Decades ago a woman whose in-laws were religiously conservative Mennonite people told me this funny story.
The grandmother cooked noon dinner every day for her husband, their adult sons and all the farmhands. Since the farm was mostly worked by the muscle power of either men or horses, those hard-working men were monumental eaters. The grandmother roasted, boiled, whipped and baked walloping amounts of home-canned vegetables, mashed potatoes, big servings of meat, heavy desserts.
My friend was very surprised the day she walked into the grandmother's traditional farm kitchen - and there was a brand-new microwave oven. (This was in the 1970s, before microwaves were common anywhere.) The grandmother explained with a twinkle in her eye, "Oh, it's real good for melting butter and for warming up potatoes and gravy when the men work late. Though I have to say what I like best is after they all go back to the fields after dinner, and I can make myself a quick cup of cocoa and sit down and rest my feet a bit."
I've read a little about some of the guiding principles in Amish and other simple-life religious communities. Folks do not cling to old ways for the sake of being old-fashioned. What they are trying to do, and succeeding at quite brilliantly, is this.
Excerpt. Read more at
This LinkSince we discuss community and the possible restriction of mobility implied by Peak Oil, I thought this article might be of interest. The article must be read in its entirety to be fully appreciated.