A meal well cooked is a meal that you remember.

  • David P.

    Rank #89 of 1949

    Votes: 338

    About my essay:

    A well cooked meal stays in your heart much longer than it sticks to your ribs.

One summer night when I was seventeen, a friend and I built a fire out in his back yard, got an old cast iron skillet and put it on the fire with some butter and scrambled a couple of dozen eggs. When the eggs were almost done, we threw in more butter to make the flavor a little more rich, a little pinch of garlic and some salt and pepper... and that was all. We sat on the ground by the fire, eating the egss off paper plates with plastic forks, drinking beer and telling stories. When we were done we smoked cigarettes, drank more beer and told more stories and talked about women and fishing and our families and school, but we didn't talk about where we *were* in life; at that cruel line between being a kid and an adult, that line that you step over... that line that once you do cross it, is, you realize, one way; there's no going back. 30 years later, I still remember the smell of the wood smoke, the buttery taste of the eggs, the fire casting giant shadows of us behind us on the trees at our backs, the feeling of being seventeen again.

Since then, I have made many wonderful meals. I make a hell of a manicotti, pizza my ancestors would love, a wonderful banana carmel torte when I'm feeling ambitious, my own chocolate carmel turtles that are a huge hit at my workplace... recipes I spent a lot of time developing. But I have never since made a meal that I have remembered as vividly as that one. When I think about it, I still taste the butter and the eggs and the garlic and I smell the wood-smoke and I still see the giant shadows on the trees, bearing down on us, looming, dark and scary like the future.

That was a meal well cooked.

comments

Arlene S.:

"...a couple dozen eggs"? Two people? While not Cool Hand Luke-heroics, still pretty impressive.

August 29, 2010 Report Abuse
David P.:

Arlene - LOL! Given the time period in my life in which this event occurred, it was very likely a really bad case of the munchies. :)

August 29, 2010 Report Abuse
Arlene S.:

LOL! Munchies? Naw...if you'd offered a wolfed-down bag of Cheet-os as evidence of that "time period of your life," I would've bought it. But two seventeen year old boys with the "munchies" adding garlic to two dozen scrambled eggs? Never happened.

September 1, 2010 Report Abuse
Sara K.:

Thanks so much David :)  I will return the favor with a vote every day, and not just for that but because you are also an awesome writer.  I am trying not to think about how this contest will turn out a month from now, I can only hope that whoever does make finalist deserves it for their writing.  I'm just glad we've got less than a month to go before they stop accepting entries!

September 3, 2010 Report Abuse
Sara K.:

I was your 300th vote :)

September 8, 2010 Report Abuse
Steve V.:

This is a great piece of writing.  It made me remember a long-forgotten meal of my own that I shouldn't have forgotten.  Thanks for kicking my own memories in the ass!  :-)

September 24, 2010 Report Abuse
Steve V.:

I've gotta get one of the essays I like to the top- have another vote!

September 26, 2010 Report Abuse
Sara K.:

So...voting is still up as I post this...thought today was the last day too but who knows, I'll keep voting until I can'st no more!

September 30, 2010 Report Abuse
David P.:

Thank you Steve, and you too, Sara. If it's still up tomorrow, Sara, I'll put in another one for you! Thanks for everything - your kind words, your votes. Being totally selfish, if you or me either one won this I would be tickled!!!!!!

September 30, 2010 Report Abuse