| You have your views on life and I respect them. You may enjoy spending hours everyday preparing your food, and hours eating it - why not. But personally, I don't. Just like you, I have my own views, which I enjoy enough to openly share them, in full honesty. For me food is a nuisance that I want to take as little time as possible (preparation + consumption). I enjoy spending my time on different things. The original blog post might be questionable (the iron thing - I can't imagine how he might have missed that!) and light on details. It could also be a hoax. But for the one time I find someone who shares my views, as opposed to the prevalent "food is the most important thing in life - food is sacred - spend all your time on it", I want to know more about his approach, to find mistakes, correct them, and experiment. Who knows, maybe more people think the same secretly? Maybe some day it will be the most prevalent view on food? I was somehow expecting some negative replies, but not something just ad hominem like this, and devoid of content. Still, I wanted to share my current approach, in the hope others could find it interesting as a baseline to experiment upon, and also to get their own (hopefully someone else is also trying to optimize the food problem on time + health constraints) So relax, I'm experimenting my own regimen on myself, and you're free to disagree. |
I'm the kind of person who has spent hundreds of dollars on a fine dining experience (and heartily enjoy and recommend it), and has spent countless hours in the kitchen attempting to make good food. Yet, on some days, I'd rather just whip up a soylent shake and be done with it. On some days, I'm not even in any state to care what it tastes or feels like.