Birmingham Post

Food has got such power to tell us a story

ELLA WALKER dips into new recipe book, Ripe Figs, which campaigner and food writer Yasmin Khan hopes will help to change the negative narratives that surround migration

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AS you might expect, there’s many a fig in Yasmin Khan’s new cookbook, Ripe Figs. More so though, there is strength, pain, hope, heroism, loss, and lots and lots of olive oil.

It’s a crucial component in Eastern Mediterran­ean cuisines; even treated reverentia­lly as a seasoning, not just a lowly cooking medium. “I love that,” says Yasmin, 40. “I just have a bottle of olive oil I bring to the table in the same way I’d have salt and pepper.”

Those liberal sloshes of olive oil – be it in a Cypriot-style chocolate and orange mousse, or dressing barbecued sardines in vine leaves – embody the generosity and hospitalit­y Yasmin chronicles in the book, through gleaned recipes and moving reportage.

It took four separate trips to the Eastern Med – each two to seven weeks long, over the course of a year – for Yasmin to pull together the stories she shares from cooks, restaurant owners, volunteers, migrants and refugees across Turkey, Cyprus and Greece.

They include Lena – a teacher by day, restaurate­ur by night – of social enterprise NAN on Greek island Lesbos, which feeds locals and refugees alike and Katerina, of Home for All, also on Lesbos, where equality is paramount, and people from the Moria refugee camp – prior to Covid and the camp burning down – were served meals on proper plates, on white tablecloth­s.

However, having worked as a campaigner on human rights issues for almost 20 years, covering everything from UK deaths in custody to the occupation of Palestine, Yasmin says researchin­g Ripe Figs was arguably hardest – because “it’s so abstract, the refugee and migrant story”.

Between Trump’s presidency, Brexit and the coverage of Channel crossings, it’s one that’s dominated headlines in the last few years, “but when you actually are in these camps or speaking to people, and you hear the stories of how much people risk and what they go through, and what they get at the end of it; to say something is heartbreak­ing feels a little bit gauche or patronisin­g,” says Yasmin. “It’s just so unjust.”

Ripe Figs, she hopes, will help change the persistent­ly negative narratives around migration.

“It’s also really important to realise that throughout human history, we have always moved; people have moved through empires, for trade, for agricultur­al reasons. This notion of statehood and nation states is pretty modern.” Camps and human rights abuses seen at borders, are, “I think, trying to stifle something that has naturally existed for our species,” she adds.

Covid has of course added to an already complicate­d situation. “We’re in a pandemic, there’s a lot going on,” says Yasmin ruefully, acknowledg­ing that the global context has shifted since she started writing the book. “There’s a lot of struggle in the world at the moment.” But food – sharing it, cooking it, eating it – can, she believes, cut through all that.

“Amidst

this

really difficult situation that many of the people I was speaking to found themselves in, we could always find ourselves smiling or laughing when we started sharing recipes, or when we were working in the kitchen,” Yasmin recalls.

“Food and cooking; it’s one of the few ways you can escape the reality of what is going on around you. It can provide huge solace and comfort.”

Yasmin, who is half-Pakistani, half-Iranian finds it “extraordin­ary” that through a recipe from a country, city or even town, you can “transport a little bit of that culture into people’s homes in other places in the world”.

And really, a plate of food is never just a plate of food.

“When you learn about a food culture, you’re not just learning about a set of ingredient­s, you’re learning about a place’s history, its agricultur­e, its economy, maybe its gender relations, its climate,” says Yasmin.

“Food has got such an extraordin­ary power to tell us a story.”

The people Yasmin spoke to and cooked with weren’t just feeding hungry people dinner; meals were intrinsica­lly braided with kindness; the cooks intent on preserving a person’s dignity, whatever their circumstan­ces.

“It was about telling someone, ‘I care about you, and I want you to know that I’m here, that there is support out there for you’,” explains Yasmin. “The food embodied that so much more than just the calories.”

Tragically, Yasmin had three miscarriag­es during the course of writing the book. “I was interviewi­ng a lot of people who are going through lots of grief; I was also going through similar processes,” she says, noting how grief – be it personal or collective – can affect our relationsh­ip with food and cooking. “Our appetite for life is so linked to our appetite for being able to enjoy food.”

She doesn’t obscure sadness or retreat from difficult moments, but there’s an irrefutabl­e backbone of hope to Ripe Figs.

Yasmin says: “I know first-hand how much these recipes brought the people I was meeting with, joy and how much they brought me comfort.”

Food and cooking... it can provide huge solace and comfort

 ??  ?? ■ Ripe Figs: Recipes And Stories From The Eastern Mediterran­ean by Yasmin Khan, photograph­y by Matt Russell, Bloomsbury, £26
■ Ripe Figs: Recipes And Stories From The Eastern Mediterran­ean by Yasmin Khan, photograph­y by Matt Russell, Bloomsbury, £26
 ??  ?? Cook and human rights campaigner Yasmin Khan
Cook and human rights campaigner Yasmin Khan

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