Jenny called me at work a couple of weeks ago, on one of those gray afternoons when the temperature never rises much above 10 degrees and the dog refuses to go outside.
โIโm freezing,โ she said. โHow do I turn up the heat?โ
โIn the house, you mean?โ
Weโd lived in this house for ten years. This was not our first winter there.
โYeah,โ she said.
โOkay, do you see that box on the wall? The one in the living room, near the fireplace? It has digital numbers on it. Thatโs the thermostat.โ
โI see it,โ she said. โNow what?โ
Iโll spare you the rest, but let me ask: Does this seem weird to you?
I could tell you how weird it seemed to me, too โ how do you not know where the thermostat is?!ย โ but Iโd be lying. The truth is, it wasnโt that weird at all. I have to believe that most families have these random-seeming divisions of labor which, if you really step back and look at them โ or write about them publicly on a blog โ do seem pretty weird. Our house, and our marriage, is full of them. Itโs practically built on them. Some of this is probably evolutionary (we have only so much bandwith, so we pool resources to survive, etc.), and some of it is probably just being happy to let someone else deal. Here are some other things that Jenny never does in our house: Replace light bulbs, pay bills, sweep the kitchen floor, cut the kidsโ toenails, change the filters on our air conditioner, realize that our air conditioner has filters (and that they need changing), clean the tank of Abbyโs beta fish. And here are some things I never do: Braid hair, iron anything, realize that anything needs ironing, organize closets, manage our calendar, feed the dog, sort the recycling on Wednesday mornings, hang up coats that get piled on the chair next to our front door, turn on the dreaded Sonos system.
This ad-hoc division of labor applies to our lives in the kitchen, as well. There are certain things we just close our eyes and rely on the other person to execute. (Q: And what if that other person isnโt around to execute it? A: We buy it.) For me, the idea of making, baking, and frosting a cake: unh-uh. Same goes for latkes โ and for deep frying, in general. Have never done it, donโt know how to do it, donโt intend to learn. Jenny, on the other hand? She doesnโt make coffee. โCan you make some of your coffee?โ she ask me on Sunday morning, as though โmy coffeeโ is some rare, magical potion and not a matter of pouring some hot water over ground beans. How strange does all this get? Consider this: Jennyโs favorite breakfast of all time is a bowl of steel-cut McCannโs oatmeal with a little cream and fruit, AND SHE HAS NEVER MADE IT IN HER LIFE. Or, she tried once and wasnโt happy with the result and gave up forever, ceding all future oatmeal duties to me. Oatmeal is not hard to make. There is no real art to it. I am pretty sure she could (a) figure it out in about five seconds, if she tried, and (b) become a thousand times better at it than I am. But thatโs not how it works, when it comes to the division of labor. Oatmeal is my thing. Mud cake is her thing. And as long as we stay in our lanes, we keep moving forward. โ Andy
Andyโs Oatmeal Instructions
The only downside of steel-cut, real deal oatmeal is that it takes a while. If youโre trying to get it on the table on a Tuesday morning, as the kids are packing their backpacks and the dog needs to go out and orchestra practice starts in 25 minutes, this will not make you happy. On a Saturday morning, however, with the kids watching some SpongeBob and a cup of good coffee in your hand, and a rare โnothing dayโ stretching out in front of you: Yes. This humble little grain will do you right. Note: As much as I love oatmeal, I also believe that itโs all about the toppings. There must always be fruit โ strawberries, raspberries, blueberries, bananas โ or, if youโre in a pinch, dried cherries or cranberries work well, too. There must always be something sweet, as well, and here are my go-tos, in descending order of favoriteness: Maple cream, maple sugar, high-test maple syrup, dark brown sugar, agave. Jenny likes a few chopped almonds or pecans. Some people like a sprinkle of cinnamon. I am not one of those people.
1 cup steel cut McCannโs Irish oatmeal
3 cups water, plus another cup in reserve
1 pinch salt
In a medium saucepan, add 3 cups of water and a pinch of salt. When water is boiling, add 1 cup of oatmeal and stir. Reduce heat to the lowest simmer and cook uncovered, stirring occasionally and scraping along the sides of the pot with a rubber spatula, for 25-30 minutes. If it looks like the oatmeal is getting too thick, add a little more water and stir. I like it to be almost like porridge: thick but not too thick. Top with a drizzle of milk or cream, and the toppings of your choice.
Related: You Make it, You Own it.
love the idea of staying in your respective lanes.
is the recipe correct? Shouldnโt it be 3 cups water to one cup oatmeal? Just wondering. Or perhaps that is why Jenny canโt make great oatmeal the way you canโyouโve given her the wrong proportions?
Dominique โ yup, that was a mistake. Fixed. Thanks.
I think that is so sweet โ a sort of natural delegation of tasks. I find it so endearing that she likes YOUR oatmeal and YOUR coffee.
{Teffyโs Perks} X
My mother in law has never put gas in her car in 49 years of marriage. Gassing up the vehicles is โhisโ job, in her opinion, and she is very happy to let him do it. I confess that I also donโt pay the bills, clean the kitty litter, wash the cars or change any kind of filter (seriously โ air conditioners have filters?). I do make the oatmeal though, and have to agree with Jenny โ something crunchy is a must in my bowl.
My parents wanted me to be a self-sufficient woman, so they taught me things like how to change my carโs oil, how to pay taxes, etc. Yet, now that Iโve been married for 10 years I have forgotten how to do those things. Itโs funny how a couple divides up random things in their lives!
I love steel cut oats. I have mastered the overnight method which makes the weekdays more tolerable. 2 cups oats toasted in 1 tablespoon of butter, add 6 cups of water and a pinch of salt. Bring to a boil, turn the heat off and cover with lid. In the morning add 1 cup water and 1 cup of dairy type product (I have used milk, 1/2 and 1/2, almond milkโฆthey all work). Slowly heat and you are done. A weekโs worth of oatmeal ready to re-heat each morning as needed!
I like to use the โnight beforeโ approach to McCannโs โ that way I get the fresh oatmeal but it only takes 10 minutes instead of 30. Put the water and oatmeal in the pan, bring to a simmer for 1 minute then stash it on the freezing porch โtil cool, then in the fridge overnight. The next morning I finish the simmering while I make the kidโs breakfast/school lunch. Easy peasy fresh oatmeal.
And I never make coffee or cut my kidโs toenails eitherโฆ
Glad we are not the only house with clearly divided lines of duty ๐
For a quick oatmeal I like to soak the oats overnight in the fridge with milk. And we always top with butter, brown sugar and milk at our house. Oatmeal is so comforting.
Have you tried Megan Gordonโs steel-cut oatmeal method (I found it posted on http://orangette.blogspot.com/)? She toasts the oats in butter before cooking them, and honest to god, it was the best bowl of oatmeal Iโve had in a long time (and I love oatmeal)!
Also, Iโve definitely done the slow-cooker steel-cut oats for weekday mornings, and they are fantastic!
This is so true in our house as well. Except my husband is my daughterโs hair stylist in addition to handling the heating and cooling duties (she will only let him do her โponiesโ every morning!).
Actually, I think it IS pretty hard to get oatmeal right. My husband and I have had actual disagreements about this before, as ridiculous as that sounds.
We love morning oatmeal, too, but not the time to make it. Enter the slow cooker. Overnight oatmeal that is silky, never dry or gloppy, and ready when we wake up.
I love these silly divisions of labor, every couple has them.
for me, and this is a realllyyy weird one. but I never ever ever peal/chop/press/anything with garlic. I have the ability to, I can do it very wellโฆbut every single time itโs like something is wrong with my fingers and they soak up all the garlicky smell for DAYS. doesnโt matter how much I rub them against the stainless steel or wash them in scolding hot waterโฆthey smell like garlic.
so my husband has very kindly taken the task, and he never smells like garlic!
my husband and i have had the EXACT same conversation about the thermostat. i have no clue how to use it. partially because i am uninterested but more importantly because i am terrified of the thing. my mother watched it like a hawk when we were kids and it was put in the category of her favorite scissors, the hot burners and alcohol โ do not touch ever.
ps the oatmeal sounds perfect on this snowy day.
pps just for fun: http://semiweeklyeats.blogspot.com/2014/02/work-outfit-9.html
Really enjoyed this! We have them also, and these separate lanes we travel in are actually essential for showing the other we care. Our โbuy inโ if you will. Thanks for the visit!
Iโm obsessed with making steel cut oats in my rice cooker. It is completely foolproof. Set it up at night and set the timer for breakfast time.
Andy โ we would LOVE to send you a free sample of our awesome oatmeal that you and Jenny will love. Check out our website and let us know where to send all the goods. We have the toppings Jenny will love and we will make your life much happier and easier.
Another vote for overnight oatmeal. Only I toast it dry in a tall pot โ stir frequently, pour in hot water, bring to a boil, cover, remove from heat, and go to bed.
In the morning, top with a little liquid of choice and cook for 10 minutes. Weekday oatmeal!
I love that you wrote about this! After 10 years of marriage, my brain is no longer willing to accept any information about the car. My husband probably canโt tell you whether I change the sheets weekly or annually. Delightful post.
I have the thermostat programmed so my husband is frightened to touch it. Heโll ask me to turn it up if heโs cold. We joke that I am the man in the family.
My husband has always cut the kidsโ nails. He also does the changing of filters. We are happy when we stay in our lanes, too.
This sort of post is why I read you guys. The recipes are great, but these perfect vignettes of married life with children are the real treasure. Like the post about dinner party etiquette (aka no kids present) or the reports cards where you both admitted to crowding the pan. Yup, blogging perfection. Thank you for sharing.
saturday morning oatmeal is a tradition in our house! i love that it takes time to make, thatโs what makes it so specialโฆbut personally i prefer no toppings, except a little brown sugarโฆcanโt wait for saturday!
I love this, and am sure that most households have hilarious examples just like these. And yes to oats!
Iโm going to refer to this the next time my partner shakes his head because I donโt know how to get to Netflix on our TV