Fish can be hit-or-miss. Any breading or pan-frying and I'm out. But a baked fish with minimal seasoning is good!
A little dill is all it needs. And if the cook is skilled enough and the fish is fresh, you wouldn't need any at all.
I've only ever had beef pies. They're alright, although usually I find myself wanting more of what's inside the crust instead.
I like beef stew, but not beef pie. Chicken and turkey pies are good, though. Of course the kind of veggies included makes a difference.
Now that I have *some* sort of disposable income from a full-time albeit minimum wage job that consumes 40 hours of my week but is mercifully close to my new rented home, I find I want to do about a million things at once and not having the time nor money nor energy to pursue them all to any adequate degree, and it's stressing me out.
I want to get better at drawing, I want to study GIS, I want to start gardening, I want to read more, I want to catch up with old friends and meet new ones, I want to help out my parents, I want to start a podcast, I want to play games that have been on my wishlist forever, I want to cook more, I want to taste more of other people's cooking, I want to travel, and I want to clean up my new home and my new computer and keep everything reasonably organised.
The trouble is I have problem breaking all the big projects I want to do down into smaller manageable everyday goals. I'm trying, but with drawing for example, I try to do it everyday but I look at how I draw now and how I want to be drawing and I think "how the heck do I get myself to where I want to be when I'm this bad at it". It's hard not to get discouraged.
It sounds like you're trying to do too much, too fast.
It helps to break things down into long, medium, and short-term goals, as well as concrete ones and open-ended ones.
"I will plant a garden" is a concrete goal. "I will get better at drawing" is an open-ended goal.
Planting a garden depends on the season and weather and if you have a place to put a garden. It's something that takes prep work, to make sure the soil is worked and suitable for what you want to plant.
Obviously some things should be done every day. Other things can be done 2-3 times/week, and other things weekly.
Since creativity can't be scheduled, I would suggest that you don't force yourself to draw if you don't feel like it that particular day, unless you're doing drawing exercises (kind of like how music students have to practice scales every day), but keep your drawing materials handy for times when inspiration strikes and says, "Draw!".
And keep in mind: If you know more than you did the day before, you haven't failed. If you're farther along on a project than you were the day before, you haven't failed.