO BE TL;DR
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