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By the Chef at Worldwide Recipes
As told to the Chef at Worldwide Recipes
Index of Chapters
Chapter 1: I Am Born
Chapter 2: My Brother is
Born
Chapter 3: The Early
Years
Chapter 4: We Keep On
Moving On
Chapter 5: A Strange Boy
in a Strange Land
Chapter 6: Traveling
on My Belly
Chapter 7:
A Tale of Two Lassies
Chapter 8:
Back in the USSA
Chapter 9: Freshman Daze
Chapter
10: Living in a War Zone
Chapter 11:
The Chef Answers Only to the Ambassador
Chapter 1: I
Am Born
[Note: The events described in this chapter are based on
the accounts of my parents, and are largely supported by
hospital records.]
I was born as a baby in the early hours of August 19th,
1953, in Cleveland, Ohio. I have no recollection of this,
which I would count as one of the most important single
events of my life, but I have been told that it is so. After
a pleasant but thoroughly unmemorable three-day stay in the
hospital with my new mother, we were driven home by my new
father. I have no recollection of this, either.
My new parents lived in a small house, their first, for
which I believe they had paid $4.75 in 1952. That is
equivalent to $250,000 in today's dollars. It was one of
several identical homes in a small development in the
northeastern Cleveland suburb of Willowick. In order to
differentiate their house from the long row of homes
indistinguishable from their own, and to assure that my
parents were able to locate their own house without having
to drive around the block several times, my father painted
the front door bright red. They later learned that several
of their neighbors also used the red door as a landmark, and
the number of cars circling the block declined dramatically.
I have no recollection of any of this, but it's a good story
so I continue to tell it.
The first several weeks of my life were largely
uneventful, with most of my limited attention directed
towards eating, a habit that I still practice to this day. I
was a colicky baby, which made the first six weeks of my
existence miserable for both myself and my long-suffering,
sleep-deprived parents. I have no recollection of this
either, but that doesn't seem to dissuade my parents from
making sure that I never forget it.
Chapter 2: My Brother is
Born
A mere 16 months after my birth,
which seemed like an entire lifetime to me, my
brother Bert was born. He was delivered by the same
doctor in the same hospital as I was, which is
nothing extraordinary in its own right. What is
rather unusual is that my father was also delivered
by the same doctor in the same hospital 25 years
earlier, and this is even more remarkable knowing
that my father and his family had moved no less than
19 times in those intervening years. How he came to
find himself in Cleveland after all those years,
just in time to have two sons, has always been a
mystery to me, and I can only guess that the doctor
must have owed my grandparents some money and would
only return it in the form of services rendered. Or
perhaps he offered a volume discount to families.
Whatever the reason, I am resigned to the fact that
this mystery will never be solved.
While my parents were off seeing to
brother Bert's entry into the world, they left me in
the care of some neighbor friends. This was a
natural thing to do, since a 16-month-old baby has
rarely been of much service during such occasions,
and up to that point I had not established much of a
reputation for being able to take care of myself,
much less a newborn brother. In retrospect, I cannot
blame my parents for abandoning me during the birth
of a sibling, and am prepared to forgive them
provided they promise it will never happen again.
During my stay with these kind
caretakers I apparently decided to drink a bottle of
ink. Whether I did this as a form of protest against
my parent's apparently careless treatment of their
(up to this point) only child, or whether it was
simply that the bottle was within the reach of my
chubby little hand and its contents appeared able to
fit into my infantile yet ample mouth, will be
something for future historians to decide.
Regardless of the outcome of their research, I am
convinced that this early accident had a profound
and lasting effect on my future life; it obviously
sparked in me an appreciation for unusual and exotic
flavors, and it gave me an everlasting love of the
written word. After all, I literally had ink running
through my veins.
Chapter 3:
The Early Years
Not long after my brother was born, my father took a job
with IBM. Back then the company's famous initials stood for
"I've been moved," and that is precisely what my parents did
for the next twenty years. Unlike the unfortunate episode
surrounding my brother's birth, they chose to take me along
for most of these.
By the time I had attained the ripe age of seven, our
small but extremely young family moved from Cleveland to the
Westchester area of Los Angeles. The street we lived on
would later become known as the north runway of Los Angeles
International Airport, but when we lived there the airplanes
came no closer to our house than a couple of hundred feet
directly overhead.
We then moved to Dallas, Texas, and then back again to
the Los Angeles area, this time to the town of Woodland
Hills in the San Fernando valley. Very few memories from
these years have survived, other than of some wonderful
neighbors and Cub Scout buddies. It seems to be an almost
total vacuum regarding persistent memories of food, and this
break in the continuity of my food memory has often caused
me to wonder if my parents even bothered to feed me at all
during this period of my life. I do recall long drives
through winding mountain roads to get to the Sea Lion
restaurant in Malibu, though. These drives invariably
resulted in a delicious meal followed by my brother and me
becoming violently carsick on the way home. Was it worth it?
I guess it must have been; for all I know that was the only
food I was given during those seven years.
Chapter 4:
We Keep On Moving On
Not long after my family moved to Woodland Hills,
California, my dad was offered a job at IBM World Trade
headquarters in New York City. Without so much as
consulting my brother or myself, we were once again
uprooted and moved, this time taking up residence at 47
Betsy's Lane in New Canaan, Connecticut. I think this
took place during the summer of 1962, but I'm not sure.
I turned nine that summer, and apparently my mind was
occupied by concerns other than keeping an accurate
record of my life for the future amusement of thousands
of adoring readers. I have no idea what those concerns
could have been, so this is only conjecture.
I entered the fourth grade in New Canaan's South
School where I had a huge crush on my teacher Mrs.
Lucas. I remember being devastated when I learned that
she would not be returning to teach me the following
year because she and her husband had volunteered for the
fledgling Peace Corps, and she was planning on teaching
a bunch of kids somewhere in Africa. I was convinced
that she would benefit more from my adoration, and the
kids in Africa would be no worse for it, so this all
seemed extremely illogical to me.
Realizing that my relationship with Mrs. Lucas was
doomed, I turned my amorous attention in a more
age-appropriate direction. My parents had made friends
with another IBM couple, Wade and Lois Cannon, and I
made friends with their beautiful oldest daughter Cathy.
We were, at such a young age, totally ignorant of how
boyfriend and girlfriend were supposed to act, and our
relationship never even got to the hand-holding stage,
but we each liked the other, and we each knew it. My
romantic ambitions were torn asunder for the second time
when I learned that the Cannons were moving to Mexico
City. I wondered how life (and the heartless management
at IBM) could be so cruel, and I was sure that I would
never recover from the heartbreak.
A few weeks later, my broken heart completely mended,
my father brought home the news that he had accepted a
job in Montevideo, Uruguay. This news seemed, at the
time, to have little bearing on me. Outside of the facts
that I would be moving to a foreign country half a world
away, learning a new language, and attending a British
school, I didn't think that this move would have any
more impact on my life than any of the previous moves
had. It took me more than twenty years to realize how
wrong I was.
This change in our lives suddenly took on personal
implications when my parents announced that we would
stop in Mexico City to visit the Cannons on our way to
Montevideo. I would get to see Cathy, and I realized
that the management at IBM was possessed of much more
wisdom than I had previously given them credit for. All
seemed right with the world, and with IBM World Trade
Corporation as well.
[Note from the Chef: If any of my adoring readers
know the whereabouts of Cathy Cannon, or her sisters
Donna and Carol, please let me know. And please let them
know that the Chef still thinks about them.]
Chapter 5:
A Strange Boy in a Strange Land
My family arrived in Montevideo, Uruguay in November
of 1963, a few weeks after my tenth birthday. On our way
there we had stopped in Mexico City, Rio de Janeiro, and
Buenos Aires, adding three notches in my previously
unblemished country belt. At every stop I was intrigued
by the differences I found there, my ten-year-old mind
incapable of anticipating that different people in
different countries could possibly live under
circumstances so different from those I had grown up in
because I had no idea that such differences existed.
I learned, both through wide-eyed observation and the
careful tutoring of my parents, that people in other
countries manage to communicate in languages that were
completely unintelligible to me, and that most of these
people actually spoke no English at all. I learned that
in some remote corners of the world there were kids my
age who had never tasted a hamburger or peanut butter,
and that papaya was not only edible but delicious (and
the seeds were neither). I discovered that in Brazil
there was a soft drink called Guarana that was better
than any soft drink available in the USA, and that they
made ice cream from fruits that were not only new to me,
but for which there were no English names.
I was fascinated by the ancient history of the
Mexicans, so different from the history of my country
which until then I had assumed to be the only history
around. I admired the beauty of the Brazilian people, so
tall and slender and fluid and graceful, and seemingly
indifferent to the many hues of their skin. I admired
the Argentine way of life, and their custom of closing
certain downtown streets at night so that pedestrians
could walk them, shopping and dining well into the early
hours of the next day. "Why don't they do this in New
York City?" we all wondered.
My initial impression of my new home town of
Montevideo was filled with the same wonder at the
differences between this and my former life, and
excitement at the prospect of exploring these
differences. We took up residence in the small Hotel
Cottage in the suburb of Carrasco and began a five-year
total immersion course in cross- cultural living, begun
by forging a fast and lasting friendship with a Dutch
family staying in the hotel at the same time. Who would
have guessed that I, an average narrow-minded
ten-year-old American boy, would one day enjoy the
company of playmates with names like Jeroen, Stella,
Daan, and Renata? And the adventure was just beginning!
Chapter 6: Traveling
on My Belly
I believe that the ages
from 10 to 15 are the most impressionable, and therefore
among the most significant, in almost everybody's life. Mine
was no exception. During these years we are still open to
new ideas and experiences and we are still willing to
concede, at least occasionally and usually grudgingly, that
our elders might possibly know a thing or two that we don't.
Then we all hit that magic age of 16 when we are suddenly
possessed of the sum total of mankind's knowledge, and every
adult becomes nothing more than a walking, talking blob of
idiotic protoplasm. My life was no exception in this regard
either.
I was immersed in what
psychologists call a "stimulus rich environment" during this
very formative period. I was living in a foreign culture in
a foreign country, learning foreign languages, eating
foreign foods, and making foreign friends. It was during
this period of my life that I discovered the pleasures of
travel, food, and girls, in chronological order. The first
two are inextricably linked to each another, and the latter
seems to be inextricably linked to absolutely everything.
Thanks to IBM's very
generous policy of paying for a trip home every year, and my
parents' very generous policy of expanding this trip to
include tours through Europe, I was afforded the opportunity
of sampling first hand the local delicacies of many nations.
I had osso buco and veal Marsala in Rome, escargots and
onion soup in Les Halles in Paris, gravlax in Copenhagen,
pickled herring in Oslo, and reindeer in Stockholm. I had
tasted Wienerschnitzel and the famous Sacher torte in
Vienna, had fondue in Zurich and raclette in Geneva and
mussels in Brussels. Once I had a lunch of split-pea soup in
Amsterdam and dined on steak and kidney pie in London on the
very same day. I had tried haggis in Edinburgh and
discovered calzoni in Venice, had my first moussaka in
Athens, my first paella in Madrid, and my first couscous in
Cairo. All of this before my fifteenth birthday.
I don't want to give
the impression that all we did was eat during our travels.
My parents did a commendable job of making sure that my
brother and I were taken to all the museums and points of
cultural and historic interest, but to this day food
remains, in my mind, the single best reason to travel, and
traveling remains the best way to seek out new dishes and
exciting flavors. I recommend you fit in a museum or two
between meals if at all possible.
For more of the
Chef's unauthorized autobiography,
click here.
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