ON THE WRITE PATH: travel journal for Around-the-World in 2015, 16, 18. |
For: "Journalistic Intentions" The Gluten Lie BREAD OF LIFE So short the night! The last vendor still cries out at dawn [sashimi 260] Humans are fruit and grain eaters according to our teeth and we can eat them without fire. Of course, we can also eat worms and insects and fish without fire or fancy traps. But hunting weapons helped us kill birds and mammals. More protein! And fire made them easier to eat and digest. Ape-like omnivores — voracious bears with less hair. In the Far East bread is bao or pao. The Portuguese, those sailing later-day Phoenicians, brought the concept and the word. People there eat rice, also a grain, and rice cakes, but bread and many pastries are made with flour. Mind you, the best pastel de nata may be found in Lisboa, but you can get one in Tainan or Chiayi as well. Phoenician bread of life — spread with local jam The Germans and Swedes take pride in making hearty breads using rye and oats as well as wheat. Germans favor sour, the Swedes sweet. The Norwegians? Anything to put cloud berries or gjetost on. Flat rye breads and potato lefse work just as well. They harvest fish and berries, too cold to sow wheat. Sweet or sour fluffy or hard — bread fills empty tummies France ... land of great baguettes, best fresh, but they can be used like a wooden shoe after a day or two to beat those who don't behave about the head. The breads and pastries in Paris, other than tourist shops, are always good. One can't fool a Parisien twice. Bad food does not sell. Bad food sells but once — a baker sifts his flour Here in Missoula I eat cheap white bread with anything that can't run away quick enough. Bologna and peanut butter are known to be slow. I save my pennies to eat bread from around the world. Today, there's a rosemary focaccia with my name on it at Le Petit Outre, the corner bakery. rosemary focaccia — a full loaf reduced to crumbs © Copyright 2021 Kåre Enga [177.362] (14.mars.2021) |