I got into beekeeping last year (after putting it off for 20 years) and part of my final impetus was that nearing 50 means my physical capability will eventually restrict the amount of hobbies I can meaningfully engage in since I’m not getting any younger. (unsurprisingly 🤦‍♂️)

As a result, I’ve started thinking more intentionally about developing hobbies that I can continue well into old age. Beekeeping has been a great addition because it gets me outdoors, gives me something to learn, and provides a tangible reward at the end. But what about making beef jerky? Is it similar to beekeeping in that it yields a tangible reward but only incidentally and not guaranteed to be pleasing/edible until you’ve mastered the flavor and safety techniques?

Part of me sees it as a hobby because there seems to be a lot to learn: selecting cuts of meat, experimenting with marinades and seasonings, mastering dehydration techniques, food safety, and constantly refining recipes. I can imagine spending years (possibly decades) trying different approaches and enjoying the process. I saw an old youtube account of mine recently that had a 15 year old video of me making Cuban sandwiches, which I’ve been honing/improving over the last 18 years and have never lost the obsession!

If beef jerky making is a hobby then I plan to pursue it. If it’s more akin to a culinary skill, then I plan to go on a deep dive to the back bottom corners of my closet to find my rock wool cubes and plant 20 hydroponic tomato seeds before the end of this weekend. (I have a ton of hydroponic equipment but it’s all been sitting in my closet unopened for the better part of 8-10 years)

  • TaterTot@piefed.social
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    4 minutes ago

    Dude, I fucking love your head space. Choosing your next fun time thing to do based on a linguistics debate you started with your self.

    That’s my kind of neurotic.

    Hope you have a blast either way!

  • SkyNTP@lemmy.ml
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    2 hours ago

    A hobby is pretty much anything you do other than what you do for your own or someone else’s sustenance. Getting paid to barbecue for customers paying you? Not a hobby. Grilling some burgers at dinner time because you or your family are hungry? Not a hobby. Spending hours and weekends on end slow cooking a particularly challenging piece of meat? Hobby. Eating an expensive piece of meat (as a treat)? Also a hobby.

  • Cris_Citrus@piefed.zip
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    2 hours ago

    Do both. Follow whichever you’re excited about right now. If it changes do the other one. Or do them at the same time.

    If you do plants though I reccomend starting small, it makes it easier to figure things out and make smaller mistakes, which helps keep you from getting burnt out. There are no rules though, go big if you wanna :)

    Hobbies are just things we spend our time on because they bring us joy or peace, that we do for our own sakes. The very important key- do the ones you want to. Follow that joy, excitement or curiosity. Do whatever that leads you to :)

  • Default Username@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    4 hours ago

    I think you’re the one who gets to decide what is and isn’t something you would consider a hobby.

    Literally anything can be a hobby if you do it for fun on purpose.

    • alliwantsoda@lemmy.worldOP
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      3 hours ago

      Those are rock wool cubes (for hydroponic gardening hobby) mentioned in the last paragraph with a nascent tomato plant growing in the lower left corner of the image. Whenever I feel motivated enough to start hydroponic gardening, I just shrug my shoulders and plant my tomato seeds or rosemary seeds conventionally in a flower pot. (I always manage to find an excuse at the last minute on the day I finally roll up my sleeves to start hydroponic gardening 🤦‍♂️)

      If you or anyone has questions about first-time gardening, ask away!

  • blarghly@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    Barbecuing counts as a hobby, as does cooking in general. I think that if you are doing it in a utilitarian fashion - like, in an assembly like exactly the same way each time for the purpose of saving money on beef jeeky - then I think it is just, like, a chore. But if you are doing it for the sake of experimentation or creativity, etc, then it’s a hobby.

  • mushroommunk@lemmy.today
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    7 hours ago

    My take is a hobby is what you enjoy doing in your down time. Even if you made the exact same recipe the exact same way every week, so long as it’s the thing you choose to do to relax, I’d call it a hobby.

    • alliwantsoda@lemmy.worldOP
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      5 hours ago

      I’m just trying to force myself to either start the beef jerky hobby this weekend or the hydroponic gardening. My excuse for not starting the beef jerky all year is not knowing whether it “counts” as a valid hobby, so this post will help me force myself to “shit or get off the pot” and pick one since inaction is the same as choosing “neither”.

      I also own a virtually unused violin that I’ve only played 3-4 times this year which was my hobby I intended to begin last year. 🤦‍♂️

  • schmorp@slrpnk.net
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    7 hours ago

    Why do you need other people to decide that for you? It is both culinary skill and hobby. Life does not fit in categories described by single words.

    • alliwantsoda@lemmy.worldOP
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      5 hours ago

      Why do you need other people to decide that for you? It is both culinary skill and hobby. Life does not fit in categories described by single words.

      Mainly FOMO (fear of missing out on a more “valid” hobby) but also to get others perspectives, including those I might disagree with because I’m often wrong in my initial judgment about stuff. I don’t want to look back 20 years from now and realize I deluded myself into counting something as a hobby that isn’t one, when the opportunity cost might be a better hobby that I’ve also been putting off getting started for the past 5-10 years (hydroponic gardening, wall/rock climbing, telescope star-watching, learning violin, etc.)

      • zurohki@aussie.zone
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        1 hour ago

        Nobody’s going to call the hobby police. Do what you want.

        You have my permission to call whatever you’re interested in a hobby, if you feel like you need it.

      • [deleted]@piefed.world
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        6 hours ago

        You are massively overthinking it.

        Just do what you enjoy and it is a hobby. You can always have more than one hobby if you have the time and can afford it. You can even switch between hobbies that you focus on at any point in time!

  • Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    Definitely counts as a hobby. It just happens to be a hobby that requires and develops cooking skills.