Cookbook for the kids!

I’m taking a break from our ‘Table Tales’ to let you know that for Christmas this year, I made a cookbook for my kids. As they’re growing up so quickly, I wanted to make them something that means they could take me with them wherever they are. Something to accompany the stories they’ll continue to share around their own dinner tables.

I learnt to cook when my oldest two were babies, mostly because I don’t like to be bored, and as much as I loved having the babies around, I needed to feel like I’d achieved something every day. I started out with a book called ‘Quick and Easy Recipes’ that I found in a charity shop. We had some absolute disasters along the way! The time I mixed up the sugar and salt in a lemon drizzle cake! Or the soggy courgette quiche, which even now makes Sean gag at the thought of! But over time, I’ve made fewer mistakes and gotten a better idea of what will work and what definitely won’t.

I’m not claiming to be an amazing or even a natural cook, I’m probably about an average family cook and the recipes are for things that I genuinely regularly make for my family.

If you’d like to have a go at a few of our recipes, then the cookbook is available on Amazon in Kindle, paperback and hardback. If you enjoy it, please leave a review or let me know if you have any other recipes I should try.

How to win friends and influence people

Recently I finished this book by Dale Carnegie and I think it’s one of the most helpful books I’ve read in a long time. Carnegie has grasped the essence of human interactions and the things that cause blockages to that. His principles are so critical to success in life that I wonder whether this is the kind of thing we should be teaching our children. We teach them how to use logic and reasoning but not how to talk to people.

One of the most significant things we can learn to do is to listen without judgement. Listen to understand and learn something. We all have our own preconceived ideas of what’s right and are eager to tell people. So often when we’re listening we’re thinking of what we’re going to say next, or offer a correction to what we’ve heard.

Wouldn’t the world be a different place, if instead of offering correction, we consider what we hear before we speak. I’m not saying we should agree when someone is wrong or that we never correct but that the way we do that should be with kindness, not to win an argument but because you care about the person. That means not publicly putting someone down but taking them aside to question a little further, to understand what they meant.

We forget that all people are ultimately looking for acceptance, security and significance and when we rob someone of any of these things, we’re likely to alienate and hurt them. We don’t make friends this way. Everyone has something good in them, wouldn’t it be lovely to call that out rather than their mistakes.

I’ve learnt a lot from Dale Carnegie, not least that I have a lot to learn still!