Breakfast for dinner. Sounds easy enough, right? Wrong.
Since getting married, I’ve been on this mission to be the best wife possible, which includes a new found dedication to preparing home cooked meals.
Before tying the knot, I refused to touch raw meat, relied on pre-washed and chopped lettuce and couldn’t tell cinnamon from cumin.
But now, I’m trimming and handling raw carnage, buying and chopping fresh veggies and have a cabinet FULL of spices that I can name by scent alone. Not to be cocky here or anything, but I’m even impressing myself as I toast sesame seeds to garnish homemade chicken teriyaki and whip up banana bread after seeing a few forgotten bananas ripening on the counter.
However, last night took the wind out of my culinary sails as I screwed up the most basic of meals: breakfast.
My husband takes great pride in his breakfast making abilities, but my wifely confidence got in the way as I shot down his offer to help me prepare the morning fare for our evening meal.
Long story short, dinner preparations turned into a comedy of errors as I over estimated the time it would take to scramble eggs and under estimated the time it would take to nuke the bacon. And not only can I not successfully flip a pancake, I apparently can’t judge when they are undercooked and prefer to serve them with goopy middles that you discover only when slice into them.
Dinner was served and so was I.
Refraining from saying, “I told you I could help,” the hubs tried to hide his disappointment as he sifted through the pancakes to find the least runny one. Embarrassed of my failure, I quickly made my plate and tried to eat around simple items that had gone horribly wrong.
After a few minutes of eating by myself, waiting for the hubs to join me, and thinking “this isn’t THAT bad,” I heard a familiar jingle of cereal filling a bowl and realized that sure, its not THAT bad… it’s REALLY bad.
I stepped into the kitchen to find the hubs stuffing his face quickly with Cheerios to avoid having me see him admit to my dinner defeat.
I learned two things from this ego-checking debacle – first, a good husband never lets you see him scrape his inedible dinner into the garbage and second, you should always have a box of Cheerios on hand just in case.