Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Response to cooking leaves a bad taste

- By Amy Dickinson Email Amy Dickinson at askamy@amydickins­on. or send a letter to Ask Amy, P.O. Box 194, Freeville, NY 13068.

Dear Amy: I learned how to cook from my mother, grandmothe­r and aunts, who all lived under the same roof. In a Latin family like mine, it was a given that women learned to cook. I loved being among these wise ladies.

Fast forward to now. I am married to a wonderful man. Although he’s not Latin, he has fully embraced my family and culture.

My husband comes from a small family, and his mother likes having everyone over for dinner. The problem is that this woman cannot cook and has no interest in learning. There are family members (including my husband) who get physically sick after eating one of her meals!

I’ve tried bringing over a side dish, but she takes offense. A cookbook that was given to her is collecting dust. She declines help in the kitchen.

The poultry and whatever other meat she serves is burned on the outside and raw inside. Nothing she serves has any flavor, and she doesn’t get why people are eating small portions of food and why no one wants leftovers.

Going to restaurant­s is an ordeal because she complains about everything she orders and sends it back.

She doesn’t see anything wrong with her lack of cooking skills! I won’t invite her over for dinner because she claims she has food allergies and other illnesses, which have never been medically diagnosed.

Amy, how do we tell this woman that her cooking is making us sick without offending her?

— Not Hungry Dear Hungry: Whatever message is delivered, I suggest that you should NOT be the person to do it. You are justifiabl­y proud of your culinary tradition, but you are dealing with someone who did not grow up in that same tradition and quite obviously will not embrace it.

Your mother-in-law doesn’t see anything wrong with her lack of cooking skills because she doesn’t have cooking skills and doesn’t seem to want to acquire them.

Food seems to be an extremely important sticking point for both of you. No one should consume food that is obviously not safe to eat, and if meat is undercooke­d, you should avoid it. Your husband (not you) should ask his mother, “Mom, could you cook this longer? I’m not sure this is cooked through.”

You could work on becoming more tolerant. The idea is for you to demonstrat­e that you can create in your own home the generous, loving, hospitable and lively culinary tradition that you grew up with.

Invite your mother-inlaw to your home for meals, and let her know that if she is nervous about eating your food, she can bring her own but that you will always set a place for her, because, as you know, love and kindship surroundin­g the table are the most important ingredient­s of all.

Dear Amy: I have 40 years of AA sobriety and meeting experience. I recently asked a church in my hometown for permission to havemeetin­gs there.

I was sent a letter stating that there were not any rooms available. I know this is a lie because they just added on to the church two years ago.

I feel discrimina­ted against and like a bad person sitting in the parking lot. I know I cannot change their decision, but why would a church say no to people who make up 15% of their congregati­on?

Other churches in my city host AA meetings, so why not this one?

— Seeking a Meeting Dear Seeking: You seem to be making a lot of assumption­s about the availabili­ty surroundin­g this particular space, as well as the motivation­s of the people who have turned you down.

Church committees generally review requests for space, and their refusal might be because of a booking conflict with another organizati­on or because they can’t afford the cost of the utilities and personnel required to keep the building open and heated during off-hours.

Accusing them of lying is unwise and unkind. Fortunatel­y, there are options for meetings in other local spaces, as well as online (AA.org).

Dear Amy: Your recent letter from “Distressed Dad” really made my blood boil. His 20-year-old daughter lied that she had been vaccinated for COVID-19, when she had not.

I don’t always agree with you, but I did appreciate your response here, asking this father to put his daughter’s risk-taking into perspectiv­e. When I thought about it, I realized that my own kids had often behaved in a similar way at that age.

— Survivor Dear Survivor: As a parent, I’ve been there — several times.

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