meMoRiEs
I blame my father. A hefty Sebastian Cabot of a man, he is unabashedly fond of food. He had a heart attack in his forties. He gave up smoking, but not bouillabaisse or bernaise. Food is love is life, after all.
My father was an officer in the Army. I hate to admit that some of my earliest fond food memories involve Army rations (or, for those in the know, “MREs”—Meal Ready to Eat). Please keep in mind that I was no older than five last time I had them when I tell you that crackers in an olive-green can taste really good.
MREs are the perfect hiking food. They are, after all, made to keep well in the trenches. I think this is why I remember them so affectionately.
My family was stationed in Germany when I was young. Germans invented something called the “volksmarch”—non-competitive, several-kilometer-long walking hikes, at the end of which participants get (or got—I’m not really sure if the conventions have changed) really nifty medals commemorating their participation. I still have several, now decades old (medals, not MREs). You can imagine how great this was to a kid, especially one so disinclined to competition as was I. I get a medal? Really? And I don’t have to place in the first 300 or so? And you can eat along the way? Sweet!
With all the present concern over childhood obesity, I think perhaps the Germans have known the answer all along.
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January 6th, 2007 @ 8:50 pm
I really like this one!