Gulf News

At 95, she is still young to cook a meal

DAILY LIFE OFTEN CONSISTS OF MAKING COFFEE WITH THE ORGANIC BEANS SHE GROWS HERSELF

- BY AMY SCATTERGOO­D

To get to Diana Kennedy’s house, outside Zitacuaro, Mexico, about 150km west of Mexico City, you go up a dirt road jutted with rocks, through two gates, past rock walls overhung with bougainvil­lea and blue plumbago, pink lilies and darting butterflie­s, and up a flight of stone steps to an outdoor patio that features two adobe beehive ovens and two solar stoves, one lately arrived from Spanish chef Jose Andres, who also sends them to disaster zones.

Kennedy, the British-born 95-yearold expert on regional Mexican cooking and author of almost a dozen groundbrea­king cookbooks, does not live in a disaster zone but rather the small village of San Francisco Coatepec de Morelos, up a cobbled road from a 16th century Franciscan church, in an “ecological house,” which she had built in the late 1970s with recycled materials, salvaged 200-year-old wooden beams and handmade adobe.

The disaster zone, as Kennedy sees it, is rather what we’ve made of the world, fraught with pollution, climate change, an exploding population and disappeari­ng resources. And it is what Kennedy, nearing 100, is focused on, as she continues working: teaching classes and editing her books, cooking, of course, and just going about her daily life.

“This is trabajo,” Kennedy says forcefully, her expressive face mapped by laugh lines, her short, white hair tucked into a pastel scarf and a broad straw hat. “Life is not easy here; there’s no Walmart around the corner.”

Daily life often consists of making coffee, which for her means picking, fermenting, drying and roasting the organic beans she grows herself. Kennedy grows much of her own food at Quinta Diana, her name for the three hectares of land around the house, which also has a garden with some 250 plants, a small house for overnight guests, a chicken coop, two beehives and a small forest of the trees she planted when she first bought the land. “This was a dried up cornfield when I bought it.”

Through the patio doors is Kennedy’s kitchen, which is built around what she calls not an island but a peninsula, a counter jutting out from a rock wall — the house is built onto solid rock and around a boulder, now at the bottom of the staircase, that Kennedy calls “her hatrack” — with gas burners, tiles from Michoacan and an enormous copper hood she got in Guanajuato. Jars of homemade vinegars line the windowsill like at an apothecary shop.

Baskets hang from medieval-looking metal hooks that she had made by a local craftsman; sometimes they’re filled with chilies, sometimes with tins of tea. (Kennedy, as she’ll tell you, grew up in wartime England, which imprinted her with a respect for both tea and poverty.) Cazuelas, the ceramic Mexican cooking pots, are stacked on the floor next to her round kitchen table, also constructe­d from old salvaged beams. Another wall, behind an iron wood-burning stove used for heating rather than cooking, is hung with copper pots and a framed photo taken at Craig Claiborne’s 60th birthday party.

It is the late Claiborne, a longtime editor and restaurant critic of the New York

Times and author of many game-changing cookbooks himself, whose presence fills the kitchen as much as anybody’s. He was the one who suggested that Kennedy start teaching cooking classes in the first place.

Series of jobs

Go back more than half a century: In 1953, Kennedy left England for Toronto, where she got a series of jobs (“at one point, I was selling lamps”) and then, after meeting New York Times foreign correspond­ent Paul Kennedy on a trip to Haiti, she followed him to Mexico, where they married. During the years the couple lived in Mexico City, where her husband was based, Kennedy became fascinated by the local food, cooking it and researchin­g the recipes and techniques. The couple eventually moved to New York City, and after the death of her husband from cancer, Kennedy was championed by Claiborne, who wrote about her cooking classes, and she soon got a book deal at Harper & Row. And then, Kennedy says now, “One day I thought, ‘Why am I still in Manhattan? I should be in Mexico.’”

So she came back, and into the house in Michoacan where she’s lived for almost 40 years. “You cannot take this without context,” says the woman who sleeps with a loaded pistol under her pillow. “It’s important to talk about what I do here.” The issue of sustainabi­lity, on-trend now, is something Kennedy has been living and practising for much of her long life. She uses electricit­y only when necessary, reuses any plastic (like the bags she uses to press tortillas) multiple times, filters all the water (she allows only neutral soaps) used at Quinta Diana for irrigation. “Everybody is responsibl­e,” Kennedy says vehemently. “Everybody. At all stages.”

And then there is her responsibi­lity to the cuisine, which has earned Kennedy honours: Mexico’s Order of the Aztec Eagle and membership in the Order of the British Empire. (Prince Charles once came for lunch at Quinta Diana; Kennedy notes how much he loved her candied Jalisco green mangoes.)

“You be as authentic as you can,” she says of the cuisine she’s devoted her life to documentin­g. “The first Mexican food I ever had was in Los Angeles.” Kennedy appreciate­s the irony, if you can call it that, of a woman who speaks British-accented Spanish teaching traditiona­l Mexican techniques. “Who was I to say? I looked as if I’d dropped out of Mars.

“I’ve driven all over the country,” Kennedy adds, nodding in the direction of her third consecutiv­e pickup truck, a 17-year-old stick shift white Nissan parked under an awning, which she still drives (her licence expires when she turns 100). “I spent months up in the mountains, sitting in kitchens.”

This dedication to accuracy gives her little patience for those who do not meet her standards or follow the recipes she’s translated from those rural Mexican kitchens. Publicatio­ns will change recipes to suit them, altering ingredient­s and techniques — a common and accepted practice, given the current cookbook copyright laws, which Kennedy longs to change to give more protection to recipe writers. “The difference between excellence and mediocrity is subtle,” she says, after a day spent demonstrat­ing how to make tortillas.

“You be as authentic as you can,” Kennedy says of the cuisine she’s devoted her life to documentin­g.

It was a process that began with a small bucket of local corn, which she simmered with lime, soaked and hulled — a sequence called nixtamalis­ation — and then took to a tiny neighbourh­ood mill, where it was ground, and then back to her kitchen, where it was pressed into discs of massa and then cooked on a comal. (Kennedy grows her own corn when there’s enough rainfall, which there hasn’t been lately; Michoacan doesn’t have California’s drought, yet, but she notes that this spring has been the driest and hottest she can remember.) To see every part of the process is an object lesson.

Homemade

Guacamole made in a molcajete, each ingredient mashed by hand; camarones enchipotla­dos, made with the season’s first heirloom tomatoes and homemade chilies in adobo, the reduced sauce spooned over salted, perfectly cooked shrimp; a cup of coffee brewed with beans that had recently been fermenting in a bucket outside. The simplicity is deceptive, dependent on a vast architectu­re of sourcing and labour, timing and technique.

Kennedy sits in her kitchen, wearing a police whistle on a lanyard like a necklace for protection, a cup of tea before her. “Darjeeling may not exist soon,” she points out, “because of climate change”. She’s been thinking about the future, not only of the planet but also of Quinta Diana, the house she’s still in the process of turning into an ecological reserve and whose plants are catalogued at CONABIO, Mexico’s national biodiversi­ty website. She’s approached universiti­es about housing her papers and is working with filmmakers on a documentar­y. A new edition of her pivotal The Art of Mexican Cooking is in the works, plus a new Mexican edition of the massive Oaxaca al Gusto, which took Kennedy 14 years to research and write. And she hopes to continue doing boot camps, the intensive cooking classes she runs from her house. “I’m off at 100,” she says, although it’s easy to imagine her outliving us all.

“It’s about survival,” Kennedy says. “And taste.”

Kennedy does not live in a disaster zone but rather the small village of San Francisco Coatepec de Morelos, up a cobbled road from a 16th century Franciscan church.

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 ?? Los Angeles Times ?? Diana Kennedy is in the process of turning her home into an ecological reserve. The plants she grows are catalogued at CONABIO, Mexico’s national biodiversi­ty website.
Los Angeles Times Diana Kennedy is in the process of turning her home into an ecological reserve. The plants she grows are catalogued at CONABIO, Mexico’s national biodiversi­ty website.
 ?? Los Angeles Times ?? 1 Organic coffee beans dry in the sun. 2 Diana Kennedy tests the skin of the kernel. 3 Massa for corn tortillas, which are made from scratch, at Quinta Diana. 4 A hand-held mechanical press for tortillas. 5 Frying tortillas on a pan.
Los Angeles Times 1 Organic coffee beans dry in the sun. 2 Diana Kennedy tests the skin of the kernel. 3 Massa for corn tortillas, which are made from scratch, at Quinta Diana. 4 A hand-held mechanical press for tortillas. 5 Frying tortillas on a pan.
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