Thursday, March 1, 2012

unit one


Kevin Lim
Leah Benedict English 201
2/9/12
                                                Differences from time periods and places
            With her roots directly coming from Taiwan, my mother moved to the United States when she was just 10 years old.  When she was a child her parents forced her to move due to their ambition to attain the American dream and become successful.  This had a toll on my mother as well though since she didn’t want to leave.  When I was a child she would always spout out the random facts about the food that she had back home and how it was so different from the food here.  However, being the child that I was I never took the time to listen or to even care.  This project gave me the opportunity to learn about my family’s past and culture and the types of foods that they used to eat on a daily basis.  I learned this with the online interview with my mother. 
            Throughout the interview my mother named all these kinds of foods that I have never even heard of.  Some of these foods were rice porridge, and many different kinds of soups.  There were also many common foods that I knew like fried rice dumplings and eggrolls.  However, the thing that really interested me was how they made their food.  She told me that ll of the ingredients used is all fresh with hardly any preservatives.  This shocked me because that would have to mean that the products must have a very short shelf life.  My mother confirmed this, and she also said that it was more “economical this way.  This process lets us not waste the food that we eat and also lets us appreciate the money used to get the food, the people who grew the food, and thank the animals which gave us our fill for the meal.”  This was the life that my mother had and she told me that it was one of the happiest times of her life. 
            However, her father suddenly decided to move to the states so being the family they must follow along.  My mother saw that after she had arrived in the states, she noticed the differences in how food is transported is already really different but also how they store the food was very foreign to her as well.  She saw vegetables like potatoes, lettuce and tomatoes were being sold in plastic bags and being sold in large quantities.  This was a real shock to her at first because she was thinking to herself how her family can finish that many pieces of food in a few days.  This shocked her until her mother told her that there many kinds of chemicals that can keep the food edible for a very long time.  At first my other was fascinated by this but that was until she tasted the food that her mother made.  She noticed that there was a different taste to it; there was an excess taste.  She tasted a sort of salty taste that wasn’t in the food before.  So she thought to herself that it was probably the ingredients since the way that her mother prepared the food hasn’t changed at all. 
            My mother also didn’t like how there were so many fast food restaurants that were open.  Her first meal in the states was actually in a fast food restaurant in the airport.  This disgusted her because she didn’t even like the taste of it at all.  She thought that the burger was “a softened hockey puck.” She tasted all kinds of salts which made the food itself taste good but she knew that the ingredients origins were not the same as it was back in Taiwan.  Even though she had these kinds of opinions she knew that there was nothing she could do about it.  She had to live a new life where food is not as fresh as it was and the way it is prepared can also be done in the matter of minutes due to technological advances.
            After a while of staying in the states my Grandfather’s business of selling jewelry and also his other business of owning a shoestore was skyrocketing and he playing the stock market also gave them a really good income.  He first bought a black and white TV so his family can get some entertainment.  This however led to my grandma watching a lot of cooking shows to improve her cooking skills and to expand her variety of what to make every night.  My grandma started to mimic the techniques being shown and started making more Americanized meals.  One time the children were so shocked not to see rice on the table but steak that was made medium rare and it was so tender that it melted in their mouths.  After the meal my grandmother asked what for the children’s thoughts about the food.  They said it was great but it still tasted like there were preservatives and they wouldn’t want to eat Americanized food every day.  My grandfather made a proposal to go buy organic foods; even if it’s more expensive.  He told them that even if the food is more expensive it has “no preservatives so it’s basically like the food back home.”  This also proved that Pollan has a point because my grandma was able to learn some new techniques just by watching and she was able to “expand her horizons.”
            The family decided to try the organic foods the next time they went to the market.  They picked up many kinds of vegetables.  They were glad that they weren’t sold in bulk like the other foods so they don’t have to waste as much and picked up some organic meat as well like fish and chicken.  They decided as soon as they got home that they would make their most favorite meal which was fried fish with corn sauce all over rice.  Back in Taiwan this was considered fast food but it takes a very long time to make.  The process of peeling the corn instead of opening a can to get the food was very refreshing to them.  It reminded them of the good times back home and the quality time spent on cooking.  After my grandfather came back from work they decided to have a nice family dinner.
            However my experiences with food have always been about how fast I can get my food and get on with my other activities.  I would always not even eat breakfast in the morning and just go to school because I overslept.  I guess things have definitely changed over the past 20 years since my mom came over from Taiwan.

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