Our Cooking Is Full of Our Souls

Introduction

Over this pandemic era, many of us have spent most of our time at home with family or by ourselves. Being at home more, we have spent a lot more time cooking and baking. Food in general has a tremendous effect on us. Cooking can be a joyful experience, lifting our souls up with joy and with thanks to God for his bounty. Cooking can be good for the soul, and cooking with soul can yield wonderful food.

Our congregation at Prairie Presbyterian Church discussed some of our favourite recipes on our Zoom coffee calls after our online church services. We decided to put together a cookbook of our favourite recipes. So here we are!

Cooking and baking are creative outlets we use to connect with ourselves, family, friends, and others. Some of us have recently found lost recipes or tried new ones. We wanted to gather these recipes and share them, to broaden our cooking horizons, and also to give us joy. The recipe could be one our moms or dads made for us as kids, Grandma’s favourite that she always made for us, or a recipe we love to make with our children or grandchildren.

Here, you will discover some tried and true recipes, as well as some new favourites, that members and friends of Prairie have shared. It is our hope that as you prepare these recipes you would feel more connected with others and more connected with God.

The Bible is full of wonderful stories about food and its many meanings. From a definition of physical sustenance to enable us mortals to stay alive and even thrive, to offerings to God to celebrations to rituals that help us remember our Saviour, food and cooking food fill our souls with sustenance, energy, memories, and delight. Cooking can help to heal in times of grief and share joy in communal kitchens; it can help to serve our Lord’s message and to serve those who have less than we have.

Among the many Biblical writings about food, several stand out as being about cooking with or for the soul.

At a wedding banquet, Jesus turned water into wine, a miracle at the time.

Jesus fed 5,000 souls who had gathered to hear him with fish and bread, and there were leftovers!

The night he was betrayed, Jesus and His disciples sat down for the Last Supper, a time when their souls joined together with food for the last time.

During the last supper, Jesus instituted communion. Matthew 26:26-28 (NRSV) tells us: “While they were eating, Jesus took a loaf of bread, and after blessing it he broke it, gave it to the disciples, and said, “Take, eat; this is my body.”  Then he took a cup, and after giving thanks he gave it to them, saying, “Drink from it, all of you; for this is my blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins.”

Our souls reach out to each other and to God through our love of cooking and sharing what we have cooked. So many family memories are built on cooking and celebrating, whether we celebrate religious holidays, national holidays, the beauty of the outdoors through barbecues and picnics, joyful events such as weddings and graduations, and events filled with grief, such as funerals. Cooking is an outlet to express our souls’ feelings and talents. It is also an outlet for our souls’ energy.

 

The Prairie Presbyterian Church members who served on the committee to publish this cookbook share below their own experiences in finding that cooking is a soulful outlet.

Cookbook Committee Members’ Stories

Jen
Ostash-Gooch

Prairie’s Worship and Community Leader

Sheila
Anderson

Retired librarian, Elder at Prairie Presbyterian Church

Mary
Brabston

Retired professor, Elder at Prairie Presbyterian Church

Liz
Cox

Retired manager, Prairie Presbyterian Church

Heather
McLaren

Retired Civil Servant, Elder at Prairie Presbyterian Church