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The Ten Most Recent Comments By gloriabythelake

From Talk

What summer foods are you cravin'?

Thick slices of heirloom tomatoes layered with fresh mozzarella & fresh basil & olive oil (room temp), home grown lettuces (so tender), any berry, corn on the grill with sweet butter, potato salad, a tall any-drink with lots of ice drunk while under my umbrella, bare feet....85 degrees out.

From Talk

Dogs in the Kitchen

I've had Cairn Terriers for over 40 yrs. and every one of them (all girls) have been in the kitchen whenever they THINK they hear food being made. They consider it akin to manna dropping from heaven. I am constantly telling them to "move, move". There is the infamous grilled cheese story not to mention the latest. We recently got a rescue dog...a male Chihuahua from the SPCA. I swear, this dog never saw or smelled people food before. (or even a Milk Bone) On New Years eve I had a party with lots of food. I set some stuff out on the coffee table and left the room. (dumb me) Next thing I here "NO! NO! bad dog". Buster aka Lover Boy had scarfed 1/4 of a cheddar cheese ball. Without his front paws touching the table. I rescued a circus dog!

Responses to Comments by gloriabythelake

From Talk

Dogs in the Kitchen

There are 2 dogs in our house - a german shephard and a lab. They have the run of the house. We started feeding them carrots as a treat and now any time someone is chopping in the kitchen they think it is carrots. So far they have tried and eaten - carrots, cauliflower, lettuce, potatoes, onions, apples, bananas, zucchini, and celery. All the vegetables and fruit must be better for them than commercial biscuits.

From Talk

Dogs in the Kitchen

Lily (130 lb bullmastiff) is wherever I am - she keeps my kitchen floor impeccably clean :), but is afraid of the mixer. She can hear the fridge open from any room in the house.
In 25 years of large dogs and a small kitchen, there have only been 2 mishaps. Gracie, our last Neapolitan mastiff, learned how to open the oven, the microwave and the refridgerator - so I lost the Thanksgiving leftovers when I went shopping on Black Friday about 8 years ago. Locks were put on the fridge after this. Rip, another Neo, got splashed with boiling pasta water - he stayed away from me when I carried pots from then on.

From Talk

Dogs in the Kitchen

After the dog food scare last spring, I started making food for our two dogs, Lily, a rescued Great Pyrenees about 120 pounds and Lucy, a Japanese Chin-Lab mix. Making their food is a family experience. Lucy loves to cook and see what we're doing and Lily sits in den waiting patiently.
I can't imagine not having them in our kitchen!

From Talk

Dogs in the Kitchen

our dogs know they are allowed in the dining area but not the cooking area. they will wait patiently to be tossed scraps.

When I joined the household there were dogs used to being where they wanted to be....not so much in my kitchen. It's dangerous for them and for me. It took about a week before we had an imaginary line that they did not cross when I was in the kitchen.

Kids and grandkids understood that pre-helping they could be in the kitchen in highchairs (strapped in), and learning came with a hat, an apron and a stool for them to stand on. I have had some great helpers over the years, they have had fun and learned how to behave in the kitchen (safe).

From Talk

Dogs in the Kitchen

Do I allow? No! Never!

Are they there any how? Fur sure!!

From Talk

Dogs in the Kitchen


Sorry, lex (she said with a sheepish grin whilst blushing furiously)... Don't know how I misread that. I must have already been a good ways into that bottle of cotes du rhone when I replied.

Please disregard.

From Talk

Dogs in the Kitchen

@ LoCo - hahahahaha sorry, nope a FOUR pound yorkie. his claim to fame is that he's still the cutest dog alive even though he's only got one eye (he was attacked by a raccoon 18 months ago).

From Talk

Dogs in the Kitchen

We've had eight dogs over the course of our marriage: mutt, beagle, JRTs, bearded collie, Berners. We've always ignored begging, and so they pretty much didn't/don't do it. I thought, unlike my parents, that they shouldn't have human food with the exception, of leftover Brussels sprouts and bits of banana; my husband has different policies as do visiting friends and relatives. Every part of our home has been open to them, and although I've worried about their safety outside, I never have when inside. Most of them have learned to vacuum up diced vegetables as they flew off the chopping block or accidental spills. Some have seemed to have known, no matter from how far away, when I unwrapped the imported Parmesan. The greedy, greedy beagle (found two pounds of Sees chocolates my mother had hidden, ate them while we were out, and did not die) always knew when my husband opened a jar of peanuts no matter how hard he tried to muffle the sound.
Lots of amusement, great joy, supplementary vacuuming, what's not to love?

From Talk

Dogs in the Kitchen

I have 2 dogs currently (64 & 70 pound rotties). Our kitchen/dining area is all open and the dogs are generally wherever I am...so if I am in the kitchen cooking they are in the area. I try to keep them away from the cooking hub as it is small and I don't want them to get hurt. They are well behaved and don't get underfoot.

From Talk

Dogs in the Kitchen

I've had many rescue dogs and cats also, at times. The highest number was three dogs and four cats at once - but mostly they lived outside - there was a lot of acreage they could run and play on and they preferred that to being in the house mostly except for sleeping.

I can think of more instances where the cats brought me birds or chipmunks or rabbits to cook (believing that I would be very pleased, happy and proud of them for doing so)(wrongly) than I can think of them being in the kitchen lurking . . . and one dog (indeterminate breed but definitely part beagle) was apparently an excellent hunter all on his own, for several times he carried home enormous wild turkeys to me with his tail wagging, his eyes gleaming at his prowess. Poor fellow thought the world had gone upside down every time I refused to let him in with his gift.

My Pomeranian who got drunk on beer once at a big party at my house used to sit outside the kitchen, flat out like a tiny black bear rug, legs extended backwards, head on front paws in prayer position, with some sort of reproachful look in his eyes when I cooked. He had the art of doling out guilt well and he usually got tidbits thrown to him, whereupon he would assume the prayer position again till he'd had his fill.

At the moment I have one cat who will not eat her food unless I stand and chat with her to keep her company. If I do not she comes and gets me, emitting little meows and prrps endlessly, and leads me back to her food where she will eat if I talk.

Then there's the little brown bird with the red beak who knocks against my window at 8AM sharp every morning, once or twice if I've put out birdseed but endlessly, for an hour or more straight if I have not refilled it enough. I believe the bird is a person stuck in a bird's body somehow. I also believe the person stuck in the person's body is an ex-New Yorker and a guy, though the bird is a female red cardinal. Don't ask me how I know this - I just do.