Cook the Old Way Again.
now just a message away.
Line
- A fad diet
- A list of foods you can’t pronounce
- A recipe that needs a professional kitchen
- An overnight miracle
- A man who forgets your name between messages
He learned the kitchen from his father, who learned it from his.
Six decades. One small town. A table everyone wanted a seat at.
He was the man people called for a good recipe — and the one they called when they just needed company.
Today he shares what he knows about food and everyday nutrition, and the porch is open to a wider circle.
“I tried one of his recipe cards on a Wednesday, and by the next week it had become the thing I actually looked forward to cooking. I print every card he sends now. They live on my fridge.”
“I replied to a Sunday voice note thinking nobody really reads these. He wrote back the next morning. Called me by name. Asked about my week. I don’t know the last time anyone did that.”
“My sister and I both got his number. We trade the recipe cards back and forth and call each other about which one to cook next. It’s the closest we’ve felt in twenty years.”
His number arrives in your WhatsApp, with a welcome voice note.
Your first Sunday Sit-Down at 8 a.m.
Your first Morning Ritual at 6 a.m.
Your first Recipe Card arrives, ready to print.
Two weeks in, and his kitchen already feels like part of your week.
Is this really Mr. Harris’s personal number?
Yes. When you buy, his WhatsApp line is saved straight to your phone. You can reply to his voice notes and send him a message — he reads them himself and answers in his own time, in his own voice.
How often will he reply to me?
He reads everything himself, so replies come in his own time — usually within a day or two, on weekdays. He’s one person, not a call centre, so a little patience is part of it.
Is this a subscription?
No. It’s a one-time purchase — you pay once and that’s it. There’s no subscription to manage, nothing to renew, and nothing to cancel.
Is this medical advice?
No. Mr. Harris is not a doctor, and nothing he shares is medical advice. The recipes, habits and notes are for general interest and everyday cooking — they don’t diagnose, treat or cure anything, and they don’t replace your doctor. For any health concern, or before changing a medication or treatment, always speak with a qualified healthcare professional.
Can I share the recipe cards with my sister or daughter?
Of course. Print them, pin them up, pass them around — the recipe cards are yours to share with whoever you cook for.
How will everything be delivered?
Everything is digital and arrives right after checkout: his WhatsApp number plus the three ebooks (The Recipe Book, The Monday Almanac and A Year in Season), with a link to download them. The Sunday note, the morning habit and the recipe cards then arrive in your WhatsApp on their own gentle rhythm.