Recently, I read somewhere (Nepal Weekly?) about a journo's US visit and his fear of eating beef. Then afterwards, saw the same post in Ajay's blog. Some of the comments to the post were funny, some where ridiculous and some outright stupid. When it comes to food (like many other things), we Nepalese tend to be very narrow minded and limited to very few variety. Very few of us have developed our taste buds beyond Daal-bhaat-masu and Roti-sabji-mithai. Granted that our food does have some variety to it and tends to be closer to Indian food (thus, spicy), but it is common to find too many of us, living abroad, not venturing beyond sandwiches and pizzas or an occasional pasta of some sort. Let's keep it aside for now...it is topic that I think I'll post something about on its own.
Double standards (read, hypocrisy) is what I see in what to eat or what not to eat norms that we follow. We do enjoy Everest momo to a great extent and don't eat buffalo meat at home. We eat Badel (boar) but don't eat Bangoor. We eat goat but don't eat chicken. So on goes our way of belonging to a "higher" sect or the "aaadambar" of it. Being a disciple of science, the only observation that I could make is that we label ourselves as belonging to a higher sect if we eat something that has less meat and more bones. Just think about it: pig then buffalo then goat, so goes our order (untimately, no meat at all :D ) . If all of them are farm raised, what makes one better or worse than the other? Given the free will, a pig tends to bathe more than a goat(which doesn't at all!). Or, may be I am not theorizing properly. May be it is this..less availability means more valuable, like gold, and so the higher status. If so, I have nothing to say..ignore my gan-gan and just enjoy your food.
I remember one funny incident. I brought some dry meat (buff, of course) from KTM during one of my trips home. At the port of entry, the custom inspection guy asked me if I had any meat product. I said I do. He asked me if it was beef. I knew that one couldn't bring beef unless it was inspected/approved by USDA as safe, owing to Mad-cow disease. Anyways, I said "No, I only know that it is a jerky (sukuti) of some sort". At that time, he produced a tissue analyzer and tested a piece of my sukuti with it. There it was -- in my plain sight -- the result read "BEEF". It was tossed off to garbage for disposal !! :-( Was I duped by the Bhatbhateni dept. store? No, I don't think so. It was what it was - it was buffalo, alright. But, it apparently falls into Beef category. Just like "Badel-ko-masu" falls in rest of the Pork category. Tilapia, Salmon, Rahu, Hile, Shrimp - what ever - it's all Fish. My friends, there you go...if you ever ate buff-momo, you ate beef ! Oooooops . :D
As for me, I don't care. I tasted my first beef before coming to the US..in India. I didn't know until a month later that the hot-sukuti that my Bhutanese friend gave me was a beef. To me, it was a sukuti that I was so used to in KTM. Well that was that. I still enjoy beef - but only eating out. I like brisket, meat loaf and BBQ. I am crazy about steak, medium to well-done , thank you ! Why only eat out, you ask? Because I don't know how to cook it properly. I can roast/grill/BBQ pork (chops or ribs) , leg of lamb, turkey and chicken very well; also, fry and stew almost anything. All my friends have enjoyed my cooking to a great degree. For some reason I never did any good with beef - but, never without trying.
Scientifically speaking, we are loosing a great source of protein by being so uptight, attaching social classification with meat types. Don't eat cows if you so believe....but eat something that has more meat on it than bones...for your own sake. My answer to it is : Buffalo !
Even Ted Turner (Yeah, that tycoon guy. Don't know of him? Google him - it's worth the trouble) has turned to buffalo in his chain of steak-houses Ted's Montana Grill . In case you don't know, he started this after "retirement" so that he could eat great steaks. They have started using Bison (wild buffalo), why? here is what Ted said "The taste is much the same as beef, but bison is highest of all meat in iron and is leaner."
Oh, all this talk of food has made me hungry...in mood of a hickory-smoked rare rib-eye, anyone?
Bon apetite :D
Friday, February 9, 2007
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11 comments:
Well, being a veggie I always (try to)avoid non-veg items. So no more fear of beef!
Good for you...since i'm not aware of bickering about cauliflower being suprior to cabbage, or vice versa.
When it comes to taste, it's entirely different :D
-saral
Saral:
I agree with most of your points but I can't just go for buffalo or cow meat for sake of vitamins or proteins. I tried to enter into the world of seafood but I found that that's not for me after I tried some shrim or crab. If we start giving reasons as nutrition then what about the taste..... Finally thanks for a good analysis
all the way with you on this one...i used to be a vegetarian, but recently switched sides...now its meat all the same to me - buff or beef, pork or boar, chicken or mutton!! either you eat "meat" or you don't. simple as that, unless you have medical reasons not to eat a particular kind of meat of course!
theroritically I agree with MP. But there is something called CUSTOM.
Vahsek's Ramblings-click me!
Agreed...taste is the numero uno reason to CHOOSE to eat something. You don't choose to eat what you dont find tasty. Period - no ifs and buts.
My point is, some taste need developing. Hmmm..Let me think of an example...(few minutes and a phone call later) Karela !!! It is noting but BITTER. Not everyone likes it but there are many who do and it does take some getting used to eating it without complaining it. Later, one actually enjoys it (mea culpa). I was about to say BEER too but I refrained from it because alcoholic drinks obviously have OTHER reasons too !!
If I was not clear enough, my only complaint is to those who pronounce judgement even before trial.
By the way, I have seen fair share of naak-nike's (fussy eaters) in my family. Recently, I had cooked chicken chilly and obviously it had green bell peppers in it. One of my relatives's verdict on it: "Oh, I like it. I like the smell of bell pepper in it, I just dont eat them." When it was time to replate it, I naturally avoided giving him any pieces of bell peppers. To that he responds - "Don't get me wrong, I NEED to have them in the plate - but just not to eat."
We are all God's creatures. Amen!
-Saral
oh, I forgot to address the custom one.
IMHO, customs are just that - customs. We embrace new ones in place of old ones when it suits us. If not, we all still would be getting married by the age of 9; we would not be learning English (gai-khane bhasa); we would have multiple wives (oh, some sad faces here :D ).
No, Sir, I don't agree to not doing something for custom's sake. Follow it and you have an intact custom; break it and you have a new one. Neither is bad. Either is good.
-saral
Exactly, custom is what we make (to break at some point or other). Okay, how is a cow's life more sacred than a goat's, if that is what vahseK means by custom [of not killing cows, eating beef]? I agree we should respect people's freedom to choose to eat or not eat beef. But, saying that its unethical/immoral to kill cows and eat beef, and at the same time sacrifice goats and eat mutton sounds very hypocritical to me. Its great you are a vegetarian, vahsek - above all these hypocrisy.
I think if we take moral stance on life and living, then we shouldn't kill either. If we talk about them as food items, they both give us meat and I see no problem eating one or the other or both.
Custom is elastic to liberal ones like "us".
I agree with you.
But again what i think is others are free to not eat anything they dont want or eat what they like.
cheers
Vahsek's Ramblings-here!
...... I recently turned into vegie...... but i just love pork n' buff's MOMOs.... n Sukuti too......
I was a nonveg but gave up meat and meat products about 15 years ago. Now I am a lactoveg.!
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