Skip to main content

from Plate to Palate

It is amazing to see how food has gone beyond mere sustenance to wholesome entertainment to an art form across various geographies shaped by local economy, events and availability. After visiting several geographies and cultures and imbibing and consuming copious quantities of nutrition available it has dawned on me that good eating experience does not equate to high cost or high society living. 'Value' is definitely in the mouth of the beholder but identifying good eats takes time. Once you find it you stick with it. The challenge faced by a traveler to unknown lands is you know little of what to expect; but at times that clean palate can be the best ignorance. Preconception can be deterimental. What is oddly interesting is also how various cultures separated by geography have some food preparations that resemble each other. Breads of the world all have the rising yeast as a common denominator yet produce vastly varying outcomes from Naan to Bhaturas to Baguettes to Pita to Croissants. Marinating and storage is the underlying theme yet it yields diverse products from Lonche (pickles made of fruits and veggies) to Kimchis to Confit (meat cured and cooked in fat). Some foods through excellent marketing get elevated to god like cult status and some go unnoticed. The marketing adds to the cost of the product more than what the actual ingredients or effort to prepare is worth. Whether one wants to partake this based on aspirations and convey a certain image is up to the consumer (and the size of their wallet or credit history). I have personally always enjoyed the holes in the street with some decorum regards to service and hygiene. I think purchasing power of the currency in hand also drives decison making. The food that I could not enjoy back in India at one point I did come back and pig out on in one of my last excursions since dollar is king. It was amazing - spendy but divine. The situation varies where certain product is not available at a lower price point because there is no demand for it at that strata. Buffets can be another option to explore the unknown especially on a budget. Whether on land or on a boat it does get to you if you see that food over and over again. Variety (not just for food) in day to day activities keeps the spirit alive to try another dish another day. Another nuance you get to see is how a culture interprets what is tasty or savory. Level of heat and spice that a palate can tolerate or the versatality to enjoy and appreciate what is amazing is a function of early upbringing and innate spirit of adventure. I see many American natives (caucasian) go ga ga over Italian cuisine and not quite come to terms with Vietnamese food. To some of them the food construct or optics of a foreign product on a plate (or bowl or stick) itself is a major leap before it goes in the mouth. Clearly the service aspect of the food delivery impacts opinion early. Restauranting is not an easy business and packaging the whole experience is not an Asian forte. Yet to the uninformed a trip to experience the colors and flavor details of Asian foods is possible if accompanied by an informed guide. I have seen some Caucasian friends of mine take to it to the point that they recommend we eat Asian if we are out more than the other natives (desis).

Comments

  1. I grew up on spicy Andhra food, but have learnt to enjoy almost all Indian cuisine, and some eastern. The western ones are Ok, just about palatable, according to me.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Indeed the meat and potatoes has not evolved 'organically' although some might argue that

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

New England is gleaming in the fall

 This autumn the weather gods cooperated as we took a family trip in the northeast to see six states that qualify or makeup what is known colloquially in America as New England. Mass, Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, Connecticut and Rhode Island (tiniest state in the union). The outing helped tally up the states we either lived in, visited or have worked in to 47. Guess which three have eluded this intrepid traveling family. Any rate the drive was all in about 1,800 miles and included some memorable geographic wonders or points of interest.  Easternmost part of state of Massachusetts being one.  Furthest drivable road east in Mass being another. Visit to all Ivy League schools (term harkens to a collegiate athletics conference and generally regarded as elite academic institutes of some repute worldwide) is another random bucket list item of which this trip afforded the chance to knock two more of the list.  Dartmouth in Hanover, NH and Brown (and its sister institute the RISD  - school f

Searching for a lavish 'fill in the blank with other adjectives and gender' in bed

 Many of the readers of this blog have experienced this. Strange sounding messages popping up in your text or WA or emails all day long from some exotic sounding locale with an out of this world individual looking for love, sex, money or other paraphernalia to get a high. I mean granted that electronic spamming is a low cost enterprise and all but the sheer volumes and the variety in these exhortations is beyond imagination. Having a desire to engage you in some sort of sexual payola or invest in some arcane crypto scheme must be a profound algorithm that someone from Oklahoma to Odessa is cranking on through the night and watching one in a few million fall for. Otherwise this nonsense would not exist I suspect. It would be funny to watch the lifecycle of some such persona that creates said content and that of a prospect for this invite becoming an unwilling or willing participant. Then that whole thing could go on some social channel and earn likes and subscriptions for someone else a

Lakeside frivolities

 We moved to the Charlotte area not knowing where exactly our new home would be. Turns out it was by a popular lake formed by the damming of the Catawba river which flows north to south in the Carolinas. Local electricity generation utility built a series of dams along the waterway for hydro and couple nuclear plants as well to supply the state grid.  The lake our house butts into is Lake Wylie. While tract home build has picked up in the Carolinas the developer often carves out parcels that they can get their hands on leaving behind privately owned lots that the individual owner may not want to sell. Our house is part of a subdivision but backs into actual lake front yardage that has always been part of legacy family owned properties who chose to build a cabin or getaway and did not sell to a corporation wanting to build in the hundreds. As such we can see the water through the year but it does not afford actual water access.  That privilege is to our neighbors who still maintain thei