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Sharing a meal with friends has been a staple of the good life across cultures since, well, probably forever. So it's little wonder that healthy food and connecting with others have been found to be two cornerstones for living a .
Want to know another of those cornerstones? Purpose. research has found that knowing your value and what brings you joy is critical to healthy longevity.
The best way to bring all of this together is not just eating with friends and family, but cooking together too. The shared purpose of putting a meal together before relaxing around the table to linger over your efforts is a satisfying feeling.
Here are five ways you can bring your friends together to cook a meal or two... or hopefully many.
Recipe swap party
A recipe swap is an excellent jumping-off point for a small group of friends. The idea is that each guest brings along a favourite recipe and the ingredients needed to make it. Then you cook the dishes together.
Sharing your treasured recipes is like sharing a part of yourself. Credit: Jamie Atlas/Getty Images/Tetra images RF
At the end of a marathon cooking session, you all get to sit down to eat and marvel at how accomplished you are at cooking. Then you get to take the recipe home to find out that may not be the case after all...
The supper club
Annette Davison, water quality scientist and founder of , is part of a supper club known as The Foodie Group. The members are all in the water, science or engineering line of work and they came together nine years ago after seeing a similar club in action.
"We wanted a piece of that!" says Annette.
There are nine members in the group - eight based in Sydney and one lone traveller in Melbourne. They get together every six to eight weeks for a themed gathering.
The themes have been as varied as the group, whose age range spans 40 years from 30s to 70s. 'Offaly Good' was a hit ("No prizes for guessing what that one was," Annette says drily). Others have been 'Are You Game' and a random 'Lego Batman Movie' night.
Annette Davison (far right) and The Foodie Group supper club. The club has become so close they were all attendants at Annette's wedding a few years ago. Credit: Supplied
If you want to start your own supper club, world-renowned chef (who started her lauded career by hosting supper clubs around her dining table), says to make sure it's a passion project. "You should only do this if it brings you great joy," she said on The Cook Up.
And keep it simple: "No one is coming there to have a kind of three-star Michelin experience," notes Asma. "They're coming there to eat the food, to listen to the stories. The stories are very important."
Those shared stories have enriched the lives of The Foodie Group in immeasurable ways. "We have been through thick and thin through our time together, including two divorces, three children, several passings, several 'big' birthdays, and one wedding," says Annette. "If it wasn't for this group, life would have been so much harder to navigate."
Cookbook dinner party
One way to kick your supper club off is to throw a cookbook dinner party and see how it goes. Choose a favourite cookbook and ask your guests to pick what dishes they'd like to see on the table. A couple of entrees, mains and dessert options will be perfect.
A cookbook dinner party is basically a world expedition of food. Source: SBS / SBS Food
Then it's a matter of deciding whether you'll each prepare a dish to bring along to the gathering (see 'supper club' above), or do all the cooking together before your meal (see 'recipe swap' above), or simply cook the meals yourself. Either way, choosing what's on the dinner party menu is extremely bonding...
A few favourites to get you started:
- Yasmin Newman's love letter to Filipino food will send you all on a tropical holiday.
COOK THE BOOK
Crispy fish tempura with sweet and sour sambal
The annual event
If it's shared cooking and a giant meal to follow that you're after, you can't go wrong with putting an event in the calendar and sharing it with friends each year. That event may be one you randomly choose to honour, or it may hold deep connection for you or someone else in your group.
For Nicole Bradley, it's definitely the latter. As an American ex-pat who had always adored celebrating with her family, bringing her friends together each year was essential when she moved to Australia over 20 years ago.
Nicole Bradley (far right) and her Australian 'framily' celebrating Thanksgiving 2022. Credit: Georgie Gilchrest
"We all go away for the weekend, cook an enormous meal together and enjoy spending time," says Nicole. "It nourishes the soul to all stand around the island bench creating our contribution to the meal while totally engrossed in the topic of conversation of the moment."
Over time, the Thanksgiving friends Nicole brought together became her 'framily' - or friends who become family, an important connection for anyone living abroad.
"We have been doing this for years and I am happy to say it is a highlight of the year for a whole new generation of my Australian framily," says Nicole.
The random Tuesday
One of the things that often stands in the way of cooking and sharing a meal together is time. But the fact is, we've all gotta eat, every night of the week.
The sooner we shuck off the notion that a '' needs to be fancy or even planned, the better. Rather, phone a friend and agree to get together and cook Tuesday's dinner side by side. It's a brilliant way to make the daily drudge of cooking something you'll look forward to instead.
Take turns hosting so you share the shopping and cost load, and then just go for it. Make the same kind of food you'd usually make on a Tuesday. A ? ? ? Yep, that will do. Set the table the same way you always set the table, plonk the food down and there you go - a random Tuesday instantly made terrific.
RECIPES TO COOK WITH FRIENDS
Lamb and lentil stew with black cardamom