Tough Pork

  • Vicki W.

    Vicki W.

    Rank #264 of 1949

    Votes: 68

    About my essay:

    Nothing kills conversation like a tough pork chop. Good food, cooked well, is communication. And what you communicate with bad food just might be: your friendship, to me, is tough pork.

 

I watch the three people around the table chew their pork chops. They gnaw. They grind. The meat is gray, for chrissakes. It needs more salt and less pepper.

 

I am the cook. And, well…shit

 

Someone does mention that the couscous is good. It came out of a box.

 

Otherwise, we’re silent.

 

I will never do this again. 

 

I don’t mean I will never host a dinner party again. I mean that never, ever, again will I cook badly. I’m done. I will learn how to cook. 

 

Because nothing kills conversation like a tough pork chop. And food, good food, cooked well, is a foundation. It is rapport. It is a relationship. Mostly, it is communication.

And what I’ve just communicated to my friends is that their worth to me is gray pork.

 

I want what we find in good restaurants. Wine, yes. Warm bread. And the rapidly escalating noise caused by people talking to and over one another. The sloppy noise where people talk with their mouths full, because their mouths are full, and because they like what is in them. 

 

It makes people forget their manners. That’s what good food does. I want my dining room chairs filled with pigs. Well-seasoned, tender, pink pigs.

 

I don’t think this is a vain or superfluous goal. There are people I love. When they’re with me, I want them to eat good food and know that I love them. I want new friends to feel welcome. A good meal tells them this. It tells them, I want you here and I want you to stay for the dessert. Now sit back and let’s talk.

 

So I will read the cookbooks. Practice. Perfect. I will taste as I cook. I will pay attention to what is in season and cook that. I will not cook from a box. I will learn what herbs and spices taste good with what.

 

The next time I cook a pork chop, it’s going to be stuffed. Or braised. Or it will be a pork tenderloin instead. But it will be good. And I will invite back my poor friends who suffered through this past meal, to make reparations. 

 

Because that’s what good food does. It brings people into your home. It speaks.

 

 

 

comments

Juliet F.:

HA!! Very funny, I love cooking for others, but hate the pressure it can bring (slowly lifts as you practice), but I'm exceptionally hard on myself - as I suspect you are too. No matter, next dinner party will always be better! 

August 6, 2010 Report Abuse
Rj M.:

bravo!  " I mean that never, ever, again will I cook badly. I’m done. I will learn how to cook. "  well said!  I could feel the tension in the beginning few lines.  That awkward moment as you wait for their facial response to what you just made.  Will they like it?  Will they hate it?  Will they lie about it?  

And without a lie, pork is by far the best meat.  I brine mine for days sometimes.  Even the cheapest cut can be a masterpeice!  Great essay!

August 29, 2010 Report Abuse
Vicki W.:

Thank you, Juliet and Rj. Very nice of you to comment on my essay!

August 31, 2010 Report Abuse
Herman S.:

Sounds like you have lame friends.   given human fallibility and how difficult it is to cook, everyone knows that once in a while, you're gonna fuck it up.  But why should the reaction be complete silence?  Oftentimes, a bad meal is the best invitation to an interesting conversation.  what exactly is it that's bad about this?  its overcooked?  why is moist prefereable to dry and chewy?  is that an objective matter or just a quesiton of personal preference?  There are such things as well don-ers- AB's been bitching about them for a long time.  Is that they are somehow ignorant?  what fact are they ignorant of?  how could they learn otherwise?  are they psychologically broken? what?

The trick to making a bad meal enjoyable is that you need interlocutors capable of thinking about why it is bad and not being afraid to discuss it.  Even to the cook's face.  You also need a cook who can handle criticism.  Which raises the possibility that your freinds didn't say anything because they knew how you'd react.  so maybe it's not them after all.  just a possibility. 

September 21, 2010 Report Abuse
Steve V.:

Ther is nothing like the sting of ignominy to motivate.  It probably wasn't even as bad a meal as it felt... to you.  Great essay!

September 24, 2010 Report Abuse