Jornal 4: I never learned how to cook– Courtney Andrews

dinner was home-made

always experimental

she’d ask as we dug in

how is it?

                        would you eat it again?

                                    should I save the recipe?

dishing out some new concoction she had slaved over

It’s called “stroganoff”

we all liked it well enough

and so, it was added to the pile

of other dishes deemed tasty enough to make again

maybe

 

mother tried her best to cook at home

but I was too young to really learn

never helped in the kitchen

but I spent time in the garden

with my dad

seeding

weeding

harvesting

the fruits and vegetables mom cooked with

chop, chop, chop

the aromatic basil

and crisp zucchini

from the garden

prepared for an appearance in the next from-scratch lasagna

 

I never lost sight of where my food came from

or how my meal made its way to my plate

while living in the rural country-side of Tennessee

for it was hard to

when every ingredient in every dish

went from farm to farmer’s market

or backyard soil to wicker basket

and immediately onto the kitchen countertop.

 

when life began moving too quickly

I began losing sight of how my meal made its way to my plate

I still went to the markets with dad

I still picked the ripe berries in my backyard brush

harvested the fresh vegetables from my soil garden

and cut the fresh herbs from my garden pot

and yet, I no longer watched my mother slave in the kitchen

ding. ding.

dinner was ready

fresh from the crockpot

and the rice cooker

yet I never learned the recipe

never watched the process

 

living in a countryside

always left me isolated

from my friends

my sports teams

my school

grocery stores

and pre-made foods

It’s peaceful out here ain’t it

 

but a move to the city-center

brought light to all of that

suddenly meals with my family were rare

meals on the go were common

dishes were served in Styrofoam boxes

and plastic containers

hi, I’d like to place a to-go order

any food I desired was mine

Chinese food, American fare Italian dishes

trout from Pickett’s Ranch

veggies from Sequatchie Cove Farm

breads from Niedlov’s

and pasta, of any shape or form, fresh from Tony’s Kitchen

            Just give us 15 or 20 minutes,

                         and we’ll have that ready for ya

 

sometimes we ate together

as a family

but never did we eat the same meal

even on noodle night

my mom had Italian pasta

every time a different sauce

my dad never settled for anything other than Pad Thai

level 3 spicy and always made with rice noodles

my brother would eat fresh from scratch ramen every day if he could

and he nearly did.

I ate zoodles or kelp noodles

or both together

drenched in spicy peanut sauce

sweet tangy tomato marinara

or creamy cashew cheese

 

all of us get what we want

dishes that accommodate our diets

our restrictions

our desires

dishes that are quick and easy

dishes from someone else’s local farm

to a disposable container

and eventually our dinner table

along-side the only home-prepared dish my family has mastered

the salad

complete the little gems grown on our porch

ripe cherry tomatoes

tender romaine lettuce

crunchy rainbow chard

aromatic herbs of every kind

everyone of them

alive and thriving

six stories above the earth

 

now that I am older and living in a different city away from home

I know that keeping track of where my food comes from is not always easy

I have settled for to-go food that may not be locally sourced

meals on the go

and snacks plucked from the shelves of the supermarket

rather than my own pots and garden beds

 

I never learned how to cook

 

but if you ask me what I miss most about home

about what always brings a smile to my face

I always think of family dinners in the condo

using silverware from my own home

to eat food from Styrofoam boxes

and plastic containers

from the kitchens of our favorite restaurants

vegetable hash from Daily Ration

shrimp curry from Bitter Alibi

spicy peanut kelp noodles from Southern Squeeze

creamy cheesy vegan zoodles from Cashew

avocado ceviche from State of Confusion

the time-tested dishes I have grown to love

from the chefs I have never meet

using the fresh ingredients

from the farmers I have always known

they remain steady

a part of my family

regardless of the creator

 

I chose to imitate “where food comes from”, one of the Saporoso poems by Jennifer Barone. I chose this piece because it almost spoke to me in that I felt as though my experience with food was exactly opposite the author’s in some respects, and closely aligned in others. It was striking for me to compare and contrast those experiences. I was able to witness the culture of the author, who presents a situation in which she watches her Italian relatives cook family recipes: all Italian, all passed down, all home-made. And yet, she herself never really learns how to cook from her family, or really bothers to learn where her food comes from while she is younger and living in New York. Then, when she grows older, she gets the chance to see food in its core, raw form: figs from the tree, fresh tomatoes from the vine, peppers, eggplants, herbs, etc. all from the garden. She was first able to gain these experiences in her neighbor’s tiny make-shift garden. As she journeys through life, and explores the world, she apparently learns the joy of knowing where her food comes from, and therefore develops the skill of cooking, and learns the recipes of her family. Italian heritage and home-cooked meals are part of her cultural DNA. She makes this clear through her rhetoric, for she states, “a meal has never been just a meal / it was our past time / the reason to get together” as well as “everyone would call to ask / so what are you making? / a month before they would arrive.” Through her diction, she illustrates the importance of meal-time in her family. Through mirroring her style, I realized the contrasts and similarities between her culture and my own.

I come from a very different background in terms of food, and yet I somehow relate to the writer. My mother cooked when I was young; she made home-made lasagna, shepard’s pie, beef stroganoff, hand-rolled sushi, you name it. She never made these meals based on some family recipe, as she never had any. This is in great contrast to the culture of the writer, who was apparently accustomed to family recipes. My mother’s mother is an American woman, who was raised in the 50’s, a decade marked as the age of consumerism and convenience. The convenience meals of the era were seen as the wave of the future. They were trendy, and for a single-mother who never worked less than three jobs in an attempt to make ends meet, they were essential. My mom never formed an attachment to food, because she couldn’t. Most of the time, it was not around. She never learned how to cook because quite literally, there was nothing to cook, and there wasn’t any time—she started babysitting at 12, and never stopped working.             When my brother and I came around decades later, and my mother finally had the opportunity to cook, she did, and she did it well, from what I am told. She bought cook-books and taught herself. She vowed that my brother and I would not grow up like she did—we would have home-cooked meals, together, as a family, every night. By the time I entered middle school, however, and my mom was driving us to different schools and different sports practices. Eating together, became a “most of the time” thing rather than a daily routine. My mother did not give up home cooking, but we apparently ate a lot of crock-pot meals, so that she did not have to allocate so much time to the process. At the same time, we lived deep in the country in Tennessee, so we also grew our own food at the time. We mostly had vegetables and fruits, but gardening was something my dad passed down to me. He always told me that there was nothing in this world that would allow for a stronger connection to food. He always encouraged me to be more in-tune with where my food comes from, for it is beneficial to both the mind and the body of the grower/harvester. Furthermore, growing food locally allowed us the opportunity to reap the full chemical benefits. With a personal garden, we were able to decide what chemicals and fertilizers went into our gardens, and therefore we could eat organic produce, without the harsh price-tag. My mom used these items in the food that she prepared, and we snacked on the others she could not use. Just as I entered high school, however, we moved to the city. At this point, time was limited, which was a major reason for the move. I had soccer and cheer practice, my brother had crew and soccer with a different league and we couldn’t afford to drive nearly an hour from our quaint country home to school, or sports leagues. My poor mother tried to cook, but with limited space, limited time, and a number of newly discovered food intolerances/ preferences, it became more and more difficult.

After the move, we began living in a condo in the middle of downtown Chattanooga, so we had more restaurants within a 2-mile radius than I could even begin to count. The food in my city is characteristically fresh, local, and “transparent”, meaning almost every ingredient in every dish served at the local restaurants can be traced back to their farm of origin: Crabtree Farms produce, White Oak Valley Beef, Fall Creek Farm’s goat milk and heirloom vegetables, Cloudcrest and Sequatchie Cove Farms’ dairy and eggs, 2 Angels’ mushrooms, Springer Mountain Farm’s chicken, Pickett’s Ranch trout, wild boar. Dietary restrictions, a lack of time and an abundance of fresh, local, prepared food just moments away lead to a shift in my family’s dining patterns. We instead opted for to-go food for almost every meal. We still make our own salads from the produce we grow on our porch, and we eat together most of the time when we can, but all of that aside I do not remember ever watching my mom cook. I vaguely remember the crock-pot meals, but all of that happened when I was too young to really remember. For the most part, since I turned 14, I learned how to prepare food, (throw together a salad, chop veggies for a snack, etc.) and I learned how to place a to-go order like a professional, but I never did learn how to cook.

Nonetheless, I never lost my passion for growing food, and ensuring I knew exactly where my food comes from. Yes, there was a time in my life when I indulged in Chick-fil-a, and sure I still have no clue where those chickens were from and how they lived. But for the most part, I know where my food comes from. I have visited the farms that I mentioned above, and more. I have met the farmers at the markets. I have held the fish. I have picked the veggies. I have volunteered my time to pull the delicious fruits directly from the branches. This is something I will never sacrifice, for harvesting my own food, and being mindful of its history, is more a part of my cultural DNA than knowing my own history. I do have the power to know where my food comes from. This is something that is, and always will be, integral to my eating patterns. Through writing this piece, I became more comfortable with this concept. My culture, the American culture, places nearly no importance on meal-time, and food awareness. The farming culture, my culture that comes from my dad’s side, makes it so that I am much more conscious about my eating patterns than most, despite the fact that I do not cook. I think about my food. I never randomly eat. I eat with full awareness of how that food nourishes my body, and how those ingredients came into existence. Writing about my eating patterns has made me realize that I do, in fact, have a unique food culture, despite never really cooking.

 

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