Outdoor dining: Clarke Quay, Singapore |
When travelling, however, there’s often a tug between
wanting to try the local cuisine and opting for the safe and familiar. When
it’s tripe and offal, sometimes we flinch a little. When the local cuisine is
pizza and gelati, it’s not such a great tussle. Although when I was with a
group of folks eating pizza in Venice, we munched on the thin crust scantily clad
in tomato, cheese and basil in silence.
None of us wanted to say what was really in our hearts – the pizza was
rubbish. Yeah, yeah we were in Italy but
the pizza was rubbish.
A little piece of Mickey at Hong Kong Disneyland |
But it’s the homemade meals that count the most. That’s when
connection with place really kicks in. When staying with my aunt in Formia,
Italy for a few weeks, food was always quite an item of discussion. First,
there was the giant box of Cornflakes she showed me, smiling knowingly, when I
arrived. She thought that this was compulsory Australian breakfast food and it
was her way of saying welcome, and here’s a little piece of home. Then she decided
that actually, it would be far more lovely for me to have a squidgy warm
sugared donut from the local bakery for breakfast. She would walk down there
before I woke up and then present it to me with a strong espresso. Heavenly. I
mean heavenly. However, one cannot
eat a donut the size of one’s face every day for weeks without feeling a little
unwell. I had to go on a donut hunger strike before she would really take no
for an answer.
At my aunts, we had feasts for lunch – exquisite local
seafood, oversized bowls of pasta with fresh sauce, and buffalo mozzarella and
prosciutto with crusty bread. But one of my favourite dishes was her tomato
salad. It was just tomatoes with slithers of onion, basil, salt and oil. I
questioned her time and again about her secret ingredient that made this tomato
salad so mouth watering but she would just laugh. I snuck into the kitchen one
day to discover her splashing some water into the salad. ‘Ha! You caught me!’
she said. ‘It’s just water. I add a little and it draws more juice from the
tomatoes.’ She shrugged, almost apologetically.
So simple.
But, back home, every time I make that salad (and yes, I add
a splash of water) I remember the warm summer sunshine of Formia and I connect.
What food reminds you of place?
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