My friend Suzanne requested that I take on this topic, an essay on ease, elegance and economy. The story is that my mother was reading a book from the library, name and author now forgotten, on housekeeping (which activity Mom has never cared for) and the author stated that of the three desirable qualities, ease, elegance and economy, one could only have two of the three. The formula plays out something like this: if you are rich, with endless resources, you can buy elegance and ease. You can have servants to do all tasks you find unpleasant. You can buy the best of ingredients and have them served up on the finest china. You can even hire a chef or a cook to cook your meals for you: if you hire a good one, well-trained, with a fine palate and endless patience and high-dexterity, you can serve vol au vent and pastry swans filled with creme chantilly or whatever your elegant little heart desires.
If you are not rich, you may decide to go for economy and ease. That is the American way of processed foods, the middle aisles of the supermarket containing all of those frozen things in bags and boxes: prepared pies and lasagna and pizza. Coupons in every newspaper and online will help you cut your costs further. The same supermarket features paper plates, paper napkins and plastic cups, as well as disposable roasting pans — you can cook and serve your meals on things you throw away — how easy is that?
If you get excited when you see a recipe for altering your store-purchased roast chicken or cake mix, this way is for you. To be fair, the entry of Trader Joe’s into wider markets has increased the quality and selection of many packaged foods, although many of these items are heavier on salt than they should be. An easy and economical dinner option would be to heat up some Tasty Bites with some rice, or pop open the Prego and make spaghetti, as we occasionally do on nights when no one wants to cook. We all have our favored shortcuts. Just be aware that consistently choosing economy and ease has a high cost to the planet and to your health. Celi of The Kitchens Garden once suggested visualizing everything you discard going into a heap in your yard because, in a big sense, it does.
Then there is the middle way, the one where you strive for elegance and economy. In the absence of servants and cooks, you become the servant and cook yourself. The way to produce elegance out of economy is to work and to learn. With the help of cookbooks and food shows and now cooking blogs you can teach yourself to make puff pastry, croissants, sourdough pain au levain. You can practice flipping crepes and making elegant, seasonal marmalades and jams. You can make your own pestos, rather than buying them. You can make your own pasta and cheese like John from the Bartolini Kitchens. You can raise your own chickens like Suzanne and Scott and run your own sustainable farm like John and Celi. There is no end to the elegance to which you can aspire if you are willing to put in the labor. With this option, you cannot fire the cook, you can only start over and attempt to do better. We have pretensions to elegance and economy around here: we have the economy down and we struggle with the elegance, sometimes gracefully, sometimes humorously. We have learned to know our limits: deep-fried dishes and crepes are beyond my reach, so I reserve those dishes for restaurant dining, currently a rare treat.
Many of you in the food blogosphere do better with elegant tables than I do. We do eat on china and use cloth napkins and I can manage a garnish on a good day, but I am generally more concerned with the taste and texture of the food than I am with the presentation. I do well on economy, although I could do better — I strive to use every bit of food that comes into our household: the Riverdog Farm chicory challenge is a good example of that and I have chronicled the ever-expanding list of things I make each citrus season. Using up all of that food is work and conversations around our house frequently begin with “We need to use up the sour milk” or “We need to think of something to do with the plum jam” or “What are we going to do with seven leeks?” The best starting point I can come from is that of love, when I want to make my own sourdough because I love it so much and can’t be down at the bakery everyday buying samples, when I have raspberries so special that I want to learn to make raspberry caramel to layer into a dessert. The combination of elegance and economy opens the door to challenge: can I make my own winter squash gnocchi? Will it be as good as what I have eaten in restaurants? It isn’t yet, but I have not given up trying.
I confess that I love to spend money on food and that I love to buy special, high-quality ingredients. When I walk through the Farmers’ Market in Berkeley I am often tempted to buy more than I can use easily, especially in the summer and early fall when the choices are so wide. If I had unlimited funds, I would buy more whipping cream, more organic milk and eggs and meat. I would experiment with coconut oil and almond flour and coconut sugar. I would buy raspberries every week during their season and eat them until I was sick of them. I would buy enough tomatoes in tomato season to have dried tomatoes for the other eight months of the year. With the economy I have been taught by my careful mother I scour the shelves at Grocery Outlet for true bargains: looking for great products at reduced prices is part of the work entailed in elegance and economy, as is limiting shopping to one trip a week and relying on creativity to devise appropriate substitutions and menu changes when we have run out of something.
This week I had the opportunity to visit what I affectionately call “the rotting rack” at Berkeley Bowl, the place where they put produce items reduced for quick sale. There I found several pounds of grapes for ninety-nine cents, organically grown fresh strawberries for the same price and a whole green papaya, which will soon become Thai green papaya salad (stay tuned). To find these items, I had to pick through many clam shells of moldy strawberries and under-ripe hothouse tomatoes. To turn these items into meals and snacks, I will have to contribute labor: my friend Elaine and I sat around last night removing the seeds from the grapes and arranging grape halves on the trays of my dehydrator where they became raisins overnight. I also had to sort and trim all of the strawberries to make sure no mold lurked about (There was none).
There are many paths through the maze of ease, elegance and economy. Eating things in their seasons is a good start. While seasonal delicacies such as lobster and raspberries may never become cheap, they are at their best and most plentiful in their time and when the supply goes up, the price goes down. Think of zucchini season when you have to do anything you can to refuse zucchini donations from overzealous gardeners. Good restaurants capitalize on seasonality, buying their produce from small farmers and varying their menus to serve the season’s treasures. Our local Chez Panisse built its reputation on foraging for the best ingredients each week and preparing them skillfully. Not everyone can eat at Chez Panisse, but we can do our best to shop locally, eat fresh food whenever possible and create our own experiences of elegance.
P.S. For the record: I will eat Prego marinara but I always make brownies from scratch.
Agreed. Had I unlimited funds, I’d probably buy almond flour by the case-ful.
I have yet to try it (although I hear you can make your own)
You have some wonderful tips and tricks and ideas here to keep a kitchen running well stocked and well oiled 🙂
As much as I love to bake, I do not believe in going bankrupt for it 😉
Cheers
Choc Chip Uru
Yes, I agree. Bankrupt me no bankruptcies. We have been shopping around for inexpensive flour.
What a thoughtful and thought-provoking post, Sharyn. Your friend, Suzanne, chose wisely when she asked that you pen this entry. And you’re right. No matter our personal budget, we can strive to eat the freshest, locally grown food available. We and our planet will be better off for it.
Thanks for the shout-out, too! 🙂
You are welcome, John. Our ancestors ate that way. We can do our best to emulate them.
Fabulous post Sharyn – and I love your thoughts – you are so right about the economy vs. elegance thing, and it is one thing I struggle with the most. II love your tips about seasonality and though I too, share the same love of food shopping – practicality and restraint are so important in the situations! I love that you use everything up..something too few of us do 🙂 That alone if made a focus could make a giant difference to waste, production, and pocketbooks alone…
Great thoughts! 🙂
Thank you, Shira. Economy and elegance can be had with work (ours), but that pretty much leaves ease out of the picture.
I always feel like I’m just short of accomplishing any of these.. economy and elegance would be the one I think I “fit in” but, again, there’s always more I can do to be frugal and thoughtful in my food choices. Thanks for the reminder, Sharyn!
Elegance is yours, Smidge. We all know it from the cakes covered with white roses, a testament to the work you do to make elegant presentations. The elegance painting was the hardest for me to do, which made me laugh.
You’re so kind.. I love that painting by the way!
I think chicory is good cooked: broiled or roasted with garlic & ol,ive oil or cooked in chicken broth.
Did you read the post, Elaine? This was green leaf chicory, not radicchio. It was incredibly bitter.
Firstly I’d like to thank your friend Suzanne for asking you to write on this subject. Secondly thank you for one of the best food posts I’ve ever read. Superbly expressed and illustrated.
My local fruit and veg shop has a sin bin, we pop in there for the over ripe tomatoes to make sauce, bananas to eat before exercise, and so on. We have to put thought into our actions don’t we. And yes I giggled at the generous gardeners off-loading their surplus courgettes, consider me guilty as charged 🙂
What more can I add but written with elegance!
The “sin bin.” Don’t you love the colorful names we come up with for the bargain corner? I’m glad you enjoyed the post.
loved this post sharyn. very well written and a commendable post.
i am in the middle way of elegance and economy as i do not have any servants/maids. not that we cannot hire them. but we prefer to do everything like cooking, cleaning, maintaining the house etc all on our own.
i also love the fact that you use up the stuff that is left. same here with me. i keep on thinking how to use the yogurt or what should i make of the strawberries.
completely agree with you on buying local produce. i tend to do the same here with fresh mangoes available. i make mango pickles, mango drinks, mango jams that last a year.
Thank you, Dassana. We are our own servants here and sometimes we eat cereal and milk for dinner on the cook’s night off.
Sharyn, great ideas as usual. I use everything leftover in something new if at all possible. Last night we had red potato salad cold out of the broasted red potatoes left in the fridge from barbecuing two nights ago. Food is too expensive and so many people don’t have it to waste. Nice post as always.
Thank you, Susie. It’s a good practice to use everything edible — good for economy and good for the production of less waste. We often roast extra potatoes so that we can fry them later.
Sharyn, What a wonderful read for me this morning! Really! I have already told you so many times how much you inspire me! Maybe while you’re at your writer’s retreat you can think about another place to publish this as an article. It’s is worthy and would be something worth sharing in a broader market. I’m so glad I read this at the beginning to my day…Your beautifully stated examination of ease, elegance and economy is so strong that I will be thinking about how this applies to my approach. Debra
Thank you, Debra. I haven’t been able to find the reference to the writer who originally came up with this idea. The internet attributes it to a French woman, but my Mom said it was a psychologist’s wife and she doesn’t think she was French. I need my own fact-checker!
Your blog this time accomplishes the nearly-impossible: ease, elegance and economy of writing! The ease comes from your years of writing practice, journal-keeping, and just plain talent. The economy is evident; every line counts. And the elegance is in your superbly balanced essay and the lovely topic exploring the luxury of making fine foods at home.
As a full-time worker and very active artist, the household often takes a hit. I tend to divide my life into ease and economy at home, and elegance and luxury in the studio and attendant events. I suppose I compensate by frequent dinner parties: those let me combine effort and elegance in satisfying ways. Full-time workers have a harder time being domestic divas as well. We must choose our battlefields. I suppose chickens and dinner parties are mine.
I must say, the two-out-of-three ideas always make me a bit sad. The idealist in me would love all three to be present! As my Gemini husband Scott says, why choose? However, he is the ultimate optimist. So I will take your blog as a metaphor and continue to visualize all three amiably sharing a household and irritating each other at times, like a loving yet imperfect family.
Thank you, Suzanne. Be sure to read the comments: several people thanked you for suggesting the topic.
Wow! Quite the commentary. I need to read this one over again. It applies to so much more than the table.
It is true, Granny. The original writer applied it to housework and we applied it to dinner parties (Work like hell if you want to impress people with your food and table settings), but I could see it applied to clothing, gardening, etc.
Yes, I was verbose there, but I do think it is interesting to extend it to other areas. It really shines in the realm of householding, though. Though the “provenance” of the triple-E notion may remain shrouded in mystery, your exploration of it in this blog is wonderful.
E is for Edminster! I so wanted to quote the story of your mother throwing a piece of toast across the serving counter, but I thought it might be mean.
A moment that lives in history! Householding and kitchen arts are a weak point for my mother, though she cooks venison, duck and pheasant beautifully and is a heck of a fisherwoman.My mother has always, always, gone for ease and economy, and certainly flinging the toast across the counter is both an easy and economical way of delivering it! We had the first microwave oven in Los Banos. Ease ease ease.
Great post! I too like to spend too much $$$ on good ingredients 🙂 Eating seasonal is important and I try to at all times 🙂 I think we all can make better efforts to eat seasonally and locally no matter our incomes!
It’s only “too much money” if you don’t have it, if you need it for something else, or if you are going to waste the food. Eating seasonally is easier in California and Texas than in some other places, but people make efforts everywhere.
Great “food for thought” 🙂 I’m so envious that you live in such a fabulous place for affordable produce — at least more affordable than here! I miss CA for that reason.
LOVE Chez Panisse! Only got to eat there once…
Yes, California is a great place for produce — one of the reasons I wouldn’t want to live anywhere else for very long. I used to go to Chez Panisse once a year: no longer.
Glad your friend asked you to write about this subject. The topic translate to so many things in life. You have a true gift for writing and it paints such a nice visual. Thanks.
Thank you, Jane.
What a lovely post Sharyn. I am looking forward to the farmers markets as they pop up in late May early June. That’s very cool that you use a dehydrator to make raisins out of grapes; is it because raisins are expensive? Or is it the preservatives used on raisins? Or just cheap grapes?
Lovely paintings too.
Thank you, Eva. When I find cheap grapes I use them to make raisins because the raisins we make at home taste so much better than commercial raisins — you can actually taste the grape in them. The grapes I found at Berkeley Bowl were so ripe that I couldn’t save them any other way, unless I made jelly, which I have not done yet.
Great post Sharyn – I wish I had gardener friends… alas most of the people I know live in apartments at this point in our lives, but I’d love offerings of fresh garden veg… even if it were piles of zucchinis 😀
Thank you, Charles. All it takes is one gardening friend to supply all of the courgettes you’ll ever need (but if you are lucky, they’ll give you squash blossoms!).
Very thought-provoking post. I am pretty much self-sufficient when it comes to veggies with extra to share with friends and feed my freezer, of course I eat seasonally, I also am a big believer in composting: we need to take care of our planet.
We compost, too, Norma — several times a day. Our garden is organic, but we don’t grow much food: apples, lemons, limes, bay leaves, herbs and seasonal tomatoes. We have to fight for every bit of sun we get, between the trees, shrubs and fog.
What a beautiful post, and what a wonderful read this Saturday morning. Thank you so much Sharyn.
Thank you, Susan.
What a treat! Three paintings to view while reading your interesting post. I’m adding a food dehydrater to my want list as I imagine your raisins turn out much better than store bought. Thanks for all the tips!
Thank you, Nancy. I am very fond of using my dehydrator for raisins, apples and tomatoes, although I lived most of my life without it.
“P.S. For the record: I will eat Prego marinara but I always make brownies from scratch.”
We all have our standards! As for me, I’m an “ease is enough” person, and will forego elegance any time and economy when I have to.
I enjoyed this post. Theresa
Thank you for visiting, Theresa. I like to cook, but I like to eat good food even better. Circumstances necessitate economy — hence the labor.
fantastic post Sharyn! I wish I could grow enough basil to make my own pesto but the last few sunny days have conpletely dazzled my greenhouse seedlings. If I had unlimited funds I would spend my days sourcing the best ingredients locally and my nights conjuring up wonderful feasts 🙂
Thank you, Lauren. I usually grow some basil, but I have to buy it to make pesto. Fortunately, it is quite reasonable in season.