厨渣的下厨初体验民以食为天,可见日常饮食对人的重要遥是不言而喻的。 当面对糟糕的学校伙食时,你会选择“饥不择食”地继续忍耐,还是积遥寻找其他解决办法? 请看本文作者如何解决这个难题……
Thunk, thunk, thunk. The knife moved in a blur, slicing up the green onions
into tiny morsels. Their sharp fragrance wafted through the air, teasing my
taste buds. Turning the blade at an angle, I scooped up the green onions into my
hand and deposited them beside the pile of chopped tomatoes and the bowl of egg
yolk. Rushing over to the sink, I rinsed the knife and leapt right back to the
cutting board, this time with an eggplant in hand. Snick. Snick. Snick. The soft
flesh of the eggplant gave way to the blade, giving resistance only at the
rubbery deep purple skin. Once all the ingredients were prepared, I fired up the
stoves and began to heat up the oil. Moving only by habit, I waited 5 minutes
before pouring the egg into the wok . The heady aroma brought a smile to my lips
as I threw in the tomatoes. The wok responded with a satisfying sizzle. After
stirring the tomatoes and eggs around a couple of times, I let them sit and
turned my attention to the other pan. Just as the eggplant hit the oil, a friend
walked into the common room and breathed in. “Yum! Smells great Leo! What are
you cooking? ” I grinned as I added garlic and soy sauce to the eggplant: “Just
some stir fry. You know, a taste of home. ”
Perhaps the most common complaint at American universities, other than the
horrendous torture of having to wake up for morning classes, is the grumble
about the food the school serves. Of course, this is only a generalization, as I
have heard of many institutions that ensure that their students receive
top-notch meals. Take the Rhode Island School of Design. My hometown friend who
attends that institution always comes back with tales of how the dining staff
ensure that the students receive all vegetarian meals, with the addition of some
fish and chicken to satisfy the craving for meat. His cheeks were rosier and he
burst out into laughter even more so than usual, despite frequently sleeping at
obscene hours of the morning in order to complete his projects. But when he
asked me about my dining situation, I could only roll my eyes and groan : “Just
imagine your worst nightmare about food. ” He looked back at me with disbelief. I
was always the least picky eater out of everyone he knew. How bad did the food
have to be in order to make even Leo cringe in disgust?
I will stop here about my school’s dining hall. Just to be clear, I have no
complaints against the cooks, for they are simply doing their job. Many of them
are quite friendly, and always have a riveting backstory to tell. But that is
for another time. After all, this is not an article about slandering my school,
but about the magic of cooking. The old saying goes that necessity is the mother
of invention. There are various problems to this theory, but it definitely
applied to my decision to begin cooking for myself. After a whole semester of
gradually losing hope in the quality of food at my school’s dining hall, I
resolved to take my health into my own hands and start making my own meals, at
least for dinners. I ventured into this lifestyle unbeknownst of the challenges
I would face, or the joy that I would experience.
My first encounter with cooking for myself actually took place the summer
before I was a student at Georgetown University. I was staying at my parents’
apartment in Beijing. My mother had stepped out for the evening and left me to,
shall we say, experiment with dinner on my own. Granted, I had already made a
meal once under her supervision, so I knew how to cook, at least in theory.
“Okay. ” I thought. “Eggplant, garlic, and soy sauce. Shouldn’t be too hard
right? ” The next two hours would prove me wrong in every way possible. When I
began to cut the eggplant, the knife wobbled to and fro. It was arduous work for
a neophyte like me. At times, the blade would slip and glide along the skin of
the eggplant, missing my fingers by a hair’s breadth. I kept trying to emulate
mom’s deft technique when chopping ingredients at breakneck speed without even
blinking an eye. My attempt left the eggplant in jagged shreds. Not so much luck
with the garlic either. “Well, I’m only cooking for myself, so things don’t have
to look pretty. As long as they taste good right? ”That turned out to be a pipe
dream as well. While stir-frying the eggplant, I gazed out of the window for a
little too long at the Beijing summer sunset, only turning back to the wok when
I started to smell something charring. Panicking, I grabbed the soy sauce in one
hand and the salt in the other. Whoosh! In one broad sweep, the salt and the soy
sauce splashed into the wok in a grand arc. Before I had even registered the
ridiculous amount of sodium I had added to my dinner, I began to mix everything
together. Finally, I had my meal: blackened eggplant soaked to bursting with
salt. Beside me was a plate of flatbread, ready to mask any taste I would
encounter. I took my first bite. Every drop of moisture in my mouth was wrung
out as the eggplant touched my tongue. It was more like eating eggplant
flavoured salt. Not even the flatbread helped. And there was still the entire
plate to go. The rest of the night I squirmed on my bed, feeling miserable as I
clutched my bloated stomach. The verdict: absolute failure.
But there is another old saying that goes hand in hand with the ideas of
invention and experimentation: “Failure is the mother of success. ” That could
not be truer with cooking as well. The next day, I tried making eggplant again,
taking extra measures to ensure that I added just enough salt and soy sauce.
Although it didn’t taste just the way mom made it, the dish was actually quite
appealing. After all, there was no way I could screw up worse than I had the
other day. Until now, I have made nearly all of my dinners in the kitchen of my
dormitory. On more than one occasion have I wanted to kick myself for being so
stupid as I cooked. But throughout the entire process of trial and error, such
as using water instead of chicken soup to boil cabbage, or using week-old fish
whose pungent odour lingered on the floor for days, I have developed a mentality
of simply bouncing back and trying again the next day.
Now as I enjoy feasts not only myself, but also with my friends, I barely
needed to think while I prepared the food, my movements built upon memories of
the grimaces that I’ve had to pull or the stomach aches I’ve endured for the
sake of the perfect meal. Perhaps that is one of the more exhilarating aspects
of cooking: the idea that risks are the only guides on the path to mouthfuls of
heavens.