Beware If You Are Not Cooking Your Own Food.
Why should we really? It's too cumbersome. It's drudgery! Cooking is only for chefs right? We can buy our meals and have it delivered if we want to. Why bother?
Apparently we should NOT rely on corporations like McDonalds, KFC, Burger King etc. to cook food for us. Watch this eye opening video that exposes food corporations' marketing tactics to brainwash our perception of cooking. Jump to 2:30 if you are in a hurry ;)
What caught my attention is the fact that as the rate of home cooking decline, rates of obesity INCREASES! So the advice to solve health problems is eat anything you want, just cook it yourself.
Renowned activist and author Michael Pollan argues that cooking is one of the simplest and most important step people can take to improve their family's health, build communities, fix our broken food system, and break our growing dependence on corporations. The event was chaired by Tim Lang, professor of Food Policy at City University London.
Eating in is in almost every case healthier (and much more economical)
Most of us would be hard pressed to find a Primal restaurant near us (they do exist), and even in better restaurants with local and organic suppliers, there are the still the question marks lingering on the menu. What kind of oil do they use for cooking? What kind of cookware? While I enjoy going out and have no intention of forgoing that pleasure, there’s a certain peace in knowing every facet of my dinner. Compared to the larger landscape of conventional “dine out” choices, you’re astronomically better off eating in.
The better cooks we are, the richer and more varied our diets can be
The principle worked for our ancestors’ collective health, and it applies to us individually today. Like our ancestors, the right techniques open up new food possibilities for us – like cheaper and otherwise tougher cuts of meat. Additionally, many foods may be wholly uninspiring on their own but become fast favorites when paired with the right sauce or some novel herbs. As we expand our repertoire, we lessen the chance that we’ll get bored with our choices.
A few key cooking techniques and kitchen skills can go a long way in making our Primal dishes healthier and more satisfying. You get a lot of mileage, for example, in terms of both flavor and nutrition when you can make your own batches of bone broth and use them creatively with meat dishes, sautèed vegetables, or basic sauces. Braising opens up a whole new world with certain meats. Roasting can make certain vegetables glorious that you wouldn’t touch steamed. Playing with fats and incorporating them into – well, everything – can give your food levels of flavor that will confound your dinner guests and satisfy you to no culinary end. The end result of all these endeavors just might be you, Primal chef, developing a nuanced palate and kitchen wizardry you couldn’t ever imagine wanting – let alone having. What do you know – you got skills. And a damned good dinner at that.
Reference: marksdailyapple.com
How To Start Cooking? Be Inspired
For some of us who are fortunate to have parents that are great in cooking, this would be easy. But even I had problems learning from them because the only time I learn how to cook was when I moved out from my parents house.
Personally, I started really cooking when I watched a Korean soap opera "Witch Amusement" wherein the guy was an enthusiast cook. He never had a formal culinary training but only from his Dad. His enthusiasm infected me. Cooking is an art in itself, and I'm a bit artistic so I enjoy cooking. So look for your own inspiration. If you can't, get inspired by knowing that you are eating food that is much healthier.
Here's an episode of my inspiration.












