For John & Dana, who taught me the answers to all your questions…. blessed memories from people on both sides of the whispering door. Sometimes I imagine you talk back.
Iโve been a line cook since I was thirty. Not one of those kids who gets swept into the industry at eighteen and never leaves, but someone who came in as a fully formed adult with a sense of self and a working understanding of exhaustion. Iโve worked in kitchens off and on for a decade, long enough to know the rhythm, long enough to know the cost, and long enough to see the difference between loving food and loving the labor of food. They are not the same thing. They were never the same thing.
And because I didnโt start young, I never had the luxury of romanticizing the work. I didnโt have that earlyโcareer haze where the adrenaline feels like purpose and the chaos feels like belonging. I came in with adult eyes, and adult knees, and adult rent, and I saw the kitchen for what it was: a place where you sweat, and lift, and repeat the same motions thousands of times, and somehow still manage to feed people well enough that they think youโre doing something magical.
But hereโs the truth that only cooks say to each other: the magic is mostly repetition. The magic is muscle memory. The magic is surviving the shift.
And because Iโve lived that, Iโm the last person on earth who will shame anyone for using prepared meals. I use them too. I use them because thereโs the Joy of Cooking โ the aspirational, leisurely, weekend version of food โ and then thereโs real life, where you pay the ADHD tax up front because you know damn well that if dinner requires twelve steps and three pans, youโre going to end up eating cereal at ten oโclock and calling it a personality trait.
People think cooking is hard because technique is hard. Technique isnโt hard. Technique is teachable. Technique is repetition. Technique is something I can show you in ten minutes if you actually want to learn. Whatโs hard is the relentlessness. The dailyโness. The โyou mean I have to do this every day?โ of it all. Cooking is not a task; itโs a treadmill. Plan, shop, cook, clean, repeat. Forever. Until you die or start ordering takeout with the deadโeyed calm of someone who has accepted their fate.
And thatโs why I say, with love and clarity: if you donโt want to cook, donโt cook. Stick to the things with directions on the package and call it a day. Youโre not failing. Youโre not lazy. Youโre not โless than.โ Youโre choosing the lane that keeps you fed without draining your life force.
Iโll help you if you want to learn. Iโll teach you knife skills, seasoning, heat control, whatever you need. Iโll do it without judgment because everyone starts somewhere, and I actually enjoy teaching people who want to be taught. But I will never tell you that you should want to learn. Wanting to cook is a preference, not a virtue. Itโs not a moral category. Itโs not a sign of adulthood. Itโs not a measure of care.
And I say that as someone who has lived on sandwiches eaten halfโasleep over a trash can. Thatโs not a metaphor. Thatโs the reality of kitchen life. People imagine cooks going home and making elaborate meals, but the truth is that most of us survive on whatever we can assemble and inhale in ninety seconds. A turkey club. A grilled cheese. A breakfast sandwich at three in the afternoon. A cold cut rollโup because toasting the bread feels like too much. The only time I ever ate like a human being was at Biddyโs, where we were allowed to make ourselves a shift meal โ a burger, a salad, something simple off the line. Not โhog wild.โ Not stealing tenderloins out the back door. Just enough food to keep going. That tiny sliver of autonomy felt like luxury.
So when I tell you that boxed cake mix is valid, Iโm not being cute. Iโm being honest. Boxed cake mix was literally invented to free people โ especially women โ from domestic pressure. Itโs engineered to be foolproof. Itโs designed so that you can follow the directions and get a cake every single time. You donโt have to be a gourmet cook. You donโt have to be a baker. You donโt have to be anything other than a person who can read the back of a box. And if you want to add orange zest to a yellow cake mix and pour an orange glaze over the top, congratulations โ youโve just made a dessert that tastes intentional without having to perform any culinary acrobatics.
This is the same philosophy I learned from sommeliers, who are the most overโit professionals in the entire food world. After years of performing expertise for people who want to be impressed, they eventually arrive at the only sane conclusion: drink what you like. Not whatโs correct. Not whatโs impressive. Not what pairs with the duck confit. Just what you like. And thatโs the energy I bring to cooking now. Eat what you enjoy. Cook what you can handle. Use the tools that make your life easier. Stop performing.
Because hereโs the real message: you donโt have to build an identity around a task you donโt enjoy. You donโt have to turn your home into a second kitchen shift. You donโt have to prove anything to anyone. Pick a lane. And let that lane be the one that keeps you fed, sane, and free.
If you want to learn, Iโm here. If you donโt, thatโs fine too. Thereโs no shame in choosing the path that makes your life easier. Thereโs no shame in prepared meals. Thereโs no shame in boxed cake mix. Thereโs no shame in paying the ADHD tax up front. Thereโs no shame in admitting that cooking every day is exhausting.
The only shame is pretending otherwise.
Scored with Copilot. Conducted by Leslie Lanagan.
You can put questions in the comments if you’d like. The best one I’ve ever gotten is “how do chefs do the pan flip thing without getting shit everywhere?” The answer is “we get shit everywhere until we learn to flip correctly.”














