I pull the cantaloupe out of the fridge. I love melon when it is cold. I knew it wasn’t ripe, it had no smell. It had no smell when I bought it six days ago. I still has no scent. None of the on sale cantaloupe had any scent at the market. And of course, in the post Covid world, handling food in the shop is frowned upon. I must take it home without knowing anything about it, something I’d never do with a person, let alone a summer melon. I cut the melon, nothing. I cut the melon into cubes. I put one in my mouth, and the taste was commensurate with the other sensory experience. Disappointing. I continue to nibble on it, as it’s what’s for breakfast. But the question remains.
Why, in an effort not to waste food, must we contend with occasional bad fruit? If I were hosting brunch I would not have served that cantaloupe. Maybe grind it up in a smoothie or something. How much of cooking is about trying to salvage or make the most of inferior produce? The shame, the guilt of throwing something away because it tasted terrible or was poorly handled or burned or ruined is almost unbearable as kitchen guilts go.
Possible solutions:
Don’t buy it if you can’t smell it. True for tomatoes, melons, cheese
Don’t buy it if you can smell it. True for meat, fish, eggs
Shopping is a very important part of the kitchen keeping process. Know what you are buying and why you are buying it.
Frugality is part of artistry. We are not perfect. When some food is ruined, learn from it and forgive the self for it. Next time, it will be better.
I woke up and looked outside and thought the sky looked strange. I put on my slippers and went out to move the car. Raindrops. Bona fide raindrops, falling from the sky above. Very unusual for August in San Francisco. It is a portent of things to come. Yes, it will be an unusual month for all, methinks. Cooking will bring comfort, cooking will bring adventure, cooking will take us out of our heads, nourish our bodies, lift our spirits.
Last night, a culinary triumph. I must remember that the more I care and tend to the food I am cooking, and remember that the cooking process is the thing that I love about the activity, the better the food will be in the end. Chicken and Dumplings, fit for a king. So, so, so, good.
I find that grocery shopping happens in three tiers. The first, is the everything shop. That is, pantry items, packaged foods that are basically going to be the same and roughly the same price everywhere you go. It doesn’t really matter where the shopping happens. Next is the item shop. Ideally, the way this happens is that you go to the shop open to what might be fresh, available, and affordable. Let’s say short ribs are one sale. Bingo on the short ribs. You take them home, look at what else you have on hand, maybe leaf through a cookbook or online recipes, and you find yourself inspired. Chinese five spice short ribs. Thus we come to the third tier of grocery shopping, the scrap shop.
Now this isn’t meant to intimate that this part of the shopping is unimportant or unnecessary, it is often the most important component, because it includes specialty sauces, or herbs, and vegetables that aren’t normally part of the repertoire as Chinese five spice might be. These types of shopping help avoid a couple of annoyances.
The first is that you can break up the shopping trip (as you should anyway) to avoid schlepping lots of boxes and cans and eggs and delicate fruit and fish all in the same bags. The second is that you will be shopping for ingredients available rather than to the dictates of a recipe. You are also more likely to buy your bread in a bakery, your fish from a monger, your meat from a butcher if you’re actually looking for quality ingredients instead of proximal ones. You’ll find where the best things are.
What you say? Why is this necessary? Because you are worth it, and your food source is important. If you live in a big city you can hopefully walk to a nearby full service grocery. Or have things delivered. If you live on the farm, there is hopefully a natural food source either at yours or your neighbor’s. If you live in the burbs and have to drive down a tumbling boulevard through thick, mercurial traffic to park in a lot half a mile away from the front door of the SuperDuper EasyMart, you should move, that simple.
OK, so what about my adventures? Where will the road take me next, cookingwise speaking. I still have some corn, a few old plums, plenty of pantry stuff. And a few problematic leftovers. There are some leftovers that have no real solution except the compost bin. Like the half serving of last week’s angel hair pasta that had grilled salmon in it which was nearly a week old when I made it. We must learn our lessons and try to do better in the future. Elizabeth David once said, if you are regularly throwing food in the bin then you are a bad cook, full stop.
So, what then, shall I cook? There are still strawberries in the fridge, perhaps a cake of some kind?
I did a quick shuffle of the fridge and the bookshelf. I love cookbooks, I really do.
2 August Tuesday
Another day, fresh dumplings are in order. Chicken and Dumplings, corn on the cob, cantaloupe, strawberry something. The corn is still fresh and pluckin. The dumplings can come together real quick. Fresh strawberry cake? Perhaps. I’m thinking David Tanis Indian Spice Butter on the corn.
Yes, and another new dish- Strawberry Sonker, and the dumplings from New Joy of Cooking.
No Sonker. I ran out of milk. Everything else was wonderful.
3 August Wednesday
Coffee, yes. Strawberries, cantaloupe. A fridge closing in on empty. Bread gone. There is an old, stale baguette in the pantry. Onions. Green Pepper. Flour Tortillas. Maybe a little cheese.