I think I need to write two more background pieces before I get to the ridiculousness of decanting olives.
This is one of them.
I keep remembering this time in Modesto when an older couple was going to have us over for dinner. The wife asked about our likes. I didn't want to be demanding, so I responded that anything was fine, casseroles or what not.
She looked so puzzled.
She had never made a casserole; they were really meat and potatoes people.
I had a companion around then who was totally into that. I remember thinking that maybe these food preferences were regional. She was from Minnesota and while we were in California then, maybe the older couple were transplants.
Of course, Modesto was also where I got a handout for the basic elements of casseroles, so I think the one woman would have encountered them before.
Also, apparently casseroles are big in Minnesota, but they are more likely to be called "hot dish".
I'm not saying that the region doesn't play a role, but that there are many other factors, like family background or economic level or job.
My mother was Italian, but she was from the North where the sauce tends to be less meaty and spicy. Also she was the youngest and got married at seventeen, so she did not have as much Italian cooking knowledge as any of her sisters. The most complicated dish that she made from there was gnocchi, one that her father made, instead of her mother. I suspect his cooking process was more visible.
(That is gnocchi, and I learned that more from observing her than being actually taught as well.)
My parents' cultures melded somewhat over cornmeal mush. It's kind of like polenta, popular in Northern Italy, but was also poor people food, except then you add milk and raisins. (I know it's a thing, but we never fried it.)
A lot of Mom's recipes came from women she knew through church. If there was a fair amount of casseroles in her repertoire, I assume part of that was because of their convenience.
The growing popularity of the casserole in the '70s is associate by at least one food critic with "the beginning of the dark ages of American culinary culture."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casserole
It's easy to look down on someone else's food. Don't do that.
I remember reading once that you should never eat anyone's meatloaf except for your Mom's. I think I have seen that about potato salad, too.
I am not really a big fan of either, but I get that there are things that can seem right or not, and memory and legacy is a big part of that.
The message yesterday was that you do not have to cook, but if you want to and don't know how, that can be changed.
Part of that freedom is the flexibility. There are lots of different types of foods with different ingredients and different cooking methods. If there is something easy to cook, but you don't like it, or something that you love but not enough for it to be worth the effort, those points and various others can all be valid.
There is more to it than equipment and recipes.