Well
SF I had to vote for other.
We both love to cook but I hate chili and my wife eats very little English or European food, unless it is smothered in chili flakes.
In Thailand our kitchen was fitted out with two preparation areas with 2 hobs, 2 ovens extractors etc, set at different heights, as I am tall and my wife is, shall we say vertically challenged.
This enabled both of us to cook separate meals whilst being able to talk and be together.
I would be cooking an English, French or Italian dinner and she would cook Thai, usually about 3 times a week.
The other times we would go out to a hotel or Thai eatery, where I usually managed to find something that suited my palate, whilst my wife would go through the menu, as they do.
In the UK we do the same (cook 3 times a week and eat out the other nights) and in Italy we always eat out, after all, why bother to stock the fridge at home for a few days, when there are so many little family trattorias within walking distance who serve fantastic, classic Italian dishes, all of which (except fish and shellfish which she eats with relish) can be converted to Thai, when the "secret supply" of chili flakes makes an appearance from the wife's handbag.
As for fast food, well in Thailand it means a different thing. There you can get good, well cooked, nutritious food to take away on most streets, while here in the UK its all gloop, full of MSG in a foil dish. Yuk! But I do succumb to a Big Mac about twice a year. Do I hear cries of shame, dirty sod, chuck him out?
I always cook for myself when I'm on my own and the microwave is only ever used to make my porridge and the wife's con-gee and has never been abused with a TV dinner.
The good thing about the UK is that we shop on-line at Waitrose once or twice a week for most items, that saves time and the schlep to the shops. A local butcher delivers our meat and a friend supplies fish and shellfish.
In Thailand I loved to go to the morning market, but nothing like that exists here, mores the pity
Yeah, lazy I know, but life's to short to waste it in a queue for the checkout, when the time saved can be put to more constructive use.
