from our little kitchen diary
Food • A cosy night in
The first time we tried a candlelight dinner at home, we burnt the garlic and set off the smoke alarm. We laughed so hard we forgot we were even hungry. The food was a bit of a mess, but that night is still one of my favourites.
That's the thing we learned. A candlelight dinner at home is not about getting everything perfect. It's about the two of you, a small kitchen, some music, and a little flame on the table. The food is just an excuse to slow down and be silly together.
So here's how we do it now. Simple food, made side by side, nothing fancy. You really can pull this off on a normal weeknight.
You don't need a fancy setup. We just switch off the big lights and put one or two candles on the table. If you don't have candles, even a lamp with a warm bulb does the job.
Put on a playlist you both like. Keep your phones face down. Lay out whatever plates you have, fold the napkins a little nicely, and that's honestly enough. The dim light hides the messy kitchen anyway, which is a small blessing.
Set the table before you start cooking. That way, when the food is ready, you just sit down instead of running around looking for spoons.
We always start with garlic cheese toast because it takes no effort and feels a little special.
Take a few slices of bread. Mix soft butter with chopped garlic, a pinch of salt, and some chopped coriander or chilli flakes. Spread it on the bread, add grated cheese on top, and toast it in a pan or oven till the cheese melts and the edges go golden.
Cut them into triangles and eat them straight away while they're hot. They never last long in our house. One person butters, the other grates the cheese. Done in ten minutes.
Pick one of these depending on your mood. Both are easy and feel like a treat.
For a veg night, we make white sauce pasta. Boil some pasta till soft. In another pan, melt a little butter, add a spoon of flour, stir for a minute, then slowly pour in milk while stirring so no lumps form. Add salt, pepper, a little garlic, and cheese. Mix in the pasta. If you have some boiled corn or sauteed veggies, throw them in too. Creamy, warm, and very filling.
For a non-veg night, we do garlic butter chicken. Cut boneless chicken into small pieces. Cook it in butter with lots of chopped garlic, salt, pepper, and a squeeze of lemon. Let it brown nicely on the sides. Finish with some coriander. Eat it with bread, rice, or naan. It smells amazing while it cooks, which is half the fun.
Keep dessert tiny and sweet. We love a quick chocolate mug cake because it feels indulgent and there's just enough for two spoons fighting over one mug.
In a microwave-safe mug, mix a few spoons of flour, some cocoa powder, a little sugar, a pinch of baking soda, a spoon of oil, and enough milk to make a smooth batter. Microwave it for about a minute. Let it sit for a moment, then dig in together with two spoons.
No microwave? A bowl of fruit with a little cream and honey works just as well, and feels light after dinner.
This is the real heart of a candlelight dinner at home. Don't split into "you cook, I watch." Do it side by side.
Here's what works for us. One person handles the stove, the other does the prep, the chopping, the tasting, and the cleaning as you go. Switch roles for the next dish. Keep talking while you cook. Steal a bite. Bump into each other in the small kitchen. That's where the night actually happens.
And clean the big mess together after, not alone. Two people with music on can wash up in ten minutes, and you keep the cosy feeling going right till the end.
Keep it to three easy things. A garlic cheese toast starter, a simple pasta or garlic butter chicken main, and a quick mug cake or fruit for dessert. All of it can be made in under an hour.
Switch off the bright lights, use one or two candles or a warm lamp, put on a playlist you both love, and set the table before you start cooking. Keep phones away.
White sauce pasta is perfect. It feels rich and creamy, takes about twenty minutes, and you can add corn or vegetables to make it your own.
Split the jobs instead of one person doing everything. One cooks, one preps and tastes, then switch for the next dish. Keep talking, keep tasting, and clean up together at the end.
That's the best reason to cook together. Pick simple dishes, laugh at the mistakes, and remember the goal is the evening, not a perfect plate. Burnt garlic makes for a good story later.
— made with love, from both of us