Submitted by Rona_Gura on

Sunday Dinner

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Food Blogs

“Sunday dinner” means different things to different families. To my family, during the winter, it  generally means ordering in from our favorite Italian restaurant. During the summer, it means watching my husband cook our dinner on the bar-b-que. Given all of our busy schedules, it is one of the only days during the week that we sit down and eat dinner together.

 

As a child, Sunday dinner always meant going with my immediate family to our favorite Chinese restaurant (Ho King) or Italian restaurant (Gianni’s). To my  friend  who lived down around the block, Sunday dinner meant a huge dinner with her extended family which began at 3:00 with a plate of macaroni and gravy made by her grandma. Sunday dinner then continued and did not end until much later in the evening. Every so often, I would be lucky enough to get an invitation to Sunday dinner at her house. The Italian food I had at those dinners is still some of the best I have ever eaten.

 

As I write this, I'm thinking about what I will be ordering from the Italian restaurant tonight. What does Sunday dinner mean to you?

Comments

Donald Bernstein

When I was a kid is was Chinese at Ho Yuen, or seafood at The Old Salt on Route 4.

Submitted by NULL (not verified) on Sun, 03/22/2015 - 23:24

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Donna Levine wrote
Of course Chinese or if it was near the holidays Pot roast in the dinning room.
Julie Klein

Hi Rona,
Growing up, Sunday dinner was always mid-afternoonish - gravy/sauce, meatballs and pasta or maybe ravioli. The frying started before I woke up. Now our Sunday meal varies from week to week, due to schedules, homework, etc. I miss that tradition...
Jane Jacobs

I cook on Sundays, both dinner and for during the week. It's the one night we're guaranteed to sit and eat together (we eat together other nights too, but spontaneously). I usually make something I don't have time to make during the week, often from my farmers market trip the day before. Lately I've been roasting chicken a lot. In summer it's more likely fish. In summer there often are guests (during the school year its harder with homework).

Submitted by NULL (not verified) on Mon, 03/23/2015 - 03:03

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Just for the record, our favorite Italian restaurant is Villa Maria in East Rockaway. I have been going there since they were the Gino's in Bayside Queens, over 28 years ago. And as for Sunday Dinner, We try to get everyone together, but it seems as the years pass, less of the family is there due to other obligations. Life just keeps marching on.
Philip Gura

Submitted by Lucas_Meyer on Mon, 03/23/2015 - 04:14

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Lucas Meyer

Growing up, Sunday dinner wasn't a big deal in our house. Just another meal, really...

Since I'm the weekend cook, I try to make something special for us on Sunday evenings. Last night, I made chicken cacciatore-- Lidia Bastianich's version, which was delicious. And ridiculously easy to do. Orange/fennel osso buco is always well-received, accompanied by a puree of rutabaga, which is delicious. In the warmer weather, I generally just barbecue.
Cynthia Somma

Sunday means I am cooking and its always sauce with meatballs braciole, Em is getting older and is a huge help, the boys are learning to clean up. It's no longer 1950...and I don't even like Italian food lol
Yesterday, I went to watch Battle of the Bands and took the easy way out--raviolis.
Growing up we ate together every single night and on Sundays we ate at my grandmother's...I'm still not sure how my mother managed to pull it off. Maybe because if we weren't seated at the table at acertain time we did not eat. hmmm
Nancy Schess

Family dinner has always been a priority. I learned from my parents. We had dinner together as a family whenever we could and I have tried to continue the tradition. It isn't always easy as everyone's schedules get fuller, but we try. Sundays have morphed in my house. They used to be the Chinese food night but in recent years they have turned into the night that I cook. I enjoy that time together.

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