“No Soup For Me!”
“Trust
me, Aram; it will make your stomach feel better.” With an unsettling amount of
anxiety, I plunged my spoon into the brown, frothy liquid which bore little
resemblance any soup I had ever seen. My brother and sister had already
succumbed to the pressure of our parents who promised them the strength of
Samson if they would only trust them. “Trust.” There was that word, again. It
was how a used car salesmen sold junky jalopies. The chatter among villagers
and tourists subsided. With many pairs of encouraging eyes focused on me, my
expression turned from anxious to horrified-but-I’m-trying-to-mask-it.
Including the time my sister beat me in ping-pong in front of all my friends,
it was one of the most embarrassing moments of my life.
I raised
the spoon and asked for more crushed garlic to hide the contents that smelled
suspiciously of manure. The taste was shocking. Never had I ever tried anything so revolting that it made me
gag; except maybe for spinach when I was six. I heard cheers. My dad’s friend
slapped me on the back and handed me a shot glass of vodka as a chaser. It was
a festive initiation into the club. That day, on snow-peaked mountain in an
ancient Biblical village, I became a man. By eating soup that was basically a
hideous concoction of sheep head and hooves, boiled for days on end, I
continued an ancient tradition and was hence empowered to fight bears and lions
with my bare hands.
I had
partaken in one of the richest cultural experiences of my life. “Khash,” like Christianity, has been woven into
Armenian history and culture. As we sat around that rustic table, I accepted a
second shot of vodka and mused with the wisdom of Solomon that it was no mere
coincidence that the Christian Armenians are loyal to both “khach” (the
Armenian word for “cross”) and “khash.” Both symbolized our very existence. I
politely turned away the third glass.
Interestingly, I noticed my stomach ache had gone away, but I secretly wondered
if it might have been the shots.
Since
then, I have done more research. The roots of khash are so deeply entwined into
Armenian culture that it can even be found in one of many world famous medical
texts from Mkhitar Heratsi. In his manuscript The Relief of Fevers, he describes khash as “a dish that cures
diseases” (Heraci 22). I recalled the restaurant owner saying how they were
also open for breakfast, since khash is also a cure for hangovers. I found it
amusing that vodka was used a cure for the aftertaste of the food, itself.
I learned
that the preparation of this dish spans several days, as the sheep parts are
slowly simmered. Guests are to bring a hearty appetite and a bottle of vodka.
After an entertaining series of poetic toasts, the soup is brought out in a
large cauldron and laughter fills the room as bread and garlic is passed around
the table. If food is only as pleasant as the people who share it with you,
then I could see how khash is a cherished tradition.
This
experience has only reinforced the theory that food is a social phenomenon. Its
symbolism is just as nourishing as the vitamins within. As inspiration, I can
reference Jeffrey Steingarten’s amazingly awesome book, “The Man Who Ate
Everything”. With humility, I confess
that it was tempting to not share his research, because it does somewhat blow
my project out of the water. In fairness, however, I conceded that Steingarten
has spent more time studying food than
the years I’ve spent eating it. Adding credibility to his resume, Steingarten
was a lawyer until the age of 47. Since then, he has become one of the leading
food writers in the United States. ‘He has been a food critic at Vogue magazine since 1989 where his
monthly columns have earned him a National Magazine Award. ‘His 1997 book, “The
Man Who Ate Everything”, earned him an
award for literary food writing from the International
Association of Culinary Professionals
and the British Guild of Food Writers’(Jeffrey Steingarten of Vogue
Magazine - Biography). It has been translated into eight different languages
since its release, and has earned him worldwide fame, resulting in regular
appearances on the Food Network as a judge and commentator.
For me, the first chapter alone is rich
material. In it, Steingarten writes about his past and his thoughts leading up
to his decision to try to cure himself of his aversions to certain foods. He
had my immediate attention at that point. He gives a good idea of who he is and
who he was before evolving into a foodie. He opens his first chapter
recollecting an experience that had him having to try a food that was “unsuited
to enter a human mouth”(Steingarten). Yeah, but had he ever tried khash? Like me, he claimed to have “suffered from a
set of powerful, arbitrary, and debilitating attractions and aversions at
mealtime. I feared that I could be no more objective than an art critic who
detests the color yellow or suffers from red-green color blindness.” In the
rest of the first chapter, he gives us a “Six-Step Program to liberate my
palate and soul.” Since Steingarten had proven success with his experiment, I
decided to compare it with my run through Fear
Factor: Aram Chef.
Steingarten
first gives us three fairly long lists of food, ranging from “Foods I wouldn’t
touch even if I were starving on a desert island” to “Foods I might eat if I
were starving on a desert island but only if the refrigerator were filled with
nothing but chutney, sea urchins, and falafel.” While I chose three
ingredients, Steingarten talks about 9 different kinds of foods that he
dislikes. However, he is only able to explain how his aversions came about for
a few of the dishes. In his next step.
he explores food aversions and how they don’t stem from a biological
perspective as genes don’t dictate what foods we will like or dislike (other
than a propetuency towards sugars and a mild dislike towards bitterness).
According to Steingarten, our food preferences are learned. For example,
newborns are not repelled even by the sight and smell of putrefied meat
crawling with maggots. Steingarten continues to deliver logically and
scientifically sound arguments as to why we develop food aversions in the first
place. The strongest food phobias usually rooting from an upset stomach “will
result in a lasting irrational, lifelong sense of disgust.”
What I
enjoy most of Steingarten’s manuscript is the logic in addressing why it’s
important for us to not be picky
eaters. He tells us that we have obligations as omnivores. Steingarten points
out that God instructed us in the book
of Genesis after Noah’s flood to eat everything under the son, and that by not
eating from the “bounties of nature, we become failed omnivores” or as he
gently puts it, “godless heathens.” We are given a vast variety of flavor and
foods, yet most of us stick to eating the same thing over and over again,
mostly because we want a sure thing, so we only eat what we know. It’s like
going to Starbucks, because you know you will always get the same mediocre cup
of burnt coffee. Take Usain Bolt, the fastest man that our world has ever
known. He ate at least 100 chicken McNuggets a day for 10 days in Beijing (in
case you were wondering, that’s 4700 calories and 9000 milligrams of sodium per
day). When asked why, Bolt responds that “he found Chinese food odd, so he
bounded over to the nearest McDonald’s and ordered his favorite food” (Zennie).
We eat the foods we like, and for a world-class sprinter like Bolt, all that’s
important before a competition is feeling comfortable and at home. But what about the rest of us?
Steingarten does a great job of exposing the effects of an America where “fear
and suspicion of food have become the norm.” He argues that irrational food
phobias have kept people from sharing food with one another, promoting
ignorance and arrogance in the process. While I find this claim powerful and
somewhat true, Steingarten does not provide any evidence to support it.
Steingarten
concludes his first chapter by sharing
the results of his “mere-exposure”’ test. He points out that “mere-exposure” doesn’t seem to be the
perfect cure for many of his “irrational food phobias.” In most cases, the perfect remedy seems to be
the perfect meal. As someone who detests anchovies (that’s a whole ‘nother
story), I found myself drooling at his description at how they were prepared.
This guy travels all around the world and has the opportunity to try dishes of
food he thought he disliked….until they were prepared by the greatest chefs of
the world and convinced him otherwise. Who would not enjoy anchovies, if they are prepared in
Northern Italy with a sauce of “garlic, butter, olive oil… served piping hot
over sweet red and yellow peppers as an
antipasto in Piedmonte.” Of the nine food groups he hopes to conquer, the only
one he seems to have defeated using mere-exposure is Kimchi, which he started
to enjoy after sampling many different varieties.
Unlike Steingarten, I haven’t had the same
glamourous help in overcoming my food aversions. For me, overcoming spinach has
meant adding one or two more leaves at my school cafeteria every time I make a
salad. I do think I’m at 60% towards my efforts to eat a salad made entirely of
spinach. If I had a chef from northern Italy make it with some of the world’s
best pasta, I have a feeling my goal would be more easily attained. I do
appreciate and respect Steingarten’s attempt
towards overcoming his food aversions, but I feel as if he could have fulfilled
his aversions in a more common-folk kind of a way. While I generally enjoyed
this piece, what I disliked was his opinion
on those who currently have irrational food phobias. He spends all this
time writing about his own circumstances regarding his food phobias and how he
got over them but seems to be a complete jerk in real life when he comes across
someone who has them. He does somewhat acknowledge this by naming his final
step “relearning humility,” but I’m sure
if I met him in real life I would think
he was extremely pretentious. “When seated next to a finicky eater, I would
often amuse myself by going straight for the jugular…Sometimes I launched a
direct assault by asking how long she had had her terror of bread...And then I
would sit back and complacently listen to her neurotic jumble of excuses and
explanations.”
While
I suspect that Steinarten’s personality is not very pleasant, I do like his writing style and how he
structured his first chapter. I plan to follow suit by making my final post
about the experiment itself and the results (Will Aram Chef be victorious?!). I
don’t think I will ever be able to get
over the taste of khash, but I definitely have found that by simply eating some
foods, they do start to taste better over time. As a sneak peak to next week’s
episode, I can tell you that eating tofu is uneventful. No longer, will I avoid
it, especially if it is immersed in a bowl of savory miso soup.
Giving
him due credit, Steingarten has taught me to appreciate: food and experiences
in life.
We are given so many opportunities
in this life to discover and experience new things, yet most of us stick to the
same dishes and ingredients. Even though
I hated the food, that meal while atop Aragatz Mountain will always be one of
my favorite experiences. It represents
cultural identity, friendship, and shared successes. I could not hide my
dislike for the dish, but I know that the locals appreciated my heartfelt desire
to fit in. They laughed when I couldn’t hide my reaction, but they didn’t
judge. Looking back, there is no way I would have ever eaten a meal of boiled
sheep feet, unless I happened to be surrounded by warm, encouraging, and lively
people who cheered for me. Thanks to them, I experienced khash and the culture
surrounding it.
Works
Cited
Heratsi, Mkhitar. The Relief of Fevers. N.p.: n.p., n.d. TITUS. Web. <http://titus.fkidg1.uni-frankfurt.de/texte/etcs/arm/heraci/herac.htm>.
"Jeffrey
Steingarten of Vogue Magazine - Biography" StarChefs.com. N.p., n.d. Web. 14 May 2014.
Steingarten,
Jeffrey. The Man Who Ate Everything.
New York: Knopf, 1996. N. pag. Nytimes.com.
Knopf. Web. 13 May 2014.
Zennie,
Michael. "Usain Bolt Reveals the Secret of His McSuccess: Fastest Man
Alive Ate 100 Chicken McNuggets A DAY at Beijing Olympics." Mail Online. Associated Newspapers, 04
Nov. 2013. Web. 14 May 2014.
Your post is extremely amusing and it was very enjoyable to read because you were so honest. Being someone who loves trying new dishes, I never understood why some people could feel sick from just the smell of an unfamiliar food. Your post was very insightful and I can now see your point of view. I really liked the story of khash, and how you connected it with Jeffrey Steingarten's perspective on why people dislike foods. I learned a lot I did not know, and your post was very entertaining as you took us through the story. I look forward to reading your other posts!
ReplyDeleteThis post was so great to read, it was so honest and funny. You describe the setting so perfectly, I feel as though I'm a guest observing you trying the khash for the first time.
ReplyDeleteI love that you point out that this was all about the experience with your statement, "This experience has only reinforced the theory that food is a social phenomenon." I completely agree. I think that social aspects of eating and cooking are the most important parts. The Khash experience that you so eloquently described seems so fun, I imagine there to be roars of laughter and deafening cheering after your first spoonful of the soup and shot of vodka.
I admire that you tried these new things, its take guts and a strong stomach. What a champ!
This was such a fun read, you are a great writer.
I deffinitely identify with you, I dont like soup either, and its really hard to trust the people telling you its delicious. they like it, of course they think its delicious! Your mission to conquer food is awesome, i hope you dont give it up when this project is over
ReplyDelete