Water Boils: Demystifying Brown Bagging

Entries from August 2007

Asceticism (or) We the Other Victorians (or) How I Killed My Tyler Durden

August 12 · 1 Comment

duck confit over mashed lentils

Deniz’s comment on the Netherlands lunchbox ethic of single ingredient sandwiches made me think about my Tyler Durden side, who is always trying to oppress my middle-class hedonist tendencies. Those who know me for a long time also know how much time I have wasted on trying to reconcile my obsession with food with my left leaning world view. It is not really easy, especially thinking that on more than one occasion, I had been harassed and bullied by my comrades, just because I wanted to write about food and politics at the same time. Apparently you have to be pure and clean of worldly pleasures to do politics right. I tried. I literally spent months trying to get rid of my “sinful” tendencies, but it was second nature to my middle class position. I realized that it would never happen. Then I realized it doesn’t have to happen. The latter took longer than I could have imagined, but well it did happen.

This Friday, I had my first real conversation with my butcher. Bear in mind, he doesn’t know that he is my butcher yet. We have that kind of relationship you have with a high school crush that you think is your boyfriend while he has no idea who you are. I go there every week, sometimes twice, to get something like a chicken breast or a tiny saucisson, or just three strips of bacon. Things I buy are a dead giveaway of my living conditions: one little piece of merguez cry “hey I live alone”. But they don’t complain. They put three extremely thick pieces of bacon inside a butcher paper, write 80 cents on it, and draw a smiley with a “merci!” scribbled next to it.

Perhaps saying that you have a butcher sound slightly pretentious (what next? “my butler”?) but take this: Being friends with your meat supplier also gives you some perks that most people don’t have, such as getting a special cut of meat, or an honest “perhaps, not the lamb today madam” confession. But come on, who has a butcher anymore unless they live in a big metropolitan city? Our meat comes in boxes, prefrozen, preportioned. Our younglings think that chicken grows on styrofoam trays (and only as breasts), and that sausage is a kind of root vegetable. The means of production has shifted in massive scales. No petit bourgeois butchers are in sight in most American cities, because all we have is some poor alienated meat factory worker who actually has no means to acquire the goods he helps to produce, nor has any idea what he is making to start with.

Over the last two-three decade, the culinary traditions of many centuries have reduced into the capitalist agro-industrial complex. As a secondary consequence, one of the biggest cultural creations of humankind has become a ridiculous status game. Labor intensive arts of curing, smoking, pickling, drying, salting cheaper cuts of food as well as game and offal has been pushed into esoterism, just because they are not profitable to sell; and hence became only accessible to upper classes. The food as we know it has been reduced into a meat patty and a blue box, and those who seek further are ostracized as snobs (or god forbid, “gourmets”). Cooking became a tedious and puritanic task. Boil chicken, add rice, don’t put garlic, “it stinks”. Vanity contributed to this decline further. Please. No salt, no butter, no cream. Just “Fat free fat”, a tiny bit. With a tub of olestra on the side.

So how does this rambling tie back to my atrocious fight against my own obsession with the things that taste extremely good but questionably inaccessible to the masses? This Friday, while trying to pick a piece of saucisson (a little dried sausage) and contemplating leftover rice instead, I started a conversation with the shopkeeper whom I learned later was the owner’s relative. He started telling me all the differences between the duck and the rabbit and the turkey sausages and how they are made. My eyes literally started sparkling. That minute, I understood that I wasn’t doing anything wrong by buying something esoteric, in fact it was the right thing to do. Always. Historically. Supporting artisans that make their own food, craft their own food, and most importantly know this food is our only weapon against the fat free salad dressing and the rib sandwich that is not made out of ribs. It is also the only way people could make a decent living just by producing and selling food, like my butcher who also takes three weeks of vacation every year. I wanted to ask him, “when did sausage become decadence?”, but decided to save it for a less busy day.

After this brief episode of mis-enlightenment, I got carried away and bought some duck for my Sunday dinner. I served it over some pureed mashed red lentils that were enhanced by some of the duck’s fat, garlic (yeah it stinks, and it is fantastic) and fresh rosemary from the garden. Then to balance this indulgence I decided to take a simple lunch to work next day. Some salad with leftover lentils and tomatoes, cucumbers and feta cheese was all I needed. I did this not because I wanted to be clean in a metaphoric and spiritual sense, but I realized that all fat and no grains makes missy an unhealthy girl. So, no more Tyler Durden trying to take my butter from me because it is a sin! Only my arteries can tell what I should or should not eat. Afterall, The Fight Club was a juvenilistic and misogynistic attempt of social criticism, and honestly, Tyler Durden was a jerk.

lentil salad bento

Categories: activism · factory farming · fast food industry · food politics

20 year old tiffin

August 8 · 5 Comments

20+ year old tiffin tin

I am finally reunited with my childhood tiffin tin. I can’t exactly recall when I took lunch to school with it, but I know it was mine. From the wear and tear I can tell that it was very much used and loved; but knowing that my mom only cooked 3 dishes in her whole life, I am seriously wondering what I was carrying with it. The tiffin is a mystery, an important reminder of of my childhood amnesia and I accept this. When my parents visited me a few weeks ago, the only thing I asked them to bring here was my old childhood tiffin, just for the sake of nostalgia of things I don’t even remember. “There is everything here”, I said. I was lying.

The tiffin is perhaps the most common lunchbox in the planet. Through middle east and southeastern Asia, workers, students, state employees and travelers have used these tiered boxes to take lunches to work. In certain parts of the world tiffins are also sold at roadstops for travelers who are looking for a quick snack.

My tiffin is a part of a forgotten Turkish tradition, a symbol of old world romanticism. There were times the working men and women took their leftovers, or freshly prepared meals to work. There were times all kids were sent to school with a homemade lunch, even if it was a sandwich with a slice of feta cheese. There were times grandmothers made dolma, cold pinto beans in olive oil, and borek for this sole purpose, because they are the most perfect lunchbox foods. There were times, that a cartoon strip depiction of a civil servant wouldn’t be complete without a tiffin on hand, because it was the most recognizable accessory of the man. Well, not anymore.

While the Turks didn’t get richer, for various reasons some stopped taking lunches and started paying for takeout or delivery. Indeed there is still affordable and decent street food, but most people who couldn’t afford restaurant takeout decided to opt for bland cafeteria lunches. More importantly, they never bothered to bring last night’s leftovers. When I was in high school, it was almost an embarrassment to take lunch to school. Cool kids ate out at establishments with questionable food but attractive clientele, uncool kids (like me), ate at the cafeteria and worked out their gag reflex. Noone I knew bothered to bring food from home. Well I didn’t, because there was never food at home (that’s another story); but what about the others?

The tiffin recently became a central metaphor to protest the slow destruction of Turkish culinary heritage. Part slow food organization, part lunchbox activists, the Sefertasi Hareketi (tiffin movement) brought a minority together, those who liked their food to be made of real food. Not many people paid attention. They were too busy with the drama of big corporate chains opening stores in Turkey. Those who didn’t want to throw money on the street, or couldn’t afford a three dollar latte, continued to eat decent-but increasingly homogenized-street food.

I had such high hopes for taking my tiffin to work. But bewitched by $2 lahmacuns and bahn-mis, I really didn’t have any reason to take lunch to work. After escaping the Midwestern casserole-town with only a few dependable cheap eats that are walking distance to school (and most are closed after 5:00 or in the winter anyway), I wanted to eat everything in sight in this city where real people cooked for real people. I was hungry, and there was a buffet the size of a city.

Then I remembered one thing that that no takeout lunch, even the ones cooked by grumpy old Lebanese men, could provide: variety to the extent of decadence, affordable luxuries such as a great piece of chocolate or bergamot “Cyprus delights” (oh oh, here comes another world war). A bento / lunchbox / tiffin/whatever you call it, isn’t just a hunky sandwich, or even some “salad bar” takeout with ostensible variety. It is a small buffet, made by you or someone you know, lovingly. So I promised myself to make a brown bag lunch once in a while, even if it is once a week. With a little box of cucumbers that were bought for a mere 99 cents and a reasonable interest towards cold foods due to summer heat, I decided to make a cold soba noodle salad. I put some grapes, some Cyprus/Turkish whatever delights from a corner store, almonds, and crackers and I was ready to get on the subway with my 20 year old tiffin. And I assured myself that I will look cool carrying it.

soba is my favorite noodle

Ingredients:

  • 1 cucumber, peeled and diced
  • Some dried wakame (a tablespoon perhaps). I decided not to reconstitute it in water, because I know that the cucumbers will release some water overnight and wakame will soak it. Next day it will be perfect. At least this is my hypothesis.
  • 1 bunch of soba noodles, cooked, washed and drained
  • 1 tablespoon of mayonnaise
  • a pinch of cayenne, a pinch of wasabi powder (you know, the fake one)
  • 1 tablespoon of soy sauce

Mix last three ingredients, well. Add the rest and mix until everything is coated. Put in the fridge overnight and hope that the wakame will be all right next day.

Categories: bento · culinary history