bloodyrosemccoy: (Peach)
bloodyrosemccoy ([personal profile] bloodyrosemccoy) wrote2010-04-11 07:45 pm

And Don't Get Me Started On Cacao

MY SISTER: Dinner was nice, but what about dessert? Anything good?

MOM: There’s cake mix in the pantry! You could make cookies or brownies or cake!

AMELIA: And if you cook the cake mix with a Super Shroom Shake you’ll get Shroom Cake, and it’ll restore 30 of your HP!

MY BROTHER: Dammit, you’re playing Super Paper Mario again.


I don’t know why, but I love the hell out of the stupid cooking feature of that game. I can’t really put my finger on it, but I think it distills one of my cherished beliefs: that cooking is MAGIC.

Okay, not quite, but something even better—a testament to human creativity. I mean, I can sort of understand how someone may have figured out that if you get the food hot for a while it becomes tasty and less likely to kill you from the inside, but on a larger scale, it’s baffling. Which one of us little monkeys figured out how to combine the food? How did they figure out how eggs relate to flour and water and oven heat? Who came up with flour? And what in god’s name led to the invention of cheese?* Was it deliberate trial (and error), or just some lucky accident?** And who thought their discovery was good enough to share it around to the point where it became common place?

There’s always a little of that going through my head when I crush some garlic or whip a cake mix or make some banana nut bread. Taking something necessary for survival and adding so many bells and whistles denotes a brilliance almost staggers me at times—as with so many of the things we humans do. It’s commonplace and everyday, but it’s amazing all the same.


*I firmly believe that my love of cheese renders any right I thought I had to point at other cultures and say that they eat WEIRD or GROSS food invalid. There is nothing more disgusting than cheese. I tried describing it to my host family in Kaloleni and they were with me as far as “Well, you start with some milk,” but after that they assumed decidedly Do Not Want expressions. Can you blame them?

**While discussing the origins of leavened bread, [livejournal.com profile] ironychan once theorized that a lot of great breakthroughs in cooking were probably precipitated by the words, “I dare you to eat that.”

[identity profile] gwalla.livejournal.com 2010-04-12 11:52 pm (UTC)(link)
Almonds were probably eaten like buckeyes were by Native American groups: made into a mash and rinsed until it was no longer toxic. Then agriculture got into the game and bred for almonds that didn't have to be rinsed so much.

Also, uni isn't roe. It's the gonads. Sea urchin balls. (I agree with the horribleness, though.)

[identity profile] biomekanic.livejournal.com 2010-04-13 06:34 pm (UTC)(link)
From my favorite source for questionable information, wikipedia: [almonds]"The fruit of the wild forms contains the glycoside amygdalin, "which becomes transformed into deadly prussic acid (hydrogen cyanide) after crushing, chewing, or any other injury to the seed."[5] (^ a b c Zohary, Daniel; Maria Hopf (2000). Domestication of plants in the old world: the origin and spread of cultivated plants in West Asia, Europe, and the Nile Valley. Oxford University Press. pp. 186. ISBN 0-19-850356-3.)

Also, that just makes uni even nastier than I thought it was. A friend of mine described uni as "this must be what raw sewage tastes like". I agree, but am not willing to test that hypothesis.

On a tangent... when I was keeping coral, pretty much every species of coral I had (even the primarily photosynthetic ones) would go apeshit when I'd put a little uni into the water. Apparently coral dig the taste of poo, but somehow I'm not surprised.