DEBORAH CROMBIE: We have always lived on a fairly European meal schedule around our house. My husband runs on a very late clock, and I have always tended to write best in the late afternoon and early evening, so there is no way we are going to manage to sit down to dinner early. And summer is the absolute worst! 7:00 to 7:30 is when it just begins to get cool enough to do outside chores. There is the daily second watering for me (at this point I'm always tempted to just let all those potted plants die!) and pond maintenance and other yard chores for Rick, and any little extra things that need to be done (or can be borne) outside. By the time I come in and cook, we are lucky to get dinner on the table by 9:30! And sometimes even later, I confess, no matter my best intentions. I always think I'll start crock pot meals in the morning but somehow that seldom happens, and I've sworn off grilling until it cools off a little here.
(Disclaimer: This is not what our dinner place settings normally look like, although it is our china, silver, and glassware. We eat most nights at our coffee table in the living room, on our old cork-backed London landmark placemats, but that didn't make a very pretty photo!)
Even when I was growing up, my family didn't have dinner on the table at five o'clock. That was considered uncivilized in the extreme. Of course, my parents had spent a lot of time in Mexico City, and then in Europe and Asia. Also, my dad had grown up on a farm in East Texas and didn't like anything that reminded him of farm life. They quit work around five and then had cocktail hour (so very civilized!) then we ate around 7:00.
(I have always aspired to follow in my parents' footsteps on the cocktail hour, but, alas, I can never manage to squeeze it in. I'm usually having a very late cup of tea instead…)
What about you, dear Reds? Are you early birds, or do you run on a later clock? And do you feel guilty if you do run late?
RHYS BOWEN: I’m married to an upper class Brit who thinks it’s uncivilized to dine before 8. As I get older I prefer to eat earlier. 7 is ideal for me so I have time to digest before bed. We tend to compromise!
I hope I’ll never want to eat at 5 pm!
I do like my cocktail hour, especially sitting on my deck when the first cool breezes come in. Aperol Spritz is the current favorite although if the day has been hot then a lager goes down well, with root veggie chips or radishes and hummus
HALLIE EPHRON: Dinner time growing up was always 6:30 sharp if we were eating with my parents who’d get home from a day working at the studio, ensconce themselves in the den, and drink scotch on the rocks until our wonderful amazing cook, Evelyn Hall, called us to dinner. If my parents were out for dinner, we kids ate at 6. Sharp. It was a very sheltered existence. But if you looked carefully: external order, internal chaos. (I owe my sanity to Evelyn Hall.)
These days I eat at any time after 6. Not on the clock, just when I’m hungry and feeling like throwing something together (or washing last night’s dishes.) It’s very Zen. And one of the few plusses of being alone.
LUCY BURDETTE: For me it wouldn’t be a matter of feeling guilty about eating late, it would be that I’m STARVING by 6 pm. That’s when we almost always eat, unless we have company and might push it to 7. My brother and his wife eat somewhere between 9:30 and 11 pm. Yikes! They are very kind to move it up when we visit. I suppose it partly depends on what time you get up?
HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: This is SO interesting! We generally eat at…9:30. It's because I am always working, and there’s so much to do– and yes, Debs, I also write best in late afternoon and early evening– then Jonathan finishes his work at about 6, and while I am still writing, he takes an hour on the treadmill, and when he’s finished, I do my treadmill time, and then I change and cook and by that time-whoa. It’s 9 or 9:30. It’s fun, and it works for us.
I don’t think I could have dinner at 5–it would feel very weird to me. Like…lunch. :-)
JULIA SPENCER-FLEMING: I’ve had different dinner times at different stages of my life. When my mom married John Fleming, dinner was 6PM set. In. Stone. He got home from work around 5:30 and he was hungry! I think he also liked the rest of the evening to putter around in his work room.Tiny tots, we did something like the traditional tea in England. They’d eat at five, and Ross and I would eat after their 7pm bedtime. Then for a blissful decade it was the whole family between 6 and 7 sitting at the table. Then came sports, theater, robotics, etc. etc. and we devolved into “It’s ready on the stove by 5pm, grab it when you can.”
Now I’m a 7pm gal. Time enough for a cocktail at 6, and my stomach’s not full when I go to bed at 10. I agree with Hank - the dinner at 5 stereotype of oldsters sounds as if they then turn in for the night at 8, and that can’t be right, right?
JENN McKINLAY: I eat whenever the Hub calls me to dinner, which is usually at 6 as he gets home from work at 5:15 and starts cooking because he’s starving. On weekends, he occasionally calls me to dinner at 4:30!!! If he has a late night gig the night before, he’s asleep by 9. There is no cocktail hour for us as Hub has been sober for 16 years and I don’t drink at home, unless it’s an Irish coffee after dinner.
DEBS: Now, obviously the next question for you all is whether you actually sit down to dinner at a proper table or, like us, do you abandon decoram and gravitate towards the coffee table and the TV? I would apologize more, but that is usually my only hour of TV, and I look forward to it as my reward for a day's work as well as the cooking!
What say you, dear readers?
Oh, and here's the real dinner deal, as of last night. Cat included. So we're not too horribly uncivilized.
We are flexible when it comes to eating times. While the grandbabies were with us this summer, we tended to eat dinner between five and six because they were hungry. If it's just us, we generally eat between six and six-thirty, depending mostly on when everything is ready. And we always sit at the dining room table to eat . . . .
ReplyDeleteThat sounds lovely, Joan.
DeleteI tend to eat dinner between 5pm - 6pm and I sit at a table and use the iPad for TV viewing.
ReplyDeleteGrace, if I was on my own I'd be more likely to read through dinner:-)
DeleteOh, sorry, Dru! I got my responses confused!
DeleteWe eat around six, always together at the table, and the same was true when my boys were growing up. If I had to wait until eight or nine to eat, I would have snacked so much I wouldn't need dinner! I do like a cocktail while I'm cooking. When I'm with my son and his wife, they don't eat until after Ida Rose is asleep by seven thirty, so dinner is later.
ReplyDeleteI used to have a glass of wine and snack while I was cooking but I somehow got out of both those habits. I sort of miss them!
DeleteUsually, I eat dinner between 6--7 pm but so,etimes it is as late as after 8 pm.
ReplyDeleteSince I do wake up between 4-4:30 am so it would be a long time between meals if I dined after 9 pm.
That's a long day, Grace!
DeleteI get up between 5:00 and 6:00 am and take a medication that keeps a cronic digestive issue in check. Because of that, we usually dine earlier between 5 and 6 pm. When we dine out with friends, we eat later and that seems to be fine. On the ship in July, we dined much later and I was fine which was kind of a revelation. At home, we are generally in bed reading by 9:30 or 10:00. If we have a dinner party, we dine at 7:00 or even 7:30, but the hors d'oeuvres are plentiful beforehand. Those nights are late clean-ups, but that is expected.
ReplyDeleteOne thing that I hate, is to have dishes left over from one meal to the next. In the evening, I really want to be out of the kitchen by 7:00.
Judy, I absolutely cannot stand to leave dirty dishes overnight in the kitchen, unless it's a pan that needs to soak. I'm quite obsessive about it!
DeleteWe don’t seem to have a regular supper time anymore. It depends on the day’s activities. But generally speaking we eat between 5 and 6 pm. I hate to eat late because I tend to get acid reflux if I do. Some days we just eat a late lunch and call it good.
ReplyDeleteWhen the kids were growing up we made a conscious effort to all eat together whether it was at home or grabbing a fast food meal between activities. During baseball season we ate at 4:00 in order to get to the 5:30 pregame practices.
I don't know how my daughter manages it all, between work and my granddaughter's soccer and gymnastics. They been using meal prep kits for years, which seem to work really well for their busy schedule and are certainly healthier than fast food.
DeleteI'm really the odd (wo)man out here. I'm an early bird (up by 4:30), and our meal schedules are completely bonkers. We have supper between 3:30 and 4:00 in the afternoon. Let me explain (make excuses). Since we get up so early, I'm wiped out and ready for bed by 8:00. I also have some acid reflux issues and need to leave plenty of time between eating and going to bed if I hope to sleep. Therefore, big meal at 4. Snack at 6. Bedtime at 8.
ReplyDeleteSeveral of us here are also early risers, Annette! We all make it work how we need to.
DeleteANNETTE: I get up the same time as you but I don't usually eat brekkie until after 7:00 am. Lunch is 12-1 pm, dinner is 6-7 pm or maybe as late as 8 pm. I don't go to sleep until 9:30-10 pm.
DeleteIt sounds like a healthy schedule to me, Annette. It's so interesting that we are all wired so differently. Getting up at 4:30 in the morning would be absolute torture for me!
DeleteDeborah, the 4:30 wake up time started out because my husband had to be at work by 6:00. He's partly retired now, but nobody told Kensi Kitty. Her alarm clock is set in stone.
DeleteFirst off, I have to say how much I enjoy photos of your beautiful home Debs! It's so much fun!
ReplyDeleteWe always get hungry at around 5:00 so we eat anytime around 5-6pm. But, sometimes I might have a snack in the late afternoon (something simple usually) and then I'm not hungry until later on around 7-8. But for the most part we eat around 6 pm. And I get up early around 5:00 ish. So by 9:00 I'm in bed reading before falling asleep.
Thank you, Anon! It's a shame we don't eat in our dining room more often, as it's one of the prettiest rooms in the house. I have to confess, however, that our dining room chairs were designed for people bigger than me so I don't find them all that comfortable.
DeleteAnd now for something completely different… I want my supper at 3-4pm. That is when I am starving, shaking and could eat the cat! I would like lunch at 11, but hold off until 12-12:30. I suffer from horrible hunger since I was diagnosed with diabetes and am starving most of the time – but – after a point mid-afternoon, my hunger stops and I don’t care if I eat. Waiting until 6 is about as far as I can go, if I don’t want to feed what could be a lovely supper to the dog because my ability to eat has shut down. Actually, it is a horrible way to live. It means that in the case that we were to go out to supper (not likely), or have people over to supper, I have already had a couple of eggs at 3:30, and don’t want anything so the meal is a waste for me.
ReplyDeleteThat is why we eat eggs a lot – easy, quick, versatile and satisfying. I suspect if I was alone that would be my ‘tea and toast’ – without the toast.
Meals (all except breakfast) are carried from the kitchen where they were plated to each person’s recliner in front of the telly. Summertime lunch is on Geriatric Row. Dining room table is a collections enterprise – just like that table when you come in the house and drop everything there. It gets shifted when real company comes or perhaps if it is raining and I have nothing to otherwise grab my attention.
What annoys us is that apparently people either don’t have lunch or maybe they just graze all day. Either way, they turn up between noon and 1 and act surprised that we might be having lunch!
I find it very annoying that my husband does not consider an omelet a suitable dinner! I'd be happy with omelets and salad most nights.
DeleteEggs are the best!
DeleteFrom Celia: I grew up in a world of mealtimes set in stone from prewar times but have learned to pivot to meet whatever is presented as the current norm. Now I often eat in my little apartment with 'dinner' delivered from the kitchen here. So me in my recliner with TV or a book happy not to be cooking for one. Living in community is turning out to be interesting in ways I didn't expect. I think the message is to welcome in the new opportunities , and I do.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you are welcoming the changes, Celia. Are you now in an assisted living community? Maine, or CT? Wishing you well!
DeleteHaving dinner delivered sounds pretty great, Celia. How is the food where you are?
DeleteGrateful to hear that you are doing well in your new situation, Celia. Having a meal delivered, or the choice to join others, sounds pretty darn good.
DeleteI hope you’re doing well, Celia. And having meals prepared for you does beat having to cook for one. Take care. — Pat S
DeleteDoes, I love your photo. Cat in prominent position, as is rightly so. Growing up my Mom would be home from work by 5:15 and we ate at 6. (Everyone else I. The neighborhood ate at 4:30+or 5:00) When I lived at home after college for a couple of years my Mom and I had dinner around 7-7:30. After I was married we would have cocktails before dinner and have dinner around 8 or later. Now, we’re both retired and tend to eat between 7 and 7:30, depending on if/when we had lunch. Dinner almost always at the dining room table (or at the table on the deck in the summer now), even growing up. Occasionally, pizza in the living room if there’s a how on we really want to watch.
ReplyDeleteTyoo-I meant Debs!
DeleteThe cat is Ella, who we took in when our friend Gigi died last year. She immediately claimed the spot between us on the sofa, displacing poor Yasu. I used to tidy away her blanket in the mornings, but she's so happy there all day that now I just leave it. She's turned 16 this month so I figure she deserves all the coddling we can give her.
DeleteI’ve been thinking about Gigi lately. And I came across that thank you note she sent, received after she died. You must miss her terribly, such a fun human being. Xo
DeleteIt's very sweet that you saved her note, Ann. It will be a year on September 3rd.
DeleteYour dinner at the coffee table looks very cozy Debs!
ReplyDeleteI'm totally the stereotypical old person, eating dinner early (it's very easy to book the 5 pm slot at Cabezon, my favorite, wonderful, neighborhood, seafood, delicious little restaurant). When we were growing up, dinner was at 5:30 because that's when dad got home from work. When mom started working too, we moved it to 6 and Margaret and I were in charge of cooking each night.
I eat with Mike a couple of times a week and dinner's either 4:30 or 5. When our son was around this summer, we all ate together just about every night (unless Mike had a banjo gig or I had a meeting) and it was always 4:30 because our offspring needed to go hang out with his girlfriend for hours on Zoom (she's on the east coast). Since I'm in bed mostly by 9 and up at 5, the schedule works for me.
Gillian, you had me at "favorite, wonderful, neighborhood seafood restaurant!" If I had one of those, I'd be there at 5 every day!
DeleteGillian, will you remind me of Cabezon the next time I visit? When we were in Portland in May my daughter couldn't find a seafood restaurant for me. Which, by the way, I found highly suspicious! LOL
DeleteSure Karen! It's not far from your daughter's house (maybe 15 minutes?). They change the menu often to highlight what's fresh. On Friday, Mike and I both ordered the golden snapper with roasted red pepper sauce, tempura wax beans, potatoes. The fish skin was delightfully crispy and the sauce was sublime. It's a little on the spendy side, but well worth it for a treat. I'm kind of enthusiastic about this place. https://cabezonrestaurant.com/
DeleteIn the last 15 years or so, we have totally relaxed our day to day schedules. Only the cats demand eating at set meal times. It took a very long time for me to understand my daughters food preferences were the polar opposite of mine. Now we cook and eat separately. During the hot months, I sleep long siestas, and wake at 4:30. I normally reheat leftovers for my morning meal. In short my habits reflect an old cowboy song lyric: I eat when I'm hungry and drink when I'm dry.
ReplyDeleteAnd why not, Coralee? That sounds pretty great to me!
DeleteI grew up eating right at 5. My dad worked in a machine shop and he got out at 3, home by 3:30. When mom worked she worked at the same place so her hours were similar. So we ate at 5 on the button. My husband is an early bird so we also eat early. Now that we’re retired we have more control over our hours, but he is still an early bird, so we have comprised to eating at 5:30, 6 if we’re going out usually. Eating at 7 doesn’t work for him as he goes to bed at 9 (up at 5:30-6am) and eating that close to bed upsets his stomach. I don’t care as much as I’m a night owl, so I just go along with what he wants. We usually only do cocktails on the weekends (even though we are retired), which is just a drink before dinner not a full on cocktail hour. Unless we’re having cocktails with friends/neighbors, then it’s a full on cocktail hour with appetizers. And then we rush home to have an easy dinner as early as we can manage, unless the appetizers were very substantial and that will be our dinner.
ReplyDeleteMy friend who eats at 5 is always nagging me about how unhealthy it is to eat late. I tell her it's all relative. She goes to bed about 8, and I seldom get to bed before midnight, so it's the same amount of time between meals and sleep!
DeleteGrowing up it was dinner at 5. Dad wanted dinner on the table when he came home. He worked for Otis Elevator as a supervisor in the tool and die department so he needed to be there about an hour before the official 7 AM workday began to set the schedule. It was a long day. Before I married, I grazed at dinner time. Fruit, cheese, nothing heavy, but hubs does like a real meal so we end up eating between 6 and 7 depending on what we had going on during the day.
ReplyDelete5 o'clock dinners were much more possible when women didn't work, too!
DeleteKAIT: My dad worked as a machinist at Dover Elevator, so our family had a similar early dinner schedule.
DeleteI wonder if it went with the job description?
DeleteDEBS: I forgot to mention - I love your butter dish!
DeleteButter dish! I was wondering why you had not taken the cellophane off tonight's supper - maybe it was bologna. Back to the water to reset the brain!
DeleteThank you, Kait! The knob has been superglued on for year's so I wash the top very carefully. It was from Anthropologie so of course is not replaceable.
DeleteMargo, I'm surprised no one commented on the weird contraption in the center of the table--our rotary parmesan grinder. We were having white bean and spinach soup which is meant to be served with grated parmesan and olive oil. We also had a fresh baguette from the local bakery, hence the butter for me. That's the one time I can't resist!
This brings back memories of visiting my grandfather and relatives from the Victorian Era generation when I was a young child. When my parents and I visited them, I remember eating later in the evenings. When we went out to dinner with my Uncle and cousins, I recall late night dinners out after dark, meaning after 6p.m. My Uncle had a career where he could sleep late in the mornings.
ReplyDeleteMy Dad was a "dinner by 6p.m." type. As Lucy said, it depends on what time you wake up.
Indeed it does!
DeleteI can't remember when I ate dinner as a kid, although I know that once or twice a week, my mother fed my sister and me first and read to us (Oz books, Mary Poppins, The Four-Story Mistake and other Elizabeth Enright books, and many more children's classics), then ate later with my father when he got home from work. Now I manage to have dinner ready for Peter and me between 7:45 and 8:15 (or occasionally 8:30), and we usually watch a recorded version of the daily 7:30 p.m. Swiss-plus-world news. We never watch the news live these days, so we can fast-forward anything about Trump beyond the headlines. Bad enough to have to read about the latest horrifying decision in the newspaper the next day.
ReplyDeleteI absolutely get that, Kim. I veto any news at night. It's just too stressful.
DeleteIt is so helpful - we do that with the France24 news.
DeleteMy schedule is all over the place these days. I'm hungry as soon as I get up--after I take care of the animals, I'll grab a bite of something between 7:30-8:30 and be hungry again an hour later. Lunch can be another small bite of something between 11:30-3 p.m. Supper might a small plate anywhere between 4-8:30 p.m. The 4 p.m. usually happens when there was no lunch--I feed the animals and then myself. No cocktails because I try not to have any alcohol in the house.
ReplyDeleteFlora, if I lived a lone, I would be a total grazer! Sometimes when I'm busy I don't manage to eat lunch until the middle of the afternoon.
DeleteAm not an early-riser here so first breakfast is around 8 and “second breakfast” (oatmeal for health reasons) is around Noon. A late afternoon snack gets me through until a 7 or 8 pm dinner. In the winter I tend to make more hearty meals and eat a little earlier -6 or 7 pm. Bed around 11! As a self-proclaimed “grazer” I consider myself pretty flexible with meal-times (especially like to be able to accept an invite to dinner with someone or if my husband is in town and prefers to do the cooking, I am always ready to eat!)
ReplyDeleteI would definitely eat a little earlier if I had someone else doing the cooking!
DeleteLeft to my own devices, I'm more likely to have my main meal at lunchtime-ish. I don't really eat breakfast, so that is when I am the hungriest. If I have a substantial meal midday then I'm inclined to have a light meal around 7 or 8--omelets, a dinner salad with protein, pasta, soup.
ReplyDeleteHowever, I've been married for 43 years to someone used to getting up early and having breakfast, eating lunch at the dot of noon, coming home from work at 6, and expecting his feet under the dinner table by 6:30, replicating his parents' routine. I did that for a long time, but now that he is semi-retired, we are thankfully much more relaxed about mealtimes. Just this weekend we have eaten closer to 8 twice. And tomorrow we are seeing a film with friends at noon and not eating lunch until afterwards. So dinner will be a snack.
Cocktails: both our doctors have advised us to watch out for starchy foods and alcohol because of blood sugar issues (him way more than me). Pre-dinner wine pours while I'm cooking always turn into a second glass of wine with dinner, and I try not to give in to such offers any more. And I almost never drink during the day unless I'm hosting a ladies' lunch here and there is a nice chilled prosecco.
DeleteYes, the pre-dinner half a glass does tend to get refilled. I've lost a good deal of weight in the last few years, and I suspect cutting out that treat has something to do with it. Also cutting out the pre-dinner snacking. But I do like wine and sometimes will have a tiny bit with lunch, maybe a quarter of a glass, if that. But since Rick doesn't drink wine at all, that mean that even with Repour tops, I waste too many bottles. I miss having my daughter, when they lived next door, or my friend Gigi coming over occasionally for evening happy hour.
DeleteI know you must miss Gigi immensely. Hugs.
DeleteThanks, Karen. Gigi definitely left a big hole in the lives of everyone who knew her.
DeleteWhen you grow up on a dairy farm meals revolve around when the cows need milking, and milking began at 5AM and 5PM. We had breakfast about 6:30-7 and the main meal was at noon. My dad would come in for a cup of coffee at 4 or so before "chores" began: pre-milking endeavors. We had "supper" which was more like lunch at 6:30 or so. My husband and I have settled on 6-6:30 for dinner these days. It all revolves around aging, I think! Annette
ReplyDeleteMy husband is not showing any signs of bio clock reversal. When he worked police dispatch his choice of shift was 11 p to 7 a, so you can see what a nightowl he is. Now he's usually up until 2 or 3, all of which makes is difficult to run on an earlier schedule.
DeleteIt’s been just me for dinner and retired for ever so long…so dinner is served when/if the spirit moves me and is whatever I happen to be hungry for…oat meal to salmon steaks. Glass of wine while making and another with meal … no wine with oat meal ;-). Happy Monday, all. Elisabeth
ReplyDeleteHa! I think I'd pass on wine with oatmeal, too. I do love rose with lunch, and if I go out someplace nice for lunch with my daughter, a glass of crisp pink wine is my treat.
DeleteI grew up eating dinner around 7:30 or 8:00. I didn’t intend to replicate that, but it’s kind of the window we’ve settled on. My husband is still working and I don’t know when he’ll be coming home until he texts he’s on his way. I’m retired and could easily have dinner ready by 6, but I don’t. I’m trying to teach myself to make the food and eat it when it’s ready and reheat it for him. I enjoy eating with him, but I can always sit with him while he eats. And we only eat at the table when we have guests over. Otherwise it’s on the couch in front of the television. — Pat S
ReplyDeleteThanks for not making me feel so guilty, Pat!
DeleteMy pleasure!! :-D
DeleteWhat is this "cocktail hour" you speak of?
ReplyDeleteGrowing up, dinner was 6:00-ish. If Mom was working 3-11pm, prep didn't start until Dad got home between 5 and 5:30 - that is, before I got old enough to start. We had firm bedtimes: 7pm for my baby sister, 8pm for elementary school-aged kids. I didn't have a bedtime, but I gravitated to being in bed by 9:30, asleep by ten or so. Dinner time was often controlled by evening activities - dance for my sister, sports for my brothers. In the summer, things tended to be earlier because of soccer and baseball.
When my kids were growing up, it was much the same.
Now? We start cooking around 5, eat sometime between 5:30 and 6. Usually. Unless one of us had a late lunch or we just aren't hungry. If we decide to go out, it's around the same time. But always, ALWAYS eating at a table - kitchen or dining room. Even when the kids were young. And always saying grace before we ate.
I couldn't eat dinner at 9:30. That's about when The Hubby and I are getting into bed. He's a naturally-early riser (5:30 or so) and I have to get up early for work. Plus eating that late is bad for my digestion.
Back home in Sacramento, we used to eat most evenings at around 6:30. Since coming to Portugal, we tend to eat out more, and most restaurants don't open before 7:00 or 7 30 p.m. In Galiza (Spain) where we visit often, even later. (Most kitchens open around 8:00 or 8:30.) so, even when we eat at home, we really have drifted into the Iberian schedule and eat at around 7:30 or 8:00. We also go to bed later. We used to be in bed by 10. Now, 11:00 or 11:30 is typical. We still get up early - 6:00 a.m , Rajan; 7:30 me - which feels really late after all those teaching years of being at school at that time! But we somewhat compensate with afternoon naps.
ReplyDeleteThat is the perfect schedule, in my opinion!
DeleteAnonymous on well, we are getting used to it. It's certainly a relaxed schedule. 🙂
DeleteI don't know where the "on" came from. 🫤
DeleteWe usually eat at six, and somehow I manage to have everything ready at just that time But we only eat at the table when we have company. The rest of the time it’s on our laps in the living room, watching the news, which we mute every time you know who is on, drooling dementedly.
ReplyDeleteI do the cooking and Julie does the dishes! Works for us!
No news with dinner here! Although growing up sometimes we ate on TV trays while my parents watched the evening news. Does anyone still make TV trays, I wonder?
DeleteGrowing up, dinner was around 6/6:30, about 30 to 40 minutes after Dad got home from work and my aunt picked up her kids. Mom was their day care. The exception would be on Friday, when my aunt would stay for a cup of tea, then dinner was served a little later, but it was cooking while they had tea.
ReplyDeleteToday, I eat when I want, lately around 7:30 and not much, salad, cheese, crackers is what the summer has seen. I'll probably try to get some soup started when the weather changes. I'm trying to eat my larger meal earlier in the day so I'm sleeping a such a full stomach.
The above is from me - Deana. I become anonymous when I use my computer.
DeleteMy husband starts thinking about what we will have for supper around noon. I'm really not ready to talk about it then, unless I'm fixing a crock pot dish and will start it soon. Philip usually does the cooking these days, and he wants to eat around 5:30, no later than 6:00. I prefer to eat between 6:30 and 7:00. When Philip was away and I was here alone, I often didn't eat supper until 8:00. Today I'll be eating around 4:00 because Philip had a funeral in which the Color Guard from the VFW participated, and he's stopping on his way home to pick up something. That makes me feel like the old people who go out to eat for the 4:00 special. Yes, I'm old, but that's not my meal time. And, these days I most likely will eat in my recliner to watch the news or Gunsmoke.
ReplyDeleteGunsmoke! Where is it on, Kathy? What a hoot!
DeleteMy brother-in-law loves the old Westerns. They watch all the time - INSP
DeleteDebs, it seems to be on all the time, on several different stations. I'll have to look up the names of the stations. I read that it's in the top ten shows watched.
DeleteRunning in late..and see? This is why dinner is always late! I do love reading about everyone's lives..so fascinating! And what in our lives dictates what we do...
ReplyDeleteIsn't it fascinating, Hank? I wonder if people who aren't writers or readers are so interested in the minutae of other people's lives...
DeleteIt is so hot here this afternoon that even the thought of going outside to do those evening chores may do me in! Thank goodness we replaced our downstairs AC a couple of years ago and the kitchen is no longer a sweatbox in the evenings.
ReplyDelete