Lucinda Scala Quinn's Mad Hungry: Feeding Men & Boys: Food, Gender and How We Approach Eating

Photo by David Russell
Lucinda Scala Quinn and son on the set of Mad Hungry.
Lucinda Scala Quinn, food TV personality and Executive Food Editor of Martha Stewart Living, has written a cookbook titled Mad Hungry [Artisan], which is the same name as her cooking show on the Hallmark Channel. What's different is the subtitle: Feeding Men & Boys.

It's easy to have a kneejerk, slightly offended reaction to this if you're a woman. "What? Why do we need an instruction book on how to feed guys? Can't they feed themselves? What decade is this? Geez." Then you open the cookbook, and things become clearer.

Mad Hungry is a book that's centered around what men like to eat, but that doesn't mean it's an attempt to enslave women. Scala Quinn has been surrounded by boys her whole life -- having only brothers and three sons -- and the ways in which she has adapted her cooking to accommodate that are reflected in her recipes.

Scala Quinn tells us that the cookbook, as well as the show, are actually centered on bringing the entire family into the kitchen. We sat down with her to get the lowdown on her philosophy:

"I'm not barefoot and pregnant talking about taking care of 'our men.' The book was the baseline for the television show, which is really about the family. I write from experience, and when it comes to the guys, I say, 'cook for the men you love, teach them to cook for themselves and they will pass it on.' We have a tradition in this world of women cooking and passing it on [to their daughters], and not teaching their sons to cook. In my case, it was about empowering the boys in my life."

And let's be real. Men do approach food differently than women. Anyone who's ever lived with a guy at any point knows they're much more neanderthal about eating. They like meat. They want big portions. They crave straightforward, simple food, and a lot of it. "You have to have an abundance," she says. "You have to be prepared or you're going to have an angry mob on your hands."

More importantly, "Men are less complicated about eating, and more organic and intuitive about it, in general," she says. "There's less fear."

She says women can learn from that. "I sometimes feel for young women because we have this idea of what beauty is, and how we achieve it, and how it's related to what we eat. But in fact, nourishing ourselves with food early on -- if we can have a healthier approach to it, that is to say not a deprivational approach, one that is associated with joy and pleasure -- which is what happens, actually, when you eat at the dinner table now and then with your family."

Scala Quinn frequently brings her nearly-grown sons onto the set of Mad Hungry so they can strut what they've learned. She boasts that all three have become quite self-sufficient in the kitchen. One even cooks professionally. "I am determined to deliver young men into the world who, whatever their financial circumstances are, can pull together a meal for themselves," she says. "As parents, one of the things I think we've lost sight of is to raise independent human beings."

My Voice Nation Help
2 comments
R_dxt
R_dxt

" Anyone who's ever lived with a guy at any point knows they're much more neanderthal about eating." so glad to see that cliche's are still ok when they're pointed at guys. i thought this article would call this idiot out on her pseudo-second wave nonesense, not limply nod along to it...

CaptainFabulous
CaptainFabulous

I always wanted to learn how to be a better cook but found it very daunting. Watching the Food Network and other cooking shows never seemed to be much help as most of it was either way over my head and/or meager abilities or used bizarre and/or expensive ingredients. Then I happened to catch Mad Hungry on TV and it's really changed my life (I know it's cliche, but it's true!) Lucinda makes everything very clear and easy, and it just warms my heart when she says "and if you don't have [odd ingredient], don't worry, you can just leave it out".

I bought the Mad Hungry cookbook and it's become my cooking bible. I also regularly visit the website to download recipes from the show that aren't in the book (hoping to pick up her other cookbooks sometime soon). So now I'm cooking a lot more and have a lot more confidence. Not only that, but she's taught me how to look at recipes and actually figure things out on my own, like what ingredients work with and complement others, so I can create my own unique dishes.

Now Trending

From the Vault

 

©2013 LA Weekly, LP, All rights reserved.
Browse Voice Nation
  • Voice Places Los Angeles

    Voice Places

    Find everything you're looking for in your city

  • Happy Hour App

    Happy Hour App

    Find the best happy hour deals in your city

  • Daily Deals

    Daily Deals

    Get today's exclusive deals at savings of anywhere from 50-90%

  • Best Of

    Best Of...

    Check out the hottest list of places and things to do around your city