This was her kitchen.
She was a traditional cook. She left the house around 10:00 a.m. every morning with a wicker basket to do her round. She walked a half mile to the butcher shop and backtracked home: cheese shop, bakery, vegetable stall.
She only bought enough for a day and just enough for each meal.
You couldn't drop by announced and expect her to feed you, except for eggs perhaps and potatoes. She ordered a half-ton of potatoes dumped into the cellar every winter. When I was very small, she also ordered a half-ton of coal for the stove. Later, she switched to gas.
She cooked three meals a day every day. On Sunday mornings my grandfather would come down first and make the coffee. On mother's day he'd treat her to a restaurant where she judged the food was never as good as the one she made. She cooked traditional northern French food: stews, boiled cod, sausage and peas, heart with spinach, kidneys in tomato sauce, tongue, soles with shrimp, and potatoes, always lots of potatoes, boiled, fried, sauteed, pureed but never baked (something about the Germans and the war...) She couldn't imagine life without potatoes. She didn't like rice, found pasta suspicious.
On special Sundays, she'd make puffed potatoes from balls of puree she'd fry in a large pot of grease. The puffs came out crispy and golden and burned our mouths on the first bite. She told us to slow down. We never did.