Laurie David Talks About Her New Book, 'The Family Dinner'
Filed under: Nutrition: Health, Celeb Parents, Nutrition: Big Kids, Nutrition: Tweens, Nutrition: Teens, Family Time, Celeb News & Interviews
Laurie David gives tips for connecting with your kids in "The Family Dinner." Credit: Amazon
One of those treasures is my friend Laurie David, a mover and shaker in the entertainment world, former wife of Larry David of "Curb Your Enthusiasm" fame and a co-producer of "An Inconvenient Truth." But more than that, Laurie is a passionate parent who recognizes how important it is to create rituals that bring families together.
Laurie's jewel of a book, "The Family Dinner: Great Ways to Connect with Your Kids, One Meal at a Time," comes out today. As we stood in line a few weeks ago for a movie, she handed me one of the first copies, hot off the press. Laurie, who lives the notion that "love is in the details," had thoughtfully placed sticky markers on every page where she had quoted me.
As I browsed the book, I couldn't have been more impressed with the care and creativity that had gone into each chapter, from table dressings to family dinners after divorce.
Here's what Laurie has to say about "The Family Dinner," and how she hopes families will benefit from it.
ParentDish: Laurie, you and I have talked at length about our concerns about the effect of technology on kids. How has that affected your passion about families having dinner together?
Laurie David: Like most people parenting today, I'm dealing with the invasion of technology in my home. I'm not happy about it. I'm the mom of two teenage girls, and the cell phone, computer and television are often the bane of my existence. But I put my foot down at dinnertime -- their devices are not welcome guests at the table.
PD: We both know how hard it can be to get kids to disengage from what they're doing and come to the table. What are a couple of tricks you use to get your girls to want to come to dinner?
LD: The beauty of rituals is that they work. And it doesn't take very long doing something over and over until it becomes second nature for everyone. In our house, when it's dinnertime, everyone now knows to just stop whatever they're doing and come to the table. Of course, having delicious fresh food and having fun things to talk about helps, too.
PD: Both of our books have the word "connection" in the title. One of my favorite parts of yours is the section on using family conversation to nourish that sense of closeness between parents and children. You've put a host of conversation starters into your book for keeping kids engaged and interested at the table. Can you tell me one of your favorites?
LD: I believe that conversation is just as important as the food, and so I've made a big effort over the years to have fun things to talk about at the table. One favorite is the Name Change game. I challenge your readers to try this at home tonight. All you do is go around the table and have everyone say what they would change their name to, if they could. This opens up a great discussion about whether or not they like their name and who they were named after.
PD: You're the busiest person I know. How is it that you manage to do any of this? Is there hope for those of us who don't usually have time to put together a beautiful table or a home-cooked meal?
LD: Absolutely yes! The great news about family dinner is that it doesn't have to be three courses and an apple pie in the oven. It can just as easily be PB and J sandwiches and soup and a salad. In fact, yummy black bean soup (recipe page 82) and a little green salad is one of my favorite dinners. And here's another suggestion: Eat somewhere different in your house. Change rooms. Have a picnic on the floor. This idea will make dinner special no matter what you serve.
PD: You know, we've been friends for a while, but I've never asked you this. Was Larry as funny at the dinner table as he is on the screen, and did he energize every conversation?
LD: The funny thing is that most people would think that having a professional comedian at your table would automatically lead to engaging conversation. But I don't think that Larry ever really had great dinner role models growing up. Dinner for him was about refueling. So a lot of the ideas in the book were employed in my house to teach everyone to have conversation and participate. I can tell you that although Larry was no help at all in the kitchen before dinner, he was fantastic after dinner cleaning pots and he took great pride in his work.
PD: I love that you two are clearly maintaining a real friendship, even sharing meals together with your girls. How did you get to that point, and what motivated you?
LD: Just because our marriage didn't work out doesn't mean our children aren't both of our priorities. The ritual of family dinner helped us all through the difficult years and eventually brought us all back together again. I have a chapter about it in the book and, since half of all marriages end in divorce, I hope that this will inspire other people to get back to the table.
PD: You interviewed an incredibly impressive list of people for your book, including Robert Kennedy, Jr., Tom Hanks, Jamie Oliver and even me, ParentDish's AdviceMama! What sort of common thread showed up in these conversations?
LD: One of the great privileges of writing this book was the opportunity to interview so many of my mentors and people who I admire. Their words of wisdom are sprinkled throughout the book. The common thread with everyone was what a powerful impact their own childhood family dinners had had on them, whether they were good or bad. For the most part, people get warm and fuzzy when they start to recollect their own family meals, and isn't that exactly the point?
PD: What do you most hope people take away from reading your book, Laurie?
LD: I hope people will read the book, place it on their kitchen counter, make something they've never tried before and then bring the book to the table to help spark a great conversation. My hope is that everyone's copy will be food-stained, tattered, highlighted, flagged and well used.










ReaderComments (Page 1 of 3)
11-03-2010 @ 2:05PM
bob said...Laurie David wouldn't know a family dinner if it slapped her in the face. What a phony shrew. Shame on her. Just another money grabber.
Reply
11-03-2010 @ 3:10PM
Graceven said...Yipes! Looks like she interviewed people for the book even if she doesn't have family dinners - what you say here is just plain mean. Gal's gotta make a living! I don't agree with her energy scare tactics, but regardless of who wrote this book - family dinners are a good thing.
11-03-2010 @ 3:26PM
michelle said...I'm sure you know all the details of her personal life by which to judge her!
11-03-2010 @ 9:04PM
Janet said...This one's for Laurie...we always sat down together for family dinner, during the separation period, exhubby commented while sitting at the head of the table, "eating in this house is like eating in the fu^*&g zoo."
We were just having fun at dinner. Of course, we never would've behaved that way in a restaraunt, they knew better!
He should've just basked in the moment....it was all good.
11-15-2010 @ 11:20AM
Mike M said...She slept with the landscaper and Al Gore and countless other men while she was married....what a role model for her kids!!!!!
11-03-2010 @ 2:11PM
Sher said...I am sad that we do not eat together as family. I encourage that our small home go into renovation and addition of large dining room but have not happened due to $$ My parents and sisters almost always got together for dinners which I miss alot.
We do not really have dining room at home....Our boys grow up into older teens and may go to colleges very soon.
Reply
11-03-2010 @ 2:14PM
chris said...She co-produced "An Inconvenient Truth". How could she possibly have any insight into anything based in reality??
Reply
11-03-2010 @ 3:27PM
michelle said...Go back to kindergarten and sharpen your reading skills. Larry David, Laurie's ex, co-produced An Inconvenient Truth.
11-05-2010 @ 5:39PM
Janet said...Michelle, maybe YOU should improve YOUR reading skills. Laurie David, NOT Larry David, co-produced "An Inconvenient Truth." It is quite a known fact. Another commonly known fact is that Laurie is a wench who cheated on Larry and is not considered a nice person.
11-03-2010 @ 4:07PM
Nina Williams said...Chris read it right, Laurie David was a co-producer of An Inconvenient Truth:
Producer Lawrence Bender
Producer Scott Z. Burns
Producer Laurie David
11-03-2010 @ 6:09PM
Lizard said...@janet You're right. Laurie is the bad person, and Larry is the sweet, innocent victim who just happens to make comedy skits where he urinates on a portrait of Jesus and calls that funny. May they both rot in hell.
11-03-2010 @ 8:38PM
Bill said...AMEN!
11-03-2010 @ 2:18PM
Dave said...I've got nothing to learn from super liberal morons like the Davids. Laurie David jet sets across the country and then preaches about carbon footprints. Liar, hypocrite.
Reply
11-03-2010 @ 2:34PM
gary gidlow said...didn't she leave david because she had taken up with another man?
Reply
11-03-2010 @ 2:48PM
bostonian said...i always hate reading things written by another person's close friend. the writer of this article adores her semi-famous rich friend and fawns over her and her relationship to her. i think i remember it was laurie david who had an affair with some guy, leading to the dissolution of her marriage. great role model for her daughters. but at least they all eat the dinner the housekeeper prepares together. much tougher to do when you're a non-millionaire single mom who's trying to juggle a real job, make dinner, oversee homework, do the dishes, etc. wouldn't it be nice if everyone had dinner together every night? wouldn't it be nice if mom wasn't shtupping the gardener?
Reply
11-03-2010 @ 3:05PM
reikigirl0712 said...Like this something NEW? Figures ~ it's only "worthwhile" if someone in Hollywood says so. We are a fourth generation of "family dinners" ~ and we didn't need some divorced person to tell us to eat together to do so. Eating dinner together as a family is as old as the hills ~ and plenty of us grew up that way, and still continue with this "regular" and "ordinary" but key ingredient in family life.
Reply
11-03-2010 @ 3:09PM
Graceven said...My husband is a professional comic/writer and he's also the driving force of our dinners at the table. He grew up in a strict family with many siblings and dinnertime was and still is a big part of his family. Can't speak for all comics, but we do laugh and have serious conversations equally. I do the dishes. When he travels we do have the occassional picnic on the floor - but the conversations with my young boys is so helpful to me and hopefully to them. Learning manners early (age 7 & 9) will serve them well in life. No elbows! Ask to be excused! Wait until everyone is finished before asking for dessert! Still works in progress, but our eldest has mastered the "cut only three bites" rule already : ) Will buy this book!
Reply
11-03-2010 @ 3:16PM
Graceven said...I also have two boys and we don't live near family - I see my future and don't like what I anticipate: Boys shut down, call once a week at best and basically don't communicate with Mom so much anymore. Forget the dining room and just eat without the electronics on...they may not like it, but get 'em while you can! TV Trays, picnic on the floor, doesn't matter - just don't let 'em run off with their food or eat on the run EVERY meal...try to implement slowly while you still can. You won't regret it. Good luck!
Reply
11-03-2010 @ 3:21PM
Graceven said...The Poll here reflects that most people do still have the family dinner - why so defensive? Don't buy the book - just because YOU have a tradition of family dinners doesn't mean everyone does. This is a news story as often as "drink wine, it's good for your health" & "don't drink alcohol, it's bad for you" - every year we see these "helpful hint reports" but maybe a fan of Larry David will click on this for the first time, see info about the book and have a revelation. She's not a celebrity at all! I love what Larry David said after the divorce, "I went home and turned on all the lights" because his wife is a green energy fanatic. It's the idea that's good, who cares about the author? Maybe you should have written the book since you know so much about it.
Reply
11-03-2010 @ 3:41PM
Nina Williams said...Other studies have shown that having a family meal altogether has great deterrence to our youngsters seeking the wrong crowd. An old tradition that is falling on the wayside in our modern-day hectic routines.
Nina Williams
Reply