I just finished writing Year of the Dog ! It had a massive plot hole that I had to fix which turned out to be more work than I expected. Here’s a snippet: “Hey, Auntie Nell.” He wrapped his arms around her, bussing her on the cheek and breathing in pikake flowers and shortbread cookies. And suddenly he was nine years old again, and her solid presence had made his chaotic world stable once more. “What are you doing here?” He usually took her to dinner on Wednesday nights, but today was Tuesday. The edges of her smile faltered a little before brightening right back up again. “What, I can’t visit my nephew?” She angled around him to enter his home. “Is this your new house? Looks lovely.” Which was a blatant lie, because the fixer-upper was barely livable, much less acceptable to a neat-freak like his aunt. She also left four matching pink and purple floral suitcases on the stoop behind her. Only then did Ashwin notice the cab driver standing slightly to the side of the walkway. “Can ...
Captain's Log, Stardate 11.06.2008
So this week, I’ve been sick. I think I got sick at church (I always seem to get sick at church).
I was feeling so miserable that I resorted to comfort food. What surprised me was the comfort food I picked to eat.
Normally I love chicken noodle soup or mac and cheese. This time, I made something completely Japanese-Hawaiian (Mom would have been proud of me).
I made shoyu egg rice—an egg scrambled with soy sauce and then fried like scrambled eggs, served over hot rice (the Japanese short-grain rice, not Uncle Ben’s), and topped with furikake, which is small pieces of dried seaweed and toasted sesame seeds and other spices formed into a dry shake topping which is typically used with rice.
I sat at the table and just reveled in the comfort the dish brought me. My sensitive stomach liked the bland rice, my ion levels like the salt in the furikake, and I’m sure something else inside me liked the protein in the egg.
(My arteries probably didn’t like the cholesterol, but we’ll ignore them for now.)
What’s weird is that I never really thought of shoyu egg rice as “comfort food” before. Mom would always make it for breakfast for us (usually sans furikake) so it wasn’t anything particularly special, or even something particularly bad for us.
But this time, being sick, my body just craved it. Weird, huh?
How about you? Any weird comfort food stories you want to share?
So this week, I’ve been sick. I think I got sick at church (I always seem to get sick at church).
I was feeling so miserable that I resorted to comfort food. What surprised me was the comfort food I picked to eat.
Normally I love chicken noodle soup or mac and cheese. This time, I made something completely Japanese-Hawaiian (Mom would have been proud of me).
I made shoyu egg rice—an egg scrambled with soy sauce and then fried like scrambled eggs, served over hot rice (the Japanese short-grain rice, not Uncle Ben’s), and topped with furikake, which is small pieces of dried seaweed and toasted sesame seeds and other spices formed into a dry shake topping which is typically used with rice.
I sat at the table and just reveled in the comfort the dish brought me. My sensitive stomach liked the bland rice, my ion levels like the salt in the furikake, and I’m sure something else inside me liked the protein in the egg.
(My arteries probably didn’t like the cholesterol, but we’ll ignore them for now.)
What’s weird is that I never really thought of shoyu egg rice as “comfort food” before. Mom would always make it for breakfast for us (usually sans furikake) so it wasn’t anything particularly special, or even something particularly bad for us.
But this time, being sick, my body just craved it. Weird, huh?
How about you? Any weird comfort food stories you want to share?
Comments
Anyway, I hope you feel better really soon.
But I tend to want comfort food when I'm emotional, and that typically means chocolate or doughnuts...
Good thing I'm not emotional too often, either, huh?! :)
Well hope you feel better soon!!!
Watch some silly TV!
Darby
darbyscloset at yahoo dot com
Camy
I just had a cases of the stomach ick and I resorted to my regime of bananas, appelsauce, bread and hot toddies (tea and honey with rum).
If I am just streesed I go for a bowl of rice with katsuo mirin furikake.
Hope you tummy is all better soon.
reihaisha(at)yahoo(dot)com