Why
Doesn’t It Taste Good?
I’ve
been thinking a lot about pie, lately. Not so unusual after the holidays when
we seem to be wearing every extra piece we ate. But pie isn’t only for
celebrations. It’s an everyday event in our community. Dining reputations are
made on it. Supermarkets sell it by the stack. Some of us buy frozen pie crust
and make our own pies. And a few people--I know they’re still around--make
theirs from scratch. That is, make the pie crust themselves, too. How radical
is that?
I think pie crust is an excellent example of what has happened to American food.
I think pie crust is an excellent example of what has happened to American food.
What
does it take to make a crust? Flour, water, salt and fat. Simple. But not easy,
hence the appeal of “shortening.” Shortening comes in a tin and is the color of
nursery school paste. It makes a sturdy crust that can be crimped attractively
and mass produced, if desired. But it has no taste. Add to it the current habit
of omitting salt from the crust and you have what I think of as throw-back pie.
Back to the middle ages, when crust was a “coffin” intended to keep its
contents together long enough to serve. Gentry got the filling (usually meat
and gravy) and the servants ate the coffin crust. But I’ll bet that tasted
better than most crusts today because the fat, over there in England, was
likely to be lard.
The
best pie crust I ever ate was, actually, in England. Fresh gooseberries baked
without sweetening in a light and flavorful crust. You passed the sugar in a
caster, for dusting across the top—before you dolloped on the heavy cream. The
crust brought all those flavors together and elevated them because it was made
with lard. And the right amount of salt.
Have
you had a pie, lately, where the crust enhanced the flavor of the pie? I
haven’t.
Butter
makes a delicious crust, too, although not as sturdy as shortening, of course,
so you don’t often see it in a store. A butter crust, however, will surprise anyone
who is accustomed to shortening only, or to shortening and the list of
preservatives that you find in the supermarket.
Convenience
is a large part of the reason for diminished flavor. And it’s not just pie
crust, is it?
Have
you noticed in the supermarket how much of the produce is wrapped in plastic? Over
the holidays, I even bought some haricot
verts, the skinny green beans that when fresh (and properly cooked, not
raw) will burst with green bean flavor. These came from Guatemala. They looked
beautiful inside their plastic wrapping, all grouped in the same direction,
ready for the pot. And they were terrible. They had maintained their fresh
appearance, that appealing green, but lost every trace of flavor.
Why
buy something shipped “fresh” from abroad, you will ask. And you’re right. Quality
inevitably deteriorates. A better question, though, may be: why stock it? At
Thanksgiving several years ago the same supermarket had bins of young green
beans that were outstanding. Unprocessed. Truly fresh and they tasted that way.
I’d been hoping to find those this year, but maybe bad weather ruined the crop.
The
question of flavor in food brings me to the annual New Year’s diet. Why do I
overeat when the food is nothing special?
Can it
be that I’m remembering how the dish is supposed to taste? And I keep eating in
the hope of finding that satisfaction in the next bite?
Or, more
generally, can it be that deeply satisfying food has become more difficult to
find? What I’m talking about is a meal when what we eat feels good throughout
our being. When it satisfies a hunger of the body for real nutrition combined
with flavor. (A little like that “deep down body thirst” we hear about in
commercials.)
Instead,
we seem to be training our palates, if not our bodies, to desire processed
fakery like chips embedded with flavor enhancers.
Here’s
a choice we’re asked to make all too often: On one hand, a packaged snack that
explodes with carefully tested lab-created flavors developed to make us want
more; on the other, a plate of tasteless vegetables from far away whose colors
have been preserved to withstand shipping.
I know
which one I’d choose, doggone it.