November 7, 2010

The Moral Complexity of Friary Cooking

Cooking for the brothers can be a daunting task, as can be eating their cooking at times. The moral excellence of friary cooking is a complex judgment, but I believe it can be narrowed to a function of four interacting values:

1. How talented and/or knowledgeable of a cook a brother happens to be,
2. How conscious and aware he is of 1., above,
3. Whether he puts effort into the meal, and
4. Whether he makes an inordinate mess, depending on local community standards.

Therefore, the best case scenario for friary dinner is when the brother cooking that day knows how to cook, knows that he knows how to cook, makes an effort at it, and cleans 'as he goes' so as not to make a big mess.

Beneath this best case scenario the situation grows far more complex. For example, the moral judgment on messiness depends somewhat on the other factors; brothers who make a great meal are often forgiven their messes, while those who prepare average or yucky meals are not. Conversely, an average cook is helped much by being clean.

The talent and knowledge that make a brother a good cook are not absolute either. A brother who doesn't know much about cooking but who masters one or two plain suppers will be appreciated far more than the good cook who doesn't make much effort to please.

The most dangerous friary cook is the brother who thinks he knows how to cook but in fact does not.

3 comments:

  1. Anonymous12:56 PM

    Awwwww.......

    A parable about life.

    so much to learn......

    ReplyDelete
  2. Not just in friaries either. I think that works everywhere! For example, tonight I made dinner that was really good except for one side dish (new recipe, and it was inedible.) That recipe created a big mess in the preparation and I was absolutely in NO mood to have to clean that mess up after wasting time and ingredients (and anticipation). The rest of the meal was good, so the mess that was made was less of a big deal.

    ReplyDelete
  3. pennyante12:20 AM

    Sounds like y'all take turns cooking? Is that the norm? I thought perhaps each friary had a cook.

    Who does the dishes?

    At my house, if I cook, my son does the dishes... and vice versa...

    No dishwasher... we are the dishwasher!

    ReplyDelete

Faithful, or even just thoughtful criticisms are always welcome. Uninformed rudeness to other posters or to the Lord and His Church is not.

I also reserve the right to reject comments promoting things like private revelations and fringe points of view, if it seems to me like they are being presented in a misleading way.

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