INTRODUCTION
From as far back as I can remember, my favorite moments have always centered on food: Cooking with my Belgian grandmother, baking bread with my dad or skipping summer camp to start a cookie business (just like any normal, well-adjusted teenager, right?). Growing up, family meals were a time to talk, to laugh and, of course, to eat well. I never considered the possibility that the focus of my life would be anything other than food. As they say, when you know, you know.
That single-minded focus came to fruition when, in my late 20s, I opened the first of my three cafés and bakeries, Delica Kitchen, in Toronto. I also fulfilled a lifelong dream of publishing a cookbook with my mom—an ode to our love of family, friends and the kitchen table. After several years in the restaurant business (and raising two small boys), I began to realize that there was so much more that I wanted to communicate about food and gathering. The way I ate in my early 20s was different from the way I now eat with my growing family. In my 20s, I used to relish eating alone because I could cook whatever my heart desired, whereas now, my cooking considers everyone at the table and what they might like. Feeding my family and friends, and having a kitchen bursting at the seams with mess, fun and one or two food fights, makes me happy—even though the cleanup can be much more work. For a long time, I have wanted to share all the wonderful things I’ve learned—whether they came from my own kitchen, my restaurants or my travels across the globe in search of new inspiration. My website, Crumb, was born as a place for all of these good bits to live.
Crumb is a lifestyle platform that celebrates the power of food to bring people pleasure, and to bring them together. To break free from meal planning. To cook—and eat—with spon - taneity and joy. Crumb shares expert insights, practical tips and tools, and straightforward recipes to make easy, wholesome family meals a reality. Crumb is dedicated to celebrating life’s simple pleasures: food, travel, family and entertaining, and to keeping good company along the way.
If you find yourself reading this book, I think it’s safe to assume that you, like me, LOVE not just eating but being in the kitchen and cooking too. Of course, it’s about getting from A to B with as little fuss as possible, but there’s so much fun to be had in between, right? For those of us who love to cook, we can often get bogged down by technique (fricassee vs. concasse?!), timing (because, yeah, I have six hours to braise) and the often-arduous task of kitchen and meal prep. Who has the energy? And is the alternative then “fast” food? It doesn’t need to be. Life is busy. I get that. We need food, fast. But we also want something that is wholesome, delicious, easy to prepare and appealing to the whole family and, as much as possible, can be made in 30 minutes or less. Too big an ask? Heck NO!
My strategy is simple: I don’t meal plan. I eat what I want to eat, when I want to eat it, because deciding what to eat for Thursday’s dinner on Monday morning doesn’t make sense to me. Maybe I’ll want pasta, or grilled fish, or a hearty salad. Maybe I’ll see a picture of a roast chicken thigh on Instagram and now I just NEED roast chicken. I want to be free of a plan and I want to cook what I crave. Some of you might break out into a sweat just imagining the anxiety this non-plan plan might induce, but let me tell you, this is achiev - able. I understand that we could all use a cheat sheet on our quest for happier, fuller lives. I want that cheat sheet and those tried-and-true shortcuts that really go the distance. But I also want to embrace the messy mistakes that turn into memorable moments.
Spontaneity is possible, even during the weekday crunch. My first recommendation to achieve this is to have a kitchen that is always stocked with the right basics, a combination of fresh produce and shelf-stable items. If you’ve got the right pieces, the opportunities for mixing and matching are endless. I believe that less is more, and a truly delicious meal doesn’t really need more than a handful of ingredients, most of which are things kicking around your kitchen already.
You’ll begin to notice pretty quickly that I favor punchy, bold flavors (hi vinegar, salt, lemons, fresh herbs, capers, fish sauce, tangy yogurt, Parm) that can do wonders for any simple dish. All of my recipes are meant to inspire creativity and spontaneity in the kitchen. I use simple methods to create deliciously straightforward dishes that are fun to cook, all while celebrating seasonal produce and quality products and ingredients. Gathering together over good food is one of life’s greatest joys, and you will find my favorite entertain - ing tips peppered throughout the chapters. It’s all meant to be fun, not stressful.
And the most important rule of thumb when cooking? Remember why you’re doing it. And who you’re doing it for. We’ve not yet experienced a time when cooking at home and eating together has been more fulfilling. We’re staying in, we’re experimenting, we’re having fun with food.
Everything that you find in
Conveniently Delicious is meant to bring you joy, comfort, amusement and perhaps a little spark of “huh—I hadn’t thought of that.” As you read, know that my aim is to leave you feeling a little lighter about mealtimes than when you started . . . even if most of the time I’m talking about how to make you feel full.
Copyright © 2021 by Devin Connell. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.