The year of Marley Spoon

Here in Australia, as well as elsewhere in the world, the pandemic brought changes to our daily routines.

As we struggled with the strangeness of it all, it was also a time for making creative changes to routines that now were anything but routine. How we shopped for food and dealt with meal making was one routine that merited change. Entering a supermarket was a potential super spreader event, and restaurants were either closed or only doing takeaway. What were our choices? We decided to try a meal kit delivery service that brought recipes and fresh ingredients to our door. A meal kit delivery service would not only reduce our potential Covid exposure, but also reduce carbon emissions by eliminating trips to the grocery store. My sister Ellen researched the possible options, and I got her and a chef’s recommendation to try Marley Spoon. It was exciting to think that despite the pandemic’s physical limitations, we could embark on a new culinary adventure. It not only felt like a luxurious option, but it also helped solve one pandemic conundrum.

Each week, we tried three new recipes. There were Asian and South American inspired recipes and a host of vegetarian options. To stay on the safe side, they also offer more traditional British fare with meat pies and meat and two veg. The continuing appeal for me was that I got to cook new recipes each week, which made me feel like we were regularly visiting a restaurant in our own home. Some recipes were better than others, but this was to be expected. It was also fun to compare menus with my sister overseas who also has Marley Spoon delivered. I grizzle that she gets more Mexican inspired recipes, and she complains that her menu has no lamb dishes.

As the pandemic becomes (hopefully) a distant memory, we are now less reliant on a meal kit delivery service. But such a service still offers a great alternative to grocery shopping and meals out. Plus, it feels like I am attending a continuing culinary education course, and my cooking skills have definitely improved. I am also more relaxed in the kitchen and wiser about the amount of ingredients that I need to make a meal. Another bonus of a meal kit delivery service is that there is no waste. There is just enough of each ingredient to make the meal. This is a very satisfying when you consider the amount of food waste in this country. Recent statistics report that 7.6 million tons of food is wasted in Australia annually. (I looked that up!)

Marley Spoon helped to pandemic proof our lives and moved us into new directions. For me, it was a small act of optimism, as we pushed against the boundaries of the unseen contagion. I was going to continue to learn, continue to be connected to the wider world and experience new things without leaving home.

Picture of Joyce Agee

Joyce Agee

Writing can magically transport us anywhere. My blog looks at the experiences of being an expat newcomer; life in a small town in regional Australia, and what the world looks like living ‘down under’.

SHARE

Related posts

Be seen and not heard

Growing up, our father warned us ‘Children should be seen and not heard.’ It was his parental way of controlling or at least stifling our behaviour. If my sister and I were expected to be

Read More »

The thinking woman’s crumpet

The term ‘the thinking woman’s crumpet’ always makes me laugh. I first heard it in London in the 1980s and since then I have used it sparingly but effectively to describe the elusive appeal of certain

Read More »

And the runner up is…

As I wrote and revised The Newcomer’s Dictionary, there were a number of excellent words that I did not have the space to include. ‘Nomad’ lost out to ‘Newcomer’; ‘Alien’ was left behind for ‘Abroad’;

Read More »

Learning to speak photography

 Generally, families have one main photographic collection to preserve their memories and history. In fact, I have two: a collection of private memories and a collection that documents my activities as a working photographer.  The private collection

Read More »

Singing during Covid

Gene Kelly sings, dances and playfully splashes in puddles in one of the most iconic scenes from the 1950s’ Hollywood musical Singing in the Rain. Despite being soaked to the skin, he remains optimistic while

Read More »

The year of Marley Spoon

Here in Australia, as well as elsewhere in the world, the pandemic brought changes to our daily routines. As we struggled with the strangeness of it all, it was also a time for making creative

Read More »

A major geographic

What is a “major geographic”? Is it an earthquake, a national emergency, a religious conversion or a cocktail? No, in fact, a major geographic is the noun that is used to describe the action taken by

Read More »

Audrey Hepburn has gone missing

We were visiting a friend in Vancouver, Canada and I was exploring the city. There was a commercial gallery selling studio portraits of Hollywood stars from the 1940s to the 1960s. I entered the gallery. It was a

Read More »

The accidental gardener

As a child, my family moved frequently. We lived in rental accommodation so there was little incentive to take an interest in plants or gardening. This all changed after l married and went to live

Read More »