So I'm making my dad a roasted vegetable soup.
Mainly tomatoes.
It's whatever's in the fridge to be honest.
There is a shelf in the fridge labelled for him.
That doesn't always work and there's nothing more soul destroying than like preparing food for him the day before.
and then coming home and seeing it, like, untouched, left on the fridge shelf.
Does he forget to eat?
He doesn't forget to eat.
He's always had a really healthy appetite, but I think, you know,
it's more that he kind of doesn't make the connection of, like, oh, that's my food, I can eat that.
This is the food chain from the BBC World Service with me, Ruth Alexander,
and I've been invited into the kitchen of Amy and Alan in Manchester, England.
Amy cares for Alan, her dad, who's living with Alzheimer's disease,
a form of dementia that affects memory, thought processes and behaviour.
There are more than a hundred forms of dementia and in this programme we're going to be exploring how they can affect meal times.
We'll hear about the challenges, the workarounds and the breakthroughs.
I suppose food has always been really important to us as a family,
and it would be the time that we would sit together and eat.
So, yeah, if I'm not here during the day, or if I'm,
like, working late or whatever, I do worry about what he's eating.