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호주 뉴스 3분 브리핑: 2025년 6월 10일 화요일

호주 뉴스 3분 브리핑: 2025년 6월 10일 화요일

SBS Australia17 hours ago

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Older men take to the kitchen
Older men take to the kitchen

ABC News

time9 hours ago

  • ABC News

Older men take to the kitchen

Samantha Donovan: Well, for some older men, their only cooking experience is putting a sausage or steak on the barbecue. But when their wife falls ill or dies, suddenly they're finding themselves in a foreign part of the house, the kitchen. A grassroots program in Canberra is teaching men over 60 to cook and helping them connect with other men in retirement. Angus Randall filed this report. Noah Fowler: What we're doing at the moment is we're just going to put all the scraps on the table and we're going to clean them as we go. Angus Randall: At a community kitchen in Canberra's south, the air is thick with onion, garlic and dad jokes. John Seymour: I realised I didn't know very much about cooking and I needed to learn. Angus Randall: John Seymour's wife Heather had been the head chef in their house, but when she fell ill, he had to step up and learn how to cook. John Seymour: I think a lot of men, including me, have realised that the time has come to do more around the house. Meals just don't magically arrive on the table. You have to learn, and I've learned a great deal. Angus Randall: He's taking part in a session run by Men's Kitchen, a volunteer-led program teaching men over 60 how to cook. For many, it's a brand new skill. Their wives did all the cooking. Dennis Granlund has had to learn how to run a house since his wife died 15 months ago. Dennis Granlund: She left a large binder of menus and recipes and so on that I refer to. She was a teacher in home economics, and so she had good cooking skills. I was the apprentice, but she was the chief chef. Angus Randall: The program takes men through the entire process, from shopping for ingredients to preparing and cooking, clean-up and, of course, eating. Volunteer instructor Sonja Berghuis has spent more than 30 years as a home ec teacher. Sonja Berghuis: I was quite surprised when I came my first week that when it came to even washing the vegetables, some of the gentlemen said, oh, I didn't realise that we needed to do that. I decided that this was something where I could give back to the community, use the skills that I have to help other people, which is something that I'm really passionate about, and it's good for my own wellbeing. Angus Randall: The program began in Sydney and has spread to Canberra and the Gold Coast. Local organiser Don White says older men are often isolated and the weekly classes can open up their world in more ways than one. Don White: Especially men that are by themselves or they've retired, they've lost their work relationships, a lot of them are quite lonely, so this gives them an opportunity to get together with other men, learn a few cooking skills. A lot of the men, in fact, their wives have said, go out and learn to cook. I've had enough. Your turn. Angus Randall: John Seymour can now whip up a Moroccan chicken dish and he's keen to learn more. John Seymour: The recipes have three hats, one hat, two hats and three, and I'm still at the one hat stage. Samantha Donovan: That's Canberra man John Seymour ending that report from Angus Randall and Sarah Grieb.

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