โIโm tired of pretending.โ
These were the words I heard from my husband while we sat by the edge of an closed-for-the-season swimming pool in South Carolina over the holiday break. The kids were getting dressed in the locker room after an hour on the tennis court. It was the last week of December and the sun was white in the lonely winter sky.
โReally?โ I say. โSo thatโs it? Fifteen years of marriage and I find this out now?โ
โWell, this is important โ itโs our first vacation dinner and I donโt want to ruin it by pretending that I like whatโs on the table.โ
I had just told him I was thinking of making some kind of pork and sweet potato stew with hominy โ a riff on a recipe Victoria Granof had developed forย Time for Dinner.
โYou couldโve told me before now,โ I said, at this point more confused than angry. โAll those sweet potato fries? All those Thanksgiving mashes with oranges?โ The room narrowed and widened simultaneously. The many sweet potato moments in our lives together started pulsing before me like a scene from Run Lola Run. โYour fatherโs birthday party in our first apartment!โ I said, louder than I had intended to. It was one of the first times we had ever entertained, rotating our scrappy desk sideways against the wall to create a makeshift dining room table. โWe made Emerilโs Three Potato Lasagna that night โ and you ate every bite!โ
His eyes were fixed a heron gliding across a lagoon. He said nothing.
โYouโre telling me all this time you never liked sweet potatoes?โ
โNope. Not really. Cloying. Overpowering. Too sweet. Like dessert, only bad.โ Pause. โFigured Iโd tell you before we go shopping. Iโm tired of acting like sweet potatoes are good.โ
The heron landed on a small upturned log in the lagoon. His eyes scanned the water, like he was looking for some lunch.
โAnd what about hominy?โ I asked. โShould I even bother?โ The girls were coming out of the locker room, their hair smooth and brushed in the front, but gnarly and knotted in the back where they couldnโt reach. I looked at him.
โWhy donโt you just let me go shopping,โ he said.
ย Braised Pork in Adobo with No Sweet Potatoes
2 1/2 pound pork loin, salted & peppered
2-3 tablespoons olive oil
1 14-ounce can diced tomatoes
1 ย tablespoon oregano
1/2 teaspoon cumin
1 bay leaf
(or 3 tablespoon chili powder instead of above three spices)
1 chipotle in adobo (not the sauce, just the dripping single pepper; you can freeze the rest)
1/4 cup water
1/2 cup cider vinegar (or vinegar-based bbq sauce like Shealyโs)
2 garlic cloves, halved
1 medium onion, chopped
handful fresh cilantro
Preheat oven 350ยฐF. In a small-ish Dutch oven or heavy-bottomed pot, over medium-high heat, brown pork in oil on all sides, about 4-5 minutes a side. Add everything else to the pot so the pork is 2/3 immersed in liquid, stirring. Bring to a boil, cover and place in oven for 2-3 hours. Remove pork, shred with two forks, and place back in the braising liquid.
Serve with polentaย and shredded cabbage thatโs been ย tossed with chopped apples, lots of freshly squeezed lime, cumin, a scoop of plain yogurt, chopped cilantro, and olive oil.
P.S. We wanted to do this with hominy instead of polenta but couldnโt find it in where we were staying. (Usually, you can find a 15-ounce can in the Goya section.) If you want to use the hominy, add a can (drained and rinsed) to the stew about 10 minutes before you plan to serve and heat through.
P.P.S Any leftover pork: Amazeballs on nachos under a pile of melted cheese.
Iโm with Andy on this one โ I *want* to like sweet potatoes (and beets for that matter), but thereโs something terribly strange about how sweet they are, and not in the good way like dessert.
I have to give him credit though โ I donโt think I could pretend nearly as long.
Funny what love does.
Hey โ thatโs a very mean way to start a post! I was alarmed for real that you two were splitting up, and having bought the book and read this blog since its inception years ago, I feel like I know you four. No teasing like that!
My husband feels the same way, only he doesnโt pretend. This is an issue because I LOVE sweet potatoes. This is not the only food disagreement we have, howeverโฆ..ahโฆ.blissful married life ๐
hahaha! my husband and I are closet sweet potatoes haters as well. I want so badly to like them but I just donโt (except for sweet potato fries) ๐
ha! hilarious, my MIL and i were just discussing that we donโt know any dudes that like sweet potatoes. including my husband. HOWEVER, i chopped them up real small and added them to a roasted veggies for tacos i made last week and he declared the tacos the best ever. it could of been the avocado cream sauce that went with it, though.
About 3 years into our marriage, I discovered that my husband and I were living a bacon lie. Thatโs right โ a bacon lie. Iโd been making it extra crispy because his mom does and thatโs what I thought he preferred, and I wasnโt willing to advance the cause of slightly softer bacon. Until the texts:
Me: Breakfast for dinner tonight. Sausage or bacon?
Him: Bacon โ not too crispy, please.
It was like a revelation and the dark days are over.
But, we both love sweet potatoes. I think.
My SO told me maybe 7 years into our relationship that he hates pasta with marinara sauce, which I made all the time since our kids like it (and itโs easy). He also is not a fan of sweet potatoes.
I just stumbled upon this (gorgeous) blog and read the first line of this post only to think that this was the break up of a marriage (like I HAVE seen/done in the past). Suffice to say, I am relieved your husband loves you, but dislikes sweet potatoes. Phew. Great story (and love your header)!
I was about thirty before a saw a sweet potato in the flesh. Before then that my only sighting was in Rachard Scarry books. Even now, they occupy a very small space in the supermarket here (Ireland). Its funny because regular potatoes are still SO popular. And the sweet ones we have are always grown in the States. Maybe we have too much rain? I like them though.
Ok โ now I donโt feel so wierd about the time my husband had something serious to discuss with me and then let me know he didnโt want to eat beef or lamb anymore. And since then even more has come off the will eat list for a variety of reasons (tomatoes, garlic, citrus, fish, seafood, lentils, spicy) but I think sweet potatoes are still on the ok list โ we had them in a dish last week that he announced was delish and should be repeated.
Another wonderful post from DALS! Jenny I was just telling my husband how much I love your blog. Your writing is wonderful, and even though we canโt eat some of the meals (we are those weird vegans) I check into your blog regularly! Glad your husband finally let you know he does not like sweet potatoes. Men!
hahahaha โ I would totally let him go shopping. Most of the time.
Also โ I just read Suffering Succotashโฆmaybe Andyโs secretly a picky eater? ๐
My husband says the same thing about Sweet Potatoes. He doesnโt do sweet vegetables at all.
Oh, marriage. This post made me smile hard.
The only way I like sweet potatoes is with butter and sugar involved, which really negates the health benefits I think. Fortunately(I guess), no one else in my family likes them either.
I have always felt that I really ought to like sweet potatoes more than I do. But theyโre just too, well, sweet, I guess. Apparently Iโm not alone. Re: Run, Lola, Run โ Wow, havenโt thought of that film in a while. Nice reference.
I like almost all foods but can not eat any orange vegetables โ no carrots, sweet potatoes, winter squash โ no matter how many times I try. *shiver*
My husband, on the other hand, does not like fried chicken. Who the heck doesnโt like fried chicken?
Ha ha haโฆ This is so hilarious!! I can sympathise, my husband hates โsweet/savouryโ foodโฆ So no sweet potatoes, no pumpkin, no squash- carrots just about make the grade!! It is so annoying as I LOVE these things!
This is my first time at your website, but I just wanted to tell you that I just read your book, and I loved it! I have a serious cookbook addiction, and yours was my favorite Iโve read it ages!
I love the way you started that post! The recipe looks amazing too, but itโs so great to hear the sacrifices people make when theyโre in love.
I donโt know what heโs talking about though, sweet potatoes are the best! ๐
Greatโฆ now Iโm getting the โwow, maybe he loved her that muchโฆโ business. I waited exactly one meal before I let slip my disdain for any pasta with any red sauce (reminds me of the bleak days of grad school when my grocery list was pasta and whatever red sauce was on sale). My wife is entirely unimpressed with me now (โ15 yearsโฆ you must not love me that muchโ). Thanks, Andy.
I am a longtime blog reader, just bought the book, so first must say thanks, Jenny! You have a lot of pork dishes that sound delicious, but we donโt eat pork. Any suggestions/rules of thumb if subbing chicken or beef? Or are some of the pork recipes better avoided with other meats?
Ha ha..my husband hates sweet potatoes too! Pretty much anything in that family. However, I did turn him on to spaghetti squashโฆnothing a little butter and parmesan wonโt fix.
Howโs the 7 recipe challenge coming?
I only have 1 to go. So far I have made:
1. Porcupine meatballs (declared awesome by all)
2. Crockpot split pea soup (split decision)
3. Sweet barbecue salmon (declared particularly awesome by my son..but he loves salmon)
4. Brussells sprouts, italian sausage and cannelini beans (well, I liked it anyway and my son liked the brussells sprouts)
5. Chicken with mushrooms in cream sauce (from one of the Real Simple cookbooks). Loved this.
6. Salmon with swiss chard and warm lentil salad (well, they liked the salmon and the swiss chard wasnโt completely trashed)
7. ??????
I need a big finish but Iโve got to get a meatloaf in here before my husband defects.
I am the only one who likes sweet potatoes in my family. My husband says they are too sweet and overpowering, agreeing with Andy. He will tolerate them chopped small, roasted with โregularโ potatoes. Once again, a hilarious post.