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5 years 6 months
Submitted by amber on Mon, 09/16/2024 - 09:36:AM

On Wednesday September 11, 2024, our family and Canada’s food industry lost a bright and shining light. Gay Cook, born Grace Helen Morrison, passed away peacefully in hospital with her kids by her side. Vibrant until the end, in the moment of her passing, the world suddenly got a little bit quieter.

At 93, Gay remained her cheerful, merry self, her bright eyes widening with happiness around her favourite things – her kids, grandkids, family, friends, dogs, cups of tea, favourite cookies to have with said tea, the lake at her cottage, onion sandwiches, going barefoot in her garden, pulling weeds and savouring conversations about the quality of a dish or the bouquet of a wine.

Born November 8th, 1930, in her family home in Ottawa, Gay grew up in a family steeped in the world of Canadian food. Her parents were the late Margaret Jane Kelly Cotter, consummate host, gardener and irreverent, loving grandmother and the late Cecil Morrison, founder of Morrison Lamothe, the business that the family still operates today.

The youngest of the legendary Morrison sisters, Gay attended nearby Devonshire, Connaught, and Glebe schools, graduating as the Second World War was ending. Like her older sisters, Jean Pigott and Marguerite (Grete) Hale, as a teen, Gay worked in the catering division of the family business. After her 1953 graduation from Ryerson, in Hotel Resort and Restaurant Administration, Gay worked in kitchens across Europe and South America, and she went on to run commercial kitchens, training new arrivals throughout. On her many travels, cupid struck.

Gay found her lifetime love in Robert (Bob) Alexander Cook of Edmonton, Alberta. They married on August 20, 1966, at Parkdale United Church in Ottawa and celebrated in grand style at the family home. Gay and Bob continued to travel throughout their marriage, living in Washington DC, Tucson, Arizona, Toronto and Morrisburg, Ontario. Son Donald Robert Cook was born in 1969, and daughter Kelly Ann Margaret Cook (Kubrick) followed in 1970.

Gay was an awesome mom who taught her kids with every breath and every action – we cooked and baked at her elbow, we camped and canoed with her and our Dad, we learned to ski and skate with them, and we built a log cabin with them both. A working Mom who believed in breakfast, she also fed us lunch daily through school years, engaged us during home cooked dinners, tended to extraordinary gardens, trained our many pets, encouraged our interests, and fostered our independence.

Her love and partnership with our Dad never wavered. They were a united front who revelled in embarrassing their teenagers with expressions of affection. They threw countless dinner parties, teaching us to value friends, and threw excellent birthday parties for us. We were the only kids in our neighbourhood who got Baked Alaska as their birthday cake.

Gay did all that while also blazing trails in her professional world of food. She joked constantly she’d won a life lottery there; “I married my husband for love, but it’s been good for business too!” Throughout their 28 year marriage and through the soul-tearing loss of her beloved Bob to cancer in 1994, we watched her embrace her food calling with enthusiasm and an always open-heart.

She consulted for cookware companies, freelanced for magazines like Gourmet and Epicuria, wrote cookbooks, made appearances on TV and radio cooking shows, ran her own cooking schools, launched her Mrs. Cook’s Foods business, evolving into a food journalist and restaurant critic, with her own food column. A multi-decade member of the Culinary Federation, she served on culinary advisory committees and councils for Algonquin College, Savour Ottawa, Canadensis, Canada’s future National Botanical Garden, and was a founding director and a Governor of the National Capital Sommelier Guild.

A food writer for over a decade with the Ottawa Sun, she then penned her weekly “Taste of the Town” column with the Ottawa Citizen for nine years, retiring at 80. Her hundreds of columns encouraged everyone in Ottawa who had a food or wine offering to share. Gay connected with everyone – chefs, cooks, restauranteurs, farmers, artisans, caterers, markets, shops, stores, B&Bs and hotels, wineries, and food experiences. If you were out there trying to make a go in food, Gay wanted to know about you and wanted to share your creations with, and for you.

In 2000, her decades of experience, knowledge, culinary beliefs, as well as her best cooking tips culminated in the publication of her cookbook “Mrs. Cook’s Kitchen, Basics and Beyond”. Her goal was to “help make the timid cook a little bolder and the experienced cook more adventurous.” Rich with information yet accessible, it has more than survived the test of time. If you are lucky enough to have a copy, it is likely you still refer to it to this day. Our entire family certainly does, and we regularly get reports on which recipe is the favourite in peoples’ homes.

For decades, her voice resonated across the National Capital region. Gay championed fresh, local ingredients, and its producers. She encouraged chefs, caterers, and restaurants to reach out to local farmers, who responded with enthusiasm. She believed in inspiring all to be more flavourful in our creations and inventive with our menus.

Gay was a tremendous believer in Ottawa’s food community. We were privileged to watch her, consistently and repeatedly, encourage, not criticize, the larger industry. She listened to people’s troubles and challenged the industry to rise to its potential. It broke her heart to watch the devasting impact of COVID on her beloved industry.

Gay also never shifted in her position that breakfast was the most important meal of the day. Unscientifically, her kids believe that 100% of all people Gay ever met, found themselves asked, “What did you eat for breakfast today?” Her question has been reported to us many, many times as people ran into our Mom around town.

Throughout her life, Gay’s love shone ever bright for her family. Beloved by her Bob, her sisters and parents, her playful self was outright adored by her grandkids and much loved by her nieces and nephews, her great nieces and nephews and great grandkids. She embodied the mischievous nature of her mother, innocently turning garden hoses on you without warning, but ever generous in offering you the food she had in front of her.

In 2005 for her seventy-fifth birthday, her family and friends gleefully surprised her with the endowment of the Gay Cook Bursary, in appreciation and recognition of her enthusiasm for and contribution to the Canadian Food industry. It is awarded annually to deserving Algonquin College culinary school students who exhibit the ability to work with others, inspire cooperation and inclusion and share learning.

She will be greatly missed. May her merry, joyful voice echo in your hearts and minds for decades to come. We love you, Mom.

For those wishing to honour her memory, please consider directing a donation to the Gay Cook Bursary fund within the Algonquin College School of Hospitality and Tourism.

A Visitation with the family will be held on Tuesday, September 24th, 2024, from 5pm – 8pm EST at Beechwood, Funeral, Cemetery and Cremation Services (280 Beechwood Avenue, Ottawa).

A Celebration of Gay's life will be held on Wednesday, September 25th, 2024, at 3pm, with a reception to follow.

For those unable to join us in person for the celebration, we invite you to attend via live-stream. 

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Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 09/21/2024 - 10:06:PM

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Hania Grabowski

I met Gay many times times at her gracious home on Fuller street (and other locations), usually while Grete was hosting an event there. Grete always said that their parents instilled in their children their obligation to always give back to the community. And they each generously gave of their time and resources. Many years ago, i gave my husband Gay's cookbook - Mrs. Cook's Kitchen - proudly autographed to him by Gay. He refers to Gay's book time and time again, as he sharpened his culinary skills. Gay was an icon...like her sisters. She will be missed. Deepest condolences to Gay's family.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 09/21/2024 - 10:47:PM

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Lorraine Brousseau Claude

My deepest condolences to family....my memories met Grete at store..help her bed..duvet...I met Gay she full of life she made me tea ..with her cookie..that I will always remember kindest the stories..I will never forget she will be miss..she is now with sisters..God bless her..

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 09/22/2024 - 03:51:PM

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Mary Louise Hainsworth

I am saddened by the news of Gay’s death She will be missed. I think of her lively personality whenever I use my cook book!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 09/23/2024 - 03:20:PM

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Mark (and Karen) Bonokoski

As the now-retired Editor/Publisher of the Ottawa Sun, I can say that Gay's hire as Food Writer was a brilliant move. She was an immediate star, which was no surprise considering her personal knowledge and huge personality. Besides. she was the remaining sister of a magnificent trio known to call Ottawans--Jean Pigott and Grete Hale. Sister Gay will definitely be missed but kept alive in many memories.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 09/23/2024 - 06:51:PM

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Kit Flynn

Gay was a loving and compassionate woman. We have lost a truly wonderful soul!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 09/24/2024 - 11:17:PM

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May Hyde

My heart breaks knowing that Gay has departed the land of the living. Of course, such a time comes to us all, but still ...
Wherever or whenever Gay saw me, no matter how much time had passed, she would greet me with infectious joy and warmth. She would burst into her beautiful smile and hug me. I felt important, special and loved. She was always the same. What a gift!

Gay shone so brightly. Could she know how far her light travelled? It seemed she was on a mission to ensure everyone felt nourished and happy ... especially when she described food and her passion for cooking. Such a force for good!

I am sending my deepest condolences to Gay's extraordinary and beloved children, Kelly and Don, grandchildren, and extended family.

Dear Gay, I hope there is consciousness after life and you are reunited with your loving late husband, parents and sisters. By the way, I skipped breakfast again today but I won't forget it is the most important meal of the day and smoothies are no substitute. Thank you! Rest in peace!

May Hyde

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 09/25/2024 - 12:29:PM

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Michael Durrer

My sincere sympathy to family of Gay Cook. I knew Gay through dealings with the CCFCC and Algonquin College. She was to be greatly admired for her life long accomplishments and her contributions to the trade. She will be sadly missed by many. Michael Durrer

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 09/25/2024 - 12:58:PM

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Marc Cappelli

My thoughts are both of great sadness and warm memories at Gay’s passing.

Gay always brightened up any room she was in. Her energy, smile and wonderful laugh made everyone around her feel better. I met Gay as a planning committee member of an annual fundraiser event called “Baskets with Panache!” that brought thousands of underprivileged school children to enjoy educational programs and summer camps at the Canada Agriculture and Food Museum between 2007 and 2014. Each year, to celebrate the post event’s success which Gay contributed a great deal to over the years, Gay and Grete hosted a dinner at Bayne House for the core committee members.

Later on, the original core committee members, which included Gay, would reconnect socially a few times a year at the Prescott even after Gay had moved to a Retirement residence to share a meal, stories and laughter. Gay will be dearly missed.

My sincere condolences to all of Gay’s family and friends. May she rest in peace

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 09/25/2024 - 01:10:PM

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Robin Etherington

I had the honour and pleasure of knowing both Gay and Grete, as they constantly visited the Bytown Museum when I served as Executive Director. And yes Gay always asked me: " what did you eat for breakfast? And the answer best be 'eggs,' as protein in the morning is critical." Thank you Gay for your brightness, cheer and sharing soul! Robin E

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 09/25/2024 - 03:41:PM

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Vicky Wilgress

Sending my deepest sympathy to you and your family. Gay was one of a kind and I feel fortunate for having known her....thinking of you.

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