Dinner for Two

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Holly Heyser and Hank Shaw after a hunt.

Twice a day, I spoon something into a ceramic bowl, or onto a little blue plate. I generally know how much because I’ve been given the code, anything from “not very,” to “HUNGRY!” to the most common, “medium!”

Typically barefoot, I pad down the little hallway, and the scuffling sound sparks movement in the room in front of me. Shuffling papers to clear space for food, a shifting of the mouse. It’s become Pavlovian. She knows.

“Yay!” Holly’s bright smile when I set food down for her, lunch and dinner, marks little high points in what has become the Quarantine Routine.

Our lives, like those of most of us, are not in fact being torn apart. We are not sick, nor are any of our family — even my 84-year-old mom is doing OK. In fact, I know only one person who has definitively had the Dread Disease, and she got better on her own.

I know, this is not the case for some of you, but for the vast majority of humans, this thing we’re in manifests itself more as a scary what-if than an even scarier reality. Most of us feel fine, but we all know that it could change for us tomorrow. And this is only the medical side of things. There is the economic, too.

That has affected us. My job has been hindered — I can’t really travel, and my ability to hunt or get on a fishing boat only now seems to be returning — and I, like most of you, am seeing a financial hit as the advertisers on this site pull back and customers buy fewer and fewer of my books. But for the most part, my routine hasn’t changed.

Holly, on the other hand, is the communications director for the California Waterfowl Association. And as such her job has gone bonkers. The only way the organization can interact with the world is through her department, and her workload has ballooned. This is why, most days, I bring her food while she works at her desk, which is maybe seven feet from mine.

We live in a little house, maybe 1100 square feet, including the garage. My home office is only about 80 square feet, and Holly’s isn’t much bigger; our house is a classic post-World War II California bungalow, and my little room was probably meant to be a child’s bedroom. She can hear me type this right now, and I can hear her clicking away, too.

Every morning I make coffee, tend my garden, read the news and answer your questions here and on social media. Then, I get up and think about food. What will today’s lunch be? How about dinner? Will we be doing something for this website, or for my next cookbook? (It’ll be on fish and seafood, incidentally.)

Lunch is invariably leftovers. Everything from my signature chilaquiles-style “garbage plate” — lots of good things cooked in a frying pan, bound with eggs and often cheese — to tacos, or sometimes just simple brown rice with leftover sauce or sofrito, maybe with a bit of last night’s duck or venison or quail tossed in.

I like this process, and so does Holly. It saves money, makes me more resourceful and frankly tastes wonderful. For me, I get to stretch my culinary muscles. For her, it is a home-cooked meal, complete with room service. It is a lovely little moment where I get to make her smile.

Holly Heyser after a hunt
Photo by Hank Shaw

Dinner is more thought out, even on days when Holly isn’t taking photos.

The evening meal is when I experiment with new recipes, new cuisines, new ingredients. Dinner is when I get to play. We are fortunate enough to have plenty of game and fish in the freezer, my pantry of various wild oddities is always at least reasonably well stocked, and the garden can give us something almost every day.

These days the garden has been giving us all the greens we can handle. I grow, or, to be more accurate, allow to randomly grow, a host of weed-like wild greens, most of them various forms of Mexican quelites. They start coming in March and at least one of them will be going into November.

This is a good thing. When I travel, Holly rarely ventures into the garden to harvest (unless tomatoes are ripe), and I rarely order greens on restaurant menus; not sure why. But now, stuck at home, we are eating some sort of leafy green at almost every meal. Today it’s amaranth greens. Healthy, right? Especially when cooked in pork or duck fat…

Holly says she could eat the same thing over and over, but I cannot. In between endless rounds of washing dishes — the dark side of cooking every single meal at home — I take some joy in bouncing around world cuisines, or ingredients. Never will I hear Holly utter the words, “Aw… duck again?”

I try to end my daily work around 6 pm, turn on the radio to listen to the news and start cooking what I have planned for that day. I crack open a beer, or maybe pour a glass of wine.

She is still clicking and clacking away at the other side of the house. I am clanking pans and I am certain she can hear the staccato sound of me slicing onions, mincing garlic, chopping herbs and greens. It means that dinner isn’t far away.

Soon the aroma of dinner hits her, and I smile when she tells me I am making good smells. The bouquet of tonight’s dinner will linger in one spot in our hallway, sometimes until the next morning.

Holly Heyser running a duck boat
Photo by Hank Shaw

On the nights she shoots photos for me, we get prepped well before the food is ready — yes, we eat all the food you see in our pictures, it’s not fake — I plate it up nicely, she chooses the background, and we take some pictures. Then we eat, often on the back porch, with Harlequin the Cat prowling around somewhere close. Those are good days.

Sometimes, however, her work keeps her at her desk into the evening. These days I do my best to make Holly something nice, because, well, long days should end with a good dinner.

Through it all, Holly is the constant. She is my audience, and making her happy makes me happy. One night, a few days ago, Holly had to be away for dinner. It was the first time since Before All This. Undeterred, I made a vegetarian curry from Ghana (yes, greens again) and some Ghanaian meatballs, which are so good I’ll have to put them on the site soon.

Ghanaian vegetarian curry in a bowl
Photo by Hank Shaw

But I was alone. Listening to the nightly news, sitting on the couch with that lovely meal I had just made. It felt… incomplete and vaguely absurd, like one hand clapping.

Then I thought about all of you who like to cook for others, who, because of our current situation, are now alone. For most of us, cooking is more than onboarding calories into your mainframe. It is an expression of love in any of its many forms: Companionship, familial love, even lust.

Without others to, at the very least, look up at you and smile at what you have brought them, what’s the point? I could see how a lonely cook could slide into a very dark place very quickly. Sure, you can use this time to hone new skills and try new cuisines, but where’s the fun in that if no one else can taste the fruits of your labor?

We all need someone in this terrible time. Wife, husband, sister, brother. Parent. Friend. Neighbor. Someone to share the lonely with. I’d be lost without Holly — for reasons that go well beyond dinner for two.

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About Hank Shaw

Hey there. Welcome to Hunter Angler Gardener Cook, the internet’s largest source of recipes and know-how for wild foods. I am a chef, author, and yes, hunter, angler, gardener, forager and cook. Follow me on Instagram and on Facebook.

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49 Comments

  1. One of my favorite articles from you. …and by the way, like that sticker on the back of your car (image above). “Bang. Splash. Yum!” ? Awesome!

  2. Wonderful post Hank,
    I dread Monday mornings when I see my wife head to work nursing at a small town clinic. Being rural we only have four cases in our county and no deaths. Still she front lines and two of those cases went though her clinic.
    I too go out to garden every morning checking and watching it grow. Lettuce is winding down. The baby Bok Choy stems are getting tough and woody but the leaves and their stems are fine and I find myself picking and grazing while sitting and the edges of the raised beds. I stare out into the pastures and woods wondering what the next forage will be. I flip through all your cookbooks deciding what to cook next which reminds me how blessed we were to get two nice eastern wild turkeys. Two complete sets of legs, wings, and thighs for carnitas. Then dreading putting on the mask and going to town for some of the ingredients not in our pantry. Apprehensive but taking cautions. Thank you for giving us an outlet and posting,
    Marty

  3. Great post, Hank. This one brought a smile as it is much like our house these days. My husband delivered breakfast – sausage and a fried egg – to me while I was in the sewing room making masks. And I imagine like your house, we’ll be using the yummy bits from the breakfast pan to cook our Italian sausage, pepper and onion supper. BTW, here’s a sweet story from Minnesota Public Radio and the sewing machine that is stitching up those masks!
    (https://www.mprnews.org/story/2020/05/09/how-a-pandemic-and-an-old-sewing-machine-showed-a-son-his-mothers-impact?fbclid=IwAR2bq4AyIQjvd3NbB_CJwXzWNaKeJp_0CnBgwjMTSSOnKpTdam3QOvqbWQ4)

  4. This has to be one of my favorite posts of yours ever Hank. What a lovely read this morning and yes, I love to cook for my Archie. He loves to smell the aromas of my preparations and is so complimentary. I am so grateful for our lifestyle of growing most of what we eat and living a good 45 minutes from any store or city so this adjustment to quarantine has not been difficult for us. Thank you for reminding me. I look forward to the recipe of this Ghanian meal.

  5. Loved your post! You have echoed many of the same things we are doing. We are “two” with plenty of game, vegetables and fruits around. I make a point to cook something different every night and leftovers are for lunch. I have been using your cookbooks and website (cutting many recipes down). We count ourselves very lucky to have the resources to survive, are healthy and sharing this quarantine with each other. You have summed our current life up very nicely!

  6. Beautiful work as usual, Hank. I share the same sentiments in regards to cooking for others. Food just seems less enjoyable without somebody to share it with – not to mention I don’t even get the chance to show off a little! I look forward to seeing that meatball recipe, your African dishes are always excellent!

  7. This is lovely, Hank. We finally got to go home to see immediate family this weekend, and it was so good to eat together. Funny how that seems to embody connection. I think food prepared for (or by) people I love tastes better too.

    All that to say, I’m glad you are hunkered with Holly. Stay safe!

  8. Hank – probably one of your best pieces. You captured and described the feeling I get every time I decide to get creative in the kitchen and share with my wife and son. I am the cook of the house and always try to keep it exciting. Well done! Stay safe and healthy amigo!

  9. Such an excellent article. Thanks. Made my wife her favorite meal last night …it is nice cooking for her…and you’re right about the cleanup!! That’s where the real love shows up…

  10. Hank, beautiful and spot on for me. I do most cooking, using red meat from northern hunts , lot of fish from the Gulf, herbs and green from my pots. I have great fun and fulfillment, Kat says it’s my love language. You captured so well. Thanks!

  11. Thanks Hank, you’ve made my day. Just another reason why you’re MY favorite chef and main culinary motivation!
    Jack

  12. this was such a lovely storey. thanks for sharing. i loved seeing pictures of holly instead of just a photo credit!

  13. What a lovely post! You are an excellent writer. While reading this, it was easy to “see” your routine. I enjoy you posts, pics and recipes. Thanks for the bright spot in my morning.

  14. EXCELLENT!!! Here in north central Wisconsin we don’t have much in the garden yet. We do have 125 sheep. Navajo and Icelandic. And a farm. In all this stress it’s become too easy to loose track of our blessings!!! THANKYOU for your writing!!!