NOT
TO AN AMERICAN'S TASTE
For the first two months of my United Nations tour
in Iraq and Kuwait, I was a patrol base commander in the Central Sector. Each patrol base was usually staffed with 8
to 10 officer observers. Everyone was
on their own for the morning and noon meals, but we all rotated the cooking
duties for the evening meal. Chicken,
fish, rice, potatoes, and healthy doses of curry generally found their way into
this international food festival. My
contributions were tacos, camp fire
stew--a recipe that I had acquired from my sister--and of course, a turkey dinner
for Thanksgiving. Not every entrée was
to every officer's taste, but we all did our best to sample the dining fare
that was presented. I held my own in
this subsistence quest until one evening in November.
On this particular evening, the officer from Ghana
said that he was making a special dish from home as one of his countrymen was
staying overnight at our patrol base.
He also cautioned me that it might not be to an American's taste. I had heard that line a few times over the
past few weeks, and it usually just translated into this has a lot of curry in
it. I
liked curry, and the more the better.
So I approached that evening without the slightest apprehension. Why should I have been concerned? In the Basic School, I used to eat worms,
grasshoppers, and other assorted insects just to annoy the officers with
aviation guarantees. Besides, they were
good enough for John the Baptist, and those skinny green grasshoppers are
pretty tasty anyway. I didn't even get
suspicious when the French and Russian officers came to see me after leaving
the kitchen and asked me if they could conduct an extra evening patrol. I agreed and they said they would just eat a
ration on the patrol.
All of this considered, I almost gagged when I
walked into the trailer where we ate our evening meals. I sat down at the table and was presented
with a bowl of what appeared to be, and was later confirmed as peanut butter
soup. The smell of boiling peanut
butter supplanted all of the breathable air.
The soup did have more substance than just peanut butter and as I moved
my spoon through the bowl, something floated to the top. It was a fish head, and I must have been
mistaken for the guest of honor, because I had more than one in my bowl. I think there may have been other parts of
the fish in my bowl, but the heads had my full attention. They just kept bobbing to the top of the
bowl. Having boldly accepted the offer
of this officer's home cooking, it would have been in bad taste for me to leave
abruptly. My dilemma was whether to
consume the meal quickly and excuse myself or eat it very slowly and hope some
of it would evaporate. Neither appeared
to be a viable solution.
It was at this point that I wondered if the fish
heads were really just garnish, perhaps the equivalent of Parsley in Ghana. My independent query was dismissed as
wishful thinking with a crunching sound as two of the other officers began
chomping on the heads in their bowls. A
few minutes later, the Ghanaian officer noticed that I was not eating my heads
and he graciously offered to eat them with the rest of his bowl of soup. I quickly spooned them into his bowl, making
sure that much of the soup went with them.
I completed as much of my bowl of soup as I could, thanked the cook, and
politely excused myself. I did not
appear to offend anyone as nobody else even looked up from the melee of head
chomping and soup slurping going on.
I'm sure that my international host for that evening had gone to some
trouble to make this special meal and would have not wanted to know that within
a few minutes I had deposited my share along the perimeter fence of the
compound.
The good thing about being a man is that you never
feel obliged to ask for the recipe.