When I was a little girl, I spent possibly half of my free time next door, playing with Lynne, my first friend. She's the friend who would twirl with me in our dress-ups as a storm approached. We practiced our make-up skills. We snuck her mom's cigarettes in our socks and rode our bikes to the woods and made ourselves sick. We would set up elaborate Barbie villages using the sleeves from record albums: Bobby Sherman, David Cassidy, Cher, the Carpenters. We made secret forts in the closet on under the stairs. When her awe-inspiring teenage sister wasn't home, we'd sneak in her room and listen to the Beatles White Album and Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon. I was impressed with the photo and bracelet of a Vietnam POW that she had on her bulletin board. She had a poster that said, "Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they aren't out to get you."
We played until dinner was ready. We would try to eat dinner at each others' houses. I remember peering into the square electric skillet on her turquoise formica counter to find the source of the delicious aroma. Onions browning around a dark meat that I was told was liver. My mother never cooked liver. Although it didn't sound good, the smell made me think differently. Mrs. Boyer invited me to stay and try it and I cautiously accepted. Earlier, Mr. Boyer had convinced me that their spaghetti was worms and I watched a single strand on my arm for a long time before I realized he was teasing.
The smell did not live up to the taste. I couldn't get passed the mushy quality of the meat. I really had wanted to like it, but I couldn't eat it.
It's hard to get passed those early impressions of food. I tried it once again when I was older and it was still mushy. I decided it was the onions that lured me in every time. So last night when I stopped over at my friend Peggy's, I was reluctant to accept the offer of the liver and onions her Iowan mom had cooked. But I'm a grown up now, right? Peggy likes it. I'm striving for more biodiversity in my diet and I know liver is really good for you, so I agreed to try a taste.
I was surprised. It was delicious. The texture is definitely different than steak, but it wasn't mushy. My adopted Iowan grandma told me that she pours boiling water over the raw liver to get the blood out before frying it up with the onions. Who knew?
Do you eat liver & onions? Do you cook it? What childhood food aversions have you overcome?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
5 comments:
Liver and Cow Tongue are on the top of my avoidance list. Keilbasa ranks right up there with those two as well.
After I tried Blood pudding, Haggis and Kidney pie they definitely became my least favorite. I like the smell of liver and onions, and liver and bacon, but I don't really want to eat an organ than processes so many toxic substances. I'll get my iron some other way. :)
blue cheese, as a kid, it's worse than liver, as an adult, it's better than liver.
I've always hated eggs. Still do.
Liver and onions were high on my list of food to avoid at any cost when I was young as were green peas and Brussels sprouts. Now that I am grown, I know mostly it had to do with flavor and not texture. Those foods just tasted bad and some still do unless they high quality, fresh and prepared well.
That was a nice little trip to memory lane with you, AM.
Post a Comment