Clytie
Hello Rosemary
I picked up a copy of School for Cooks somewhere and thoroughly enjoyed the description of your childhood, helping your mother in the garden.
My 3-year-old GS lives in a city, but when he comes to stay he loves pottering about with me in the garden & then "helping" to cook the fruit and vegetables he brings in. Apparently digging for potatoes is the height of excitement!
Watching him and reading your memories makes me wonder: is it enough to bring proper cookery lessons back to schools? Don't the children really need to be helping to grow food too? Even if that's not possible at home (and DD lives in a second floor flat but still has beans and tomatoes on her balcony), every school playground must surely have a spare corner. What do you think?
Absolutely agree with you. I think it's really important that children are shown how to grow and also how to cook-if you start early enough, they will get it into their system that this is how you do it!
Also, more importantly they will have enthusiasm for it. I wish they had more cooking in schools, and also I think gardening is a brilliant idea to bring alongside it, but getting these things off the ground is really an upward struggle. I try, when the grandchildren come and stay with me, to always do this sort of thing (cooking etc.)