Friday, October 21, 2011

And So, We Begin....


Where to start. Where to stop. Both are so important in so many aspects of a life. Dating. Sex. Marriage. Child-rearing. Cooking a meal. Eating a meal. Telling a shaggy dog story.
“The beginning,” you might say, when queried about where to start anything.  I would respond, “The beginning of what? And can you be sure where the beginning is?”
The beginning of a story, or a relationship, or even a meal, can be purely subjective. I have a pair of friends – a couple, who love each other deeply.  The biggest dispute they have in their lives together is at exactly what point their long-standing platonic friendship wandered into romantic territory.
He says it was the overnight trip to Vegas, where they shared a first, slightly drunken kiss at the roulette table. She swears it was several weeks later, in Yosemite, when they made love stone-cold sober.  Who’s right? Who’s wrong? Neither. Both.
For him, when he finally stole a kiss from the girl of his dreams, that was the start of his love story. No matter that they were in a noisy casino, adrift in tequila and cigarette smoke. He’d kissed her, and that was what mattered.
For her, though, until they were alone in a musty rental cabin in the forest, absent roulette wheels and alcohol, a kiss was just a kiss.  Though she treasured their little lip-lock, what happened in Vegas definitely stayed in Vegas. Their love, for her, began in solitude, surrounded by majestic nature and the wind humming through the trees.
Beginnings are tricky.
Endings can be even more fraught with dispute. No doubt there are millions of people in the world at this very writing, whose relationships have ended without them even knowing it. A partner has checked out or cheated, closed the door to their heart, and is preparing to move on.
At some point in the future, the unsuspecting jilted party will look back and try and pinpoint the exact moment their love ended. All of them will venture a guess. Some will be right. The vast majority will probably be way off the mark.
Endings are tricky, too, and harder to pull off gracefully and with loving compassion.
Today, we’re dealing with beginnings.  This story – my story – will begin at the beginning. Not in Vegas or a cabin in Yosemite.  My story is the story of food, of kitchens, of meals and large tables full of people. This is the story of food and begins at the beginning of everything.
Cavemen.
Anthropologists date the beginning of human social structure – the germination of the proverbial “village”, as it were – from the advent of the campfire. Our cultural and social traditions, our language, or concept of family and belonging, turned from pack-like to communal, not when our predecessors banded together to kill the wooly mammoth, but rather when they gathered around an open flame to cook it.
These same anthropologists hypothesize that the minute we stopped merely huddling in the cold, dark caves, sharing our raw kills, but came together in a circle to cook and eat it around the warmth of the fire, we began to become who we are – in the sociological seeds for our humanness were planted in the ashes of those blazing open flames, and took root in ways that shaped our attitudes and experiences since.  Those roaring flames licking up at the chunks of red meat over those fires forged our ideas of community, family, parenthood and, perhaps especially, of food.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

In Honor of The Wearin' o' da Green...

... and by way of my friend Eric Rapp (who swears he's making this this weekend), I give you the recipe for...


Beeramisu...

Seriously.

I insist we all make it for the upcoming St. Pattie's Day weekend, or someone's gonna get pinched, whether they're wearing green or not.

Erin-go-Flippin'-Bragh, peeps.


~C~

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Zen and the Art of Denial

Nero
Have I mentioned that part of my reasoning for starting this blog was in order to stop writing in the other one? The other one, though it didn't start that way, evolved into a political blog, especially in 2008, when I was posting 3 to 4 times a day there.

I posted so much because I was reading three to five newspapers a day, watching countless hours of coverage of the election (all channels -- except Fox News, which I don't count as news so much), and really paying attention to the world. I think I believed -- like a football fan who can't just Tivo the game, but must watch it live, in case his team needs him -- that if I paid attention, I could make a difference.  To the country. And maybe to the world a little bit, too.  Maybe if we all concentrated hard enough with our good intentions and our best thoughts and wishes, we could alter the trajectory of hate and violence we've been on for ten years.

But the truth is - and I know this now -- we can't.

We're kind of doomed.

Not in a "blood moon, rivers of fire" kind of way. But in a "collapse of the Roman Empire" kind of way.

I think in the last couple of days, I've come to understand Nero a little better. He didn't fiddle while Rome burned because he couldn't see the fire.  He fiddled while Rome burned because he knew, tacitly, that there was nothing he could do to put the fire out.  And maybe, somewhere inside, he knew that it was time for Rome to burn. It was Rome's turn to fall apart and then start anew.  Rome still exists.  So do the Greeks. So do the English and the Egyptians.  Not they way they did once, perhaps.  But they're still here, alive and well, and dedicated to all things Roman/Greek/English/Egyptian.

There's a little less hubris there, and a little more humility. But each fallen empire has retained its autonomy and its cultural... well... arrogance, frankly -- and good for them.  They created and built and wrote and painted and sculpted their way into history, and they deserve a little pat on their backs and a toot of their horns for it.  We'll survive, too.  We'll be different, and right now, we don't know what that looks like, and it's making us mighty, mighty uncomfortable.  But every major religious, spiritual and historical work hints that our time as a the Last Emperor is coming to a close.  An era is ending, and a new one beginning, and, like most new eras, it's full of promise and misadventure.

I started this blog because I can't focus on that anymore.  I can't control it. I can't change it. I can't embrace it. I don't like it.  I don't like those people. I'm not wild about them anymore, those people whose articles and blogs I read, who's shows I watched. I don't like their outlooks on what's happening. Most of all, I don't agree with it.

In light of the horrible events in Tuscon over the weekend, I'd forgotten the most important part of my new zen approach.  You people are not my children, and I'm not responsible for you.  I'm not responsible for your ignorance or your attitude, your bigotry or your hate.  If you want to be a bigot, this is America, and you get to be that.  If you want to be a homophobe or a crazy, radical extremist, again, as long as you operate inside the boundaries of the law, you get to be those things.  I'm here to talk about food -- how to make it, what it means to me (and to all of us, in many way). I'm here to talk about fresh basil and portabello mushrooms. When it comes to the rest of you, you can either join me for the ride, or not.  But I'm not in the business of directed intention when it comes to politics.

Y'all are on your own.

We're on the precipice of something big, something huge. As it happens, my spirituality teaches that we're on the brink of an epic age of love and compassion the likes of which has never been seen on this earth. Yeah. That's good. Let's go with that. I have decided to accept what is happening in the world as part of what needs to happen. I can't control it or stop it anymore than I can stop the tides or control the rain.  So I've decided to use cooking as my form of meditation.

So, I started this blog because I want to learn to cook. I want to make myself a better cook and make other people want to be better cooks.  I started this blog because it's a distraction away from thinking about the dark seriousness of this past Sunday's events.

I'm Nero. This blog is my fiddle.  So while I pick out "Turkey in the Straw" as best I can, we'll all think about ways to cook up that turkey and make it yummy.  And we won't need to concern ourselves with the ugliness of the world.
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