Stabroek News Sunday

Taste what you eat

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Please consider this week’s column a Public Service Announceme­nt and an Appeal. It is borne out of several conversati­ons I have had with various people complainin­g about the lack of taste of many foods and beverages.

Do you taste what you eat? In other words, can you discern what it is that you’re eating and drinking when you consume food and beverages? I’m not referring to having a finely-tuned palate like a chef or someone very familiar with food. Rather, I’m talking about the ability to determine that you are eating the breast meat of chicken rather than the thigh meat; that you’re eating beef and not lamb; or drinking tangerine juice and not orange juice.

Today we have a great variety of foods to choose from and to eat, and yet for all this abundance, we seem to lack a key component to eating, that is, the ability to taste our food. Oh, there’s a lot of blame to go around, including the disguising of vegetables to get them into a variety of dishes. A friend told me a couple of days ago that she puts pumpkin in everything just so that she can get her children to eat a vegetable. Cultural practices, such as the incessant lime-and-salting, for an extended period of time cooks and dulls the flavour and texture of many meats, fish, and poultry. On the world stage, we have the big profit-making companies that are content to mass-produce products that never see the natural light of day or feel the coolness of rain. It’s all about planting and harvesting a produce that crops well, is disease-resistant and freezes and travels well. Good looking yes but severely void of taste.

The reality is that there is a whole generation out there that has grown up that has never and will never experience the taste of many things. The only mauby they drink is the syrup version that’s just sugar, water, and a heavy dose of spices, vacant of any hint of the bitterness or unique flavour that makes mauby such a prized drink. For many people, cooking and eating vegetable dishes equal the flavour of bacon. In other words, rather than using a neutral fat such as oil to let the flavour of the vegetable shine through, they opt to start with bacon, the flavour of which envelopes the dish. Don’t get me wrong, I love bacon just as much as the next person and it certainly has its place in many dishes but used with certain other ingredient­s it takes over; and that my friends is why it is such a popular addition to vegetables because we don’t want to taste the vegetables.

On the other hand, we cooks often have to battle with ingredient­s that offer visually high expectatio­ns but fail to deliver on taste. A perfect example is that of tomatoes – they look so plump, red, and ripe with juice, their skin flawless. Slice into them and they are dry, at times the flesh inside is mushy when you put it in your mouth, and the taste, there is none. The most astonishin­g part is when after sitting on your counter for two weeks the tomatoes still look as rosy and fresh as the day you first bought them!

Just like bacon, using too many seasonings – herbs, spices and other aromatics can mask and dull the flavour of many things. The use of such seasonings should be to enhance, elevate and coax not smother or take over. I have a friend who once told me that before she began eating the food I would make she was unable to tell the difference between various meats. Not to blow my own trumpet, but through my cooking she was able to experience different tastes in terms of texture and flavour. Living in another country now, these days my friend boldly declares what it is that she wants to eat because she can determine what her taste buds are craving.

Just the other day, a Barbadian friend back home for vacation spoke about tossing the Coconut Sweet Bread he bought because it lacked taste and crumbled to bits as he cut into it.

On any given day there are myriad reasons why we make choices to cook and eat certain things but one of the reasons we get excited is because we feel like having that particular dish, we crave the taste of it. We want to experience and enjoy the taste. Many of us, fortunatel­y, still live in parts of the world and places where we can purchase and enjoy food that’s never seen the inside of a lab and has not been geneticall­y modified in any way. We still have available to us ingredient­s with taste, and we need to take full advantage of such a privilege especially as the world continues to shrink through globalisat­ion and large food-producing companies, corporatio­ns and entities gobble up farmers, gardeners, and small dairy producers.

If we’re not careful we will lose taste on two levels – first by the choices we make when we purchase and secondly by the applicatio­ns and methods we employ that render our food indistingu­ishable from one meat to another, one vegetable to another or one drink to another.

The thing is that it is not too late to taste or to start tasting. Farmers’ markets have been making steady strides in getting people to eat local. Shucks, they even peel the katahar for you and cut-up the eddo-leaf callaloo. Some government­s and organisati­ons have been encouragin­g us to grow our own. Sustainabl­e agricultur­e continues to grow and thrive. There are many things in life that we lose, let’s not lose the taste of our food and drink.

Eat seasonally and taste how sweet the mango, pumpkin and pineapple are. Let the chickens run free, let the cows feed on the grass. Taste your food, before it is too late.

Cynthia cynthia@tasteslike­home.org www.tasteslike­home.org

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 ?? ?? Taste in season Pomegranat­e and Mangoes (Photo by Cynthia Nelson)
Taste in season Pomegranat­e and Mangoes (Photo by Cynthia Nelson)
 ?? ?? Taste start of season Tomatoes (Photo by Cynthia Nelson)
Taste start of season Tomatoes (Photo by Cynthia Nelson)

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