The Night I Ruined Dinner but Found Love
What happens when a sensualist falls for a man raised on instant mash.
I am British. I do not come from a rich culinary heritage.
Our family home was full of love and emotion, but didn’t hold a single cook book. In fact, my mother had just two dishes in her repertoire. Her signature—which I’ve never seen anywhere else, and so assume she invented—was called Tuna Fish Pie. A strange name, as if you’ve got the word tuna in there, the fish is kind of implied. Also, it had just three ingredients: tuna, baked beans, and mashed potato.
Her second dish was salad, sort of, but not like you’re imagining. My mother was a no ingredient-left-behind salad maximalist who thought nothing of combining tuna, lettuce, grapes, pineapple and feta.
She really loved tuna.
The only thing she never put in a salad was any kind of dressing. She thought salad dressing was a conspiracy of the bourgeoisie.
Her salads came naked, but they felt no shame.
Growing up in a house like this, I learned not to care much about food. If I got hungry, I just put the nearest edible thing in my mouth, and got on with my day. Food was fuel, nothing more. Like petrol for a car, except sometimes the petrol had grapes in it.
It was a system that served me well until, in my early thirties, I met a woman who was spectacular and flawless. Both a true sensualist and a great cook, I discovered on our second date, when she made a stunning curry.
“What’s this,” I said, pointing to a green thing within it.
“It’s pak chai.”
“Come again.”
“It’s pak chai.”
“Okay,” I said, unsure if I was being informed or insulted, but feeling my culinary horizons widen. After that amazing meal, we went to a house party where she was the first one out on the dance floor. Watching her, and I had too, because apparently she was also rhythmically blessed, I thought about how the best thing about new relationships is the permission they give you to reinvent yourself.
I felt the future fork before me. On the one prong: Old Adam - narrow of mind, poor of culture, a man who considered cheese and crackers a sophisticated meal.
On the other side: New Adam - a dancer, cook and hedonist.
Which did I want to be? The answer was obvious, and I strode out to the dance floor, shameless as one of my mother’s salads, and I danced with that woman. Badly, but with conviction.
The weeks passed blissfully. We kissed so much our lips blistered. But as I got to know her, I discovered things that complicated my simple assessment of her: she struggled several things that came naturally to Old Adam.
She hadn’t grown up in an emotionally intelligent household, like mine. In hers, objects were sometimes thrown against the wall. Moods could suddenly shift and arguments exploded out of nothing, rolling in like bad weather, and then suddenly out, never talked about again.
Feelings were dangerous territory. As a result, my consistency baffled her. I’d often catch her studying me, a wry look on her face, as if I were a magic trick she was trying to solve. She seemed genuinely surprised that I kept turning up. That my feelings for her were so completely steady. Which shouldn’t have been surprising, really, since I was a man who’d eaten tuna fish pie two nights a week for ten years and never complained.
After many evenings at hers—where she effortlessly produced elaborate meals while I marvelled and cut the vegetables—it became time for our first dinner date at mine. I knew this was an important next step. Another fork in my personal road. I wanted a future where I could name more than three types of nut, and who could casually disappear into the kitchen only to return with a quiche of my own creation.
These were ambitious goals for someone who, despite being thirty-two, still didn't own a cookbook and had never once followed a recipe anywhere. But how hard could it be? I found what looked like a simple pumpkin soup recipe online. I didn't have scales, a mixer, or an appropriately sized saucepan, but I figured I could improvise. I went food shopping, ingredient list in my hand, already enjoying the new, cultured man I was becoming. Someone who whizzed through the herb section because he definitely knew the difference between coriander and parsley.
Back home, I started cooking with the enthusiasm of a contestant on a TV cooking show. Everything was going surprisingly well until, just as she was due to arrive, the recipe instructed me to "pour in one cup of vegetable stock."
I had purchased a large jar of stock powder. I opened my cupboard. There were several cups of differing sizes. Which “cup” could they possibly mean?
Time was running out. I grabbed the biggest coffee cup I had, filled it to the brim with stock powder, and tipped it in.
The soup darkened.
The soup thickened.
The soup became an angry sludge.
The doorbell rang.
“I’ve destroyed the soup,” I announced as I opened the door.
“You can’t destroy a soup,” she replied, and we rushed into the kitchen.
For the next thirty minutes, we worked side by side to save that soup like emergency room surgeons.
“Onions,” she called.
“We’re out.”
“More pumpkin,” she demanded.
“That’s all of it.”
“Bigger saucepan,” she called.
“I only have one saucepan.”
“Get one from the neighbour. How much stock did you put in?”
“One coffee cup.”
“Of powder?!” she said. “You’re supposed to dilute it.”
We threw everything we had into the pot—more water, a can of tomatoes I found in the back of the cupboard, rice, and some questionable herbs. Nothing worked.
“You’ve destroyed this soup,” she finally admitted, turning off the hob.
I laughed. “But you can’t destroy a soup.”
She turned off the stove and turned to me with that familiar expression—part amusement, part bewilderment. “You’re not even annoyed?”
“Why would I be annoyed?” I opened the freezer. “There’s always pizza.”
“All that work. And you wanted to impress me.”
“I wanted to spend the evening with you.”
She smiled. “I know.”
“I don’t think I’ll ever be a good cook,” I said. “I just don’t really care about food the way you do.”
“You don’t need to become a good cook,” she said, slipping her hands around my waist. “You don’t need to become anything. You have plenty to offer.”
For weeks, I'd been trying to transform myself into someone I thought she'd want. Someone sophisticated, cultured, who drank wine and danced and knew what a butternut squash was. But she didn’t need me to be a sensualist. What she needed was someone who could remain steady when everything went wrong, who could find humour in disaster, who wouldn't disappear when things got complicated.
“My dancing?” I joked.
She winced. “Not your dancing, no.”
We both understood what she meant. I had noticed by then that it was me steering the emotional side of our relationship. She knew Yotam Ottolenghi. I knew Esther Perel.
That night in my tiny kitchen, we failed at soup. But we succeeded at something better: we proved we could work as a team. She brought passion, expertise, the spice. I brought something harder to name—stability, humour, and the ability to keep showing up.
We both learned it.
Eight years later, we’re still together. We have a child now too, a tiny person who loves food as much as her, but is as undiscerning with it as me. Someone who eats a gourmet curry one night when her mother cooks, and spaghetti with butter the next six when I cook—and all with equal enthusiasm.
Our roles have become clearer over time. She still brings the colour and spice to our lives. I wanted to become the pak choi in our relationship—exotic and unexpected, but I’ve accepted I'm the stock, the foundation that everything else builds on, reliable and essential, even if not particularly exciting on its own. The one who remembers to buy milk and stays calm during our daughter’s meltdowns. The one who calls family meetings and makes sure issues get resolved.
There's no recipe for a successful relationship. But if there were, I think the key ingredient would be this: being willing to keep turning up, stand side-by-side, and throw all you have into the pot.