Good topic Cy!!! Something totally different....
Well, I'm 47 and I learned to cook the old fashioned way, in Home Ec and at home. My Home Ec teacher was a very strict nun, in fact we used to say she would have made the perfect housewife.....we thought it was a waste she was a nun too, so pretty. But I'm getting off track. I learned to cook from scratch, or as much as you can prepare foods from scratch. When I got married the first time, age 20, I made almost everything from scratch. This was 1975. We didn't even own a microwave. I can remember melting butter in a saucepan for recipes.....LOL My Home Ec teacher taught us to always present a colorful meal too. I know, I sound ancient, huh? A throwback to the previous Donna Reed generation. I really loved cooking. Then I got divorced, age 28, and really lived it up for a few years. That's when I do think I lost my cooking touch.....I am slowly finding it again, but now I use a microwave. Have had one for over 15 years now. Woohoo, a modern convenience,

. Happily remarried and 2 kids later, and I probably cook from scratch about half the time. We're on the go a lot. But first time around, I worked 50 hours a week, no kids though. That must have been the difference....hard to cook slowly and well when you're chauffering your kids around.
So in a very wordy way Cy - home cooking and cooking from scratch is best, IMO. Is it always practical? No, sadly not in today's hurry up world. There used to be a time I would never, ever buy a boxed cake.....that meant failure, at one time in my life.
And oh, those half time cooker type pots? Well, I'm pretty sceptical when it comes to things like that. Jim was so set on Visions pots and pans (all glass) when we registered. Well, slowly one by one, they either chipped or scorched foods. I kept asking for Farberware, please buy me a set of the old standby - Farberware. And he did. Not many wives would be thrilled with a set of pots and pans for xmas but that year I was. And I'm proud to say they've held up for at least 5 years now.