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Laurie Colwin Quotes

American novelist and short story writer (d. 1992), Birth: 14-6-1944, Death: 24-10-1992 Laurie Colwin Quotes
1.
No one who cooks, cooks alone. Even at her most solitary, a cook in the kitchen is surrounded by generations of cooks past, the advice and menus of cooks present, the wisdom of cookbook writers.
Laurie Colwin

2.
A world without tomatoes is like a string quartet without violins.
Laurie Colwin

3.
When I was alone, I lived on eggplant, the stove top cook's strongest ally.
Laurie Colwin

4.
Lentils are friendly - the Miss Congeniality of the bean world.
Laurie Colwin

5.
People who like to cook like to talk about food....without one cook giving another cook a tip or two, human life might have died out a long time ago.
Laurie Colwin

Similar Authors: Mark Twain C. S. Lewis Johann Wolfgang von Goethe Haruki Murakami Ayn Rand Charles Dickens George Eliot Albert Camus Kurt Vonnegut Victor Hugo Chuck Palahniuk Margaret Atwood Virginia Woolf Ernest Hemingway George R. R. Martin
6.
And, for an unsurpassed double whammy, there is talking about eating while you are eating with friends.
Laurie Colwin

7.
There is really a je ne sais quoi about turkey cooking - the air of festivity, the family squabbles, the constant basting - that does not apply to the turkey breast, which is, really, a convenience of food... A turkey without seasonal angst is like a baseball game without a national anthem, a winter without snow, a birthday party without candles.
Laurie Colwin

8.
I was taught in my Introduction to Anthropology [course in college], it is not just the great works of [hu]mankind that make a culture. It is the daily things, like what people eat and how they serve it.
Laurie Colwin

Quote Topics by Laurie Colwin: People Food Giving Two Cooking Kitchen Morning Cooking Classes Dinner Eggplant Children Nice Coffee Long Dream Party Meals Vegetables Hands Friendly Knows Safety Soup Reading Space Glasses Doe Social Life Empty Believe
9.
When I was alone, I lived on eggplant, the stove top cook's strongest ally. I fried it and stewed it, and ate it crisp and sludgy, hot and cold. It was cheap and filling and was delicious in all manner of strange combinations. If any was left over, I ate it cold the next day on bread.
Laurie Colwin

10.
The table is a meeting place, a gathering ground, the source of sustenance and nourishment, festivity, safety, and satisfaction. A person cooking is a person giving: even the simplest food is a gift.
Laurie Colwin

11.
Friendship is not possible between two women one of whom is very well dressed.
Laurie Colwin

12.
When life is hard and the day has been long, the ideal dinner is not four perfect courses, each in a lovely pool of sauce whose ambrosial flavors are like nothing ever before tasted, but rather something comforting and savory, easy on the digestion - something that makes one feel, if even for only a minute, that one is safe.
Laurie Colwin

13.
On Saturday mornings I would walk to the Flavor Cup or Puerto Rico Importing coffee store to get my coffee. Often it was freshly roasted and the beans were still warm. Coffee was my nectar and my ambrosia: I was very careful about it. I decanted my beans into glass...and I ground them in little batches in my grinder.
Laurie Colwin

14.
A person cooking is a person giving. Even the simplest food is a gift.
Laurie Colwin

15.
The old days were slower. People buttered their bread without guilt and sat down to dinner en famille.
Laurie Colwin

16.
It is often to the wary that the events in life are unexpected. Looser types-people who are not busy weighing and measuring every little thing-are used to accidents, coincidences, chance, things getting out of hand, things sneaking up on them. They are the happy children of life, to whom life happens for better or worse.
Laurie Colwin

17.
To feel safe and warm on a cold wet night, all you really need is soup.
Laurie Colwin

18.
We need time to defuse, to contemplate. Just as in sleep our brains relax and give us dreams, so at some time in the day we need to disconnect, reconnect, and look around us.
Laurie Colwin

19.
There is nothing like soup. It is by nature eccentric: no two are ever alike, unless of course you get your soup in a can.
Laurie Colwin

20.
Woe to those who get what they desire. Fulfillment leaves an empty space where your old self used to be, the self that pines and broods and reflects. You furnish a dream house in your imagination, but how startling and final when that dream house is your own address. What is left to you? Surrounded by what you wanted, you feel a sense of amputation. The feelings you were used to abiding with are useless. The conditions you established for your happiness are met. That youthful light-headed feeling whose sharp side is much like hunger is of no more use to you.
Laurie Colwin

21.
I do not believe that you have to spend a lot of money to eat well: it is hard to beat a plain old baked potato.
Laurie Colwin

22.
Many people eat salad dutifully because they feel it is good for them, but more enlightened types eat it happily because it is good.
Laurie Colwin

23.
No one who cooks cooks alone.
Laurie Colwin

24.
I will never eat fish eyeballs, and I do not want to taste anything commonly kept as a house pet, but otherwise I am a cinch to feed.
Laurie Colwin

25.
In this world of uncertainty and woe, one thing remains unchanged: Fresh, canned, pureed, dried, salted, sliced, and served with sugar and cream, or pressed into juice, the tomato is reliable, friendly, and delicious. We would be nothing without it.
Laurie Colwin

26.
We know that without food we would die. Without fellowship, life is not worth living.
Laurie Colwin

27.
Cookbooks hit you where you live. You want comfort; you want security; you want food; you want to not be hungry and not only do you want those basic things fixed, you want it done in a really nice, gentle way that makes you feel loved. That's a big desire, and cookbooks say to the person reading them, 'If you will read me, you will be able to do this for yourself and for others. You will make everybody feel better.'
Laurie Colwin

28.
Once my jars were labeled, I felt contentedly thrilled with myself, as if I had pulled off a wonderful trick. People feel this way when they bake bread or have babies, and although they are perfectly entitled to feel that way, in fact, nature does most of the work.
Laurie Colwin

29.
The best way to eat crabs, as everyone knows, is off newspaper at a large table with a large number of people.
Laurie Colwin

30.
Fulfillment leaves an empty space where longing used to be.
Laurie Colwin

31.
[On television:] It's made people moronic, it's robbed people of their ability to think. It's done tremendous damage, and every single household that has a small child should take it and throw it out the window.
Laurie Colwin

32.
I come from a coffee-loving family, and you can always tell when my sister and I have been around, because both of us collect all the dead coffee from everyone's morning cup, pour it over ice, and drink it. This is a disgusting habit.
Laurie Colwin

33.
It is always wise to make too much potato salad. Even if you are cooking for two, make enough for five. Potato salad improves with age - that is, if you are lucky enough to have any left over.
Laurie Colwin

34.
The sharing of food is the basis of social life.
Laurie Colwin

35.
Both happy and sad people can be cheered up by a nice meal.
Laurie Colwin

36.
Unlike some people, who love to go out, I love to stay home.
Laurie Colwin

37.
Dinner alone is one of life's pleasures.
Laurie Colwin

38.
It is a fact of life that people give dinner parties, and when they invite you, you have to turn around and invite them back. Often they retaliate by inviting you again, and you must then extend another invitation. Back and forth you go, like Ping-Pong balls, and what you end up with is called social life.
Laurie Colwin

39.
That family glaze of common references, jokes, events, calamities-that sense of a family being like a kitchen midden: layer upon layer of the things daily life is made of. The edifice that lovers build is by comparison delicate and one-dimensional.
Laurie Colwin

40.
The sharing of food is the basis of social life, and to many people it is the only kind of social life worth participating in.
Laurie Colwin

41.
Dinner alone is one of life's pleasures. Certainly cooking for oneself reveals man at his weirdest. People lie when you ask them what they eat when they are alone. A salad, they tell you. But when you persist, they confess to peanut butter and bacon sandwiches deep fried and eaten with hot sauce, or spaghetti with butter and grape jam.
Laurie Colwin

42.
For the socially timid, the kitchen is the place to be. At least, it is a place to start.
Laurie Colwin