Birmingham Post

Cooking calms me

Donal Skehan tells ELLA WALKER making meals steadied him to leave LA for Dublin and move his family three times – all during the pandemic

-

COOKBOOKS are not just a record of recipes, but a record of meals cooked and eaten together, of travels and gatherings, events and moments both ordinary and extraordin­ary.

They are effectivel­y records of life, and for Irish presenter and food writer Donal Skehan, every one of his cookbooks “ends up being a little bit semi-autobiogra­phical” in the sense that they “come with, or identify, a purpose in my life that needs recipes”.

The 35-year-old’s latest, Everyday Cook, is no different. Donal and his wife, Sofie Larsson, have two boys under three (Noah and Oliver) and have moved three times in 18 months, on top of a pandemic – and so this, his 10th book, is a “real celebratio­n of family life” and the doable recipes “we come back to; the ones that get us through”.

And schedule allowing, the former boy band singer really does cook every single day.

“Hate is too strong a word, but I’ve grown to love less the travel and all the things that go alongside the job I do,” he says. “Now, because we have kids, I don’t want to be on a plane, I don’t want to be in a hotel room. I want to be at home, and I want to be cooking.”

It’s more than just dinner, he explains, “it’s the ecosystem of your home. It’s the ecosystem of how the kids eat, how we treat our bodies” – and jetting about, however fun and important, can get in the way of that.

Donal particular­ly likes cooking at the weekends, when you can do bigger projects: “I do pot stickers with the boys and we built a lasagne the other day, which was great craic for our little fella Noah.”

Having kids has undoubtedl­y shifted things “pretty drasticall­y” he admits with a laugh. There’s less freedom to “freewheel it” in the kitchen, but it’s not all bad.

“I feel like one of these cliche parents,” he says in mock horror. “I don’t hide veggies! But I sneak a lot more vegetables into my dishes than I ever did before.”

And his children happily appreciate him making finger food out of leftovers from the bottom of the fridge. “It’s actually made me use my kitchen more actively and more efficientl­y,” he says.

It’s a change too from the food he was immersed in while living in LA. “It was nothing to do with green juices, red carpets, all the things you imagine LA to be, in fact it has this incredible food scene that’s somewhat, from a European perspectiv­e, undiscover­ed,” he says excitedly.

“We always think of New York as the food destinatio­n in the States but LA is just this incredible gem of a city.”

The tacos alone are enough to make him throw his hands in the air with glee. “Oh my god, the tacos! We ate out so much,” he says, rememberin­g the brilliance of the little Ethiopia, Thai town, and Koreatown neighbourh­oods.

After four-and-a-half years in LA though, Donal and family had to leave in a mad dash: the lease was up on their house, their youngest was only a few months old, and the pandemic had hit.

“We left in a bit of a panic, with two Ubers with guys in hazmat suits, and like 18 bags,” says Donal. The plan was to come back to Ireland, but not indefinite­ly. “It was all very tumultuous,” he recalls. “We were very much like new parents and not really knowing what was going on.”

Stressfull­y making it to Dublin, they moved into a house they hadn’t even seen (Donal’s parents scouted it out for them).

“Then we had to move again, and we’ve just moved again, and so the last couple of years have been – combined with the pandemic – personally and from a family perspectiv­e, we’ve had really quite a lot of stopping and starting and no consistenc­y.”

The cookbook falling now, when they finally have a house to settle in and a reliable oven feels not a little serendipit­ous. “I don’t know if I was writing for future me,” Donal ponders.

In times of tumult, cooking can often be a marker for how Donal’s feeling in himself. “At my very best, I am cooking every day and for me, cooking has always been a moment of solace,” he says.

“Even as a kid growing up, my mum’s kitchen was that place of warmth. I would come in from school in the autumn days, steamed-up windows, knowing there was a pot of stew on. There was always that place of warmth.”

When life gets too demanding things can become mentally difficult for any of us, which is a feeling Donal recognises.

“Burnout and anxiety and – I don’t know if I would kind of go as far as depression – but certainly there’s those moments that do come up for me,” says Donal.

“I’ve certainly experience­d them in the last 12, 15 years, and particular­ly now with Covid and stuff like that, it is something that comes and goes and is fleeting, and then comes at you like a freight train in different ways.

“But I do find when I’m at my calmest, cooking comes into play, and it really is a lovely way to turn to something that is wholesome and really is something for yourself; it’s something to look after you and the ones that you love.”

 ?? ?? Everyday Cook by Donal Skehan, from Hodder & Stoughton, priced £25.
Everyday Cook by Donal Skehan, from Hodder & Stoughton, priced £25.
 ?? ?? CHILLED: Donal in his beloved kitchen
CHILLED: Donal in his beloved kitchen

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom