Women Cooking Quotes
Collection of top 22 famous quotes about Women Cooking
Women Cooking Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Women Cooking quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
walk forwards in the radiance of the past
— Francesco Petrarca
Women do kids. Women do cooking. Women doing everything. And yet, their position in society is totally unacceptable.
— Mo Ibrahim
I like women who can throw a ball and laugh loud and have some spine, and I like men who don't mind cooking dinner.
— Paula Cole
Something that's such a joy in my life every day - cooking - is this incredible, horrific danger to women around the world.
— Julia Roberts
If you live like it's the past and you behave like it's the past, then guys from the future find it very hard to see you.
— Russell Crowe
How wonderful are the women and men in the world who feed us. Especially those who feed us with no salary. The mothers - I thought. The wives.
— Katharine Hepburn
Art is the most passionate orgy within man's grasp.
— John Donne
The paranoid is never entirely mistaken.
— Sigmund Freud
And I love to cook! I've impressed hundreds of women with my cooking. And they always come back for more.
— Luke Evans
I had such a reputation, and it was sad because I felt like it so didn't represent who I really was.
— Jennifer Lopez
You cannot make women contented with cooking and cleaning and you need not try.
— Ellen Swallow Richards
When men reach their sixties and retire, they go to pieces. Women go right on cooking.
— Gail Sheehy
The room was empty. It was full of silence and the memory of a nice perfume.
— Raymond Chandler
I learned from my mom to always keep pushing yourself.
— Gabby Douglas
No one could touch the home cooking of an Italian woman. French women, they are very intelligent, very sexy - but they don't like to cook.
— Sirio Maccioni
All the men I know add that "hands that prepared it" line. They must know it's right complimentary, an incentive to keep the women cooking.
— Vicki Covington
Indu'd With sanctity of reason.
— John Milton