The journey away from ordinary cooking…

For a long time I gravitated toward traditional comfort foods. Steak and potatoes. Hamburgers. Fried Chicken. You get the picture. I attribute much of this to how I grew up, but also to a general lack of creativity and know how in the kitchen. The food I was used to was generally bland and not always the best for me.

A few years ago I had a paradigm shift. I was completely bored with food. We were fixing the same six or seven meals over and over and over again. We supplemented this with a heavy dose of eating out. My taste buds and my wallet were suffering. This was a recipe for disaster. Then I saw Chef Rick Bayless‘ show Mexico: One Plate at a Time on our local PBS station. I can state with certainty that this is the time my love for cooking started to take shape.

Not only was the food I was seeing on TV not bland, it was colorful and looked delicious. The first episode I watched was about making salsa. He made a few different recipes that were just awesome. I went straight to the grocery store and spent at least 40 bucks on produce. I had a blast, and after a few tries some of the salsas started tasting right. I eventually got a copy of his Authentic Mexican cookbook and have really enjoyed cooking from it. (One of my goals for the year is to cook from it much more!)

I have branched out further still. I got the iPhone app Food Network: In The Kitchen. Every time we see a recipe being made on the Food Network I search for it in the application and then save it to my online recipe box. I found a recipe by Guy Fieri called Bacon and Tomato Pasta. (Whoa. That one is good!) Every time I find a good recipe it makes me want to push on further still and find more. It is a never ending hunt that has been extremely fun.

I also turned another corner when I saw Julie and Julia last year. Julie Powell’s journey was interesting enough because I blog, but the parts of the story about Julia Child really captured my attention. She was nearly 40 years old before she learned to cook. It was  years after that before the world would know her as we do now. It is not too late to learn to cook and to cook well. I was left with no excuses.

I still enjoy a good steak. I have gotten much better at making them over the years. I love a good hamburger as well, but that is because I don’t eat them that often anymore. There are many other foods out there that have found their way into my home. The list that initially had less than ten items on it now has over 40 and continues to grow.

I am on the journey away from the ordinary (in this and other areas of my life) and I am really enjoying the ride. What about you? Where are you on your cooking journey?

Having goals, not resolutions

I have a confession to make. I didn’t make any New Year’s resoultions this year. Not one. Why? I don’t think they work. Not in that form anyway. Most of the resolutions I have ever heard have been wishes with little substance. I used to make them. I have since quit.

Goals are a different animal all together. Setting a goal is making a plan. Setting goals involves making sure that the plan has steps and ways to identify progress. Goals have a beginning and an end and are measurable. They may stretch you in ways you have never been stretched and lead you further than you expected to go, but you planned on getting there in the first place.

I sat down before 2010 ended and thought about what I wanted to accomplish in 2011. There are quite a few things on this list. Some left over from last year, but not too many. I have my eyes set on accomplishing some big things this year. Big to me, anyway.

I will share three of these goals with you today. The first involves my blog.

Goal 1 – I will work on developing my personal brand (as Gary Vaynerchuk calls it in Crush It) To do this, I will blog 2-3 times per week for 2011 and devote myself to learning how, through social media, to be a contributing voice in the conversations that are already taking place.

Goal 2 – I will finish writing the manuscript for my book My Three Foot Teacher and self publish it through Create Space. (This is a book about the lessons my two year old son has taught me about God.)

Goal 3 – Run the Memorial Marathon in Oklahoma City on May 1. I ran the half marathon last year and will complete the full thing in May. I have no time goal, per se, but will run the majority of it. Finishing is the goal.

Each one of the three listed above are measurable. I can make notes of my progress every day and then look back and see how far I have come. As I stated in my last post, I intend to give this year my very best. There is much to be done. I am eager to see these goals above accomplished, as well as the others I have not shared.

What goals do you have for 2011? What needs to be done that only you can do? Forget the resolutions. Make a goal. Make a plan. Get it done. Give it your best. Let’s see where we end up at the year’s end.

Is This My Best?

The best is yet to come. I love this Frank Sinatra tune. Love it. Not so much for the love song aspect. No. I like it because it is a good mantra for life. The best is yet to come. Yeah. Things may be good now, but that doesn’t mean that can’t get better. Or, things suck now, but the best is definitely yet to come. For 2011, that is the way it’s gonna be.

I have been thinking back across 2010 and the years before it. I am not where I want to be right now. I have come a long way, yes. But, I am not where I want to end up. Why is that? I have some thoughts on the subject, but the one overriding thought is this: I haven’t given my best effort.

Why is this post titled Is This My Best? This is the lens I am looking through for 2011 and beyond. I have decided I don’t have to be the best in the world at anything. That is not a realistic goal. The world is too big and there are many many talented people out there. It just ain’t happening.

I can, however, be the best I can be at any given endevor. If I chose the most important areas of my life and committed to be the best I can be at them, what will it do? It will leave me with no excuses. It will leave me with very few regrets. I will have done what I can with what I have. If I succeed, awesome. If I fail, so be it. I will have done my best and I will choose to do something different. I will succeed much more than I fail. A mediocre life is not an acceptable choice.

I choose to be the best I can be, so the best is yet to come.

I Believe in Christmas

For the past couple of months I have not posted to my blog with much regularity. It is not because I have stopped blogging. Much the contrary. I have been blogging on a different site. http://www.ibelieveinchristmas.com. I will return to making regular Thinking Willis posts when the New Year rolls around, but for now I am working hard promoting my book, I Believe: A Christmas Story, in that other platform. If you have the chance please check the site out. I would love to have you stop by and would love to hear what you think on the subjects I present.

For those of you who have kept up with this blog. I appreciate you more than you know. I look forward to the future and to the good that is to come. Have a Merry Christmas. See you on this blog when the New Year rolls around…and at http://www.ibelieveinchristmas.com until then!

Clutter…

Piles. All around. That seems to be the way my office ends up. I would like to be able to smile and say that it was my filing system (and that I knew what was in each pile). Sadly this is not the case. Most of the stuff that is in the piles I don’t need. Some of it is stuff I want to look at later (whenever that is). The smaller portion of it is actually important, but because it is buried it often gets overlooked.

Life is a lot like this too. We get so much stuff going on. So many things we are committed (or used) to doing. Most of it is stuff that is not beneficial. Some of it could be, but we need time to work on it. The smaller portion is what really matters. There are many days that the important stuff gets lost in all of the noise.

Stephen Covey said it this way, “Things that matter most must never be at the mercy of things that matter least.” Do I really need all the piles I have in my office? No. I can say the same thing about some of the stuff going on in life as well. How many times do I bury the important things and keep the stuff that doesn’t matter up where it doesn’t belong?