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Image: Gemma Askham, novice chef.
I’m a 31-year-old woman and this sentence alone sums up my cooking talent: I am the only person I know who’s given themselves food poisoning.
When a bunch of ingredients end up in a pan with me attached to it, their final resting place will be tastelessness, sadness, and almost always blackness. If food had a mouth, it would pull the scream emoji face when it saw my shopping basket coming.
Being useless in the kitchen used to be a badge of honour. In my early twenties, colleagues would competitively boast of kitchen fails. There was a correlation that the worse the cooking, the more awesome a career woman.
Wine and chips constituted a perfectly acceptable two-course meal.
But then things changed. People had dinner parties, and the indication that dinner was ready was no longer the ping of the microwave. People baked. People ate clean. People started "spiralising". I was still eating pasta and tomato sauce.
How to order takeaway and not put on weight
So at the start of this year I made a pact to myself: get some skills, girl. Armed with a copy of Jamie Oliver’s 15 Minute Meals – chosen because the title had the lowest time commitment I could find – I began my journey from kitchen exile to, hopefully, acceptance.
Hurdle 1. Deciphering the language.
Generally, I am good at languages: I have a Spanish degree and can even read basic Swedish. But I am not fluent in Chef. Which presents problems.
My first recipe was ‘Spicy Cajun Chicken with Smashed Sweet Potato & Fresh Corn Salsa,’ chosen because three sweet potatoes had been sitting in my kitchen for so long they were practically an art installation.