In addition to the healthy meals, I also allow them to try
Mexican junk food. While Coca-Cola, admittedly, is hardly Mexican, I have an
affectionate association with Coca Cola and tropical travel from my time in Honduras , and I
believe it has medicinal properties. So they have had more Coke in the last two
weeks than I am willing to admit. (Amazing how a hot, fussy kid will perk right
up with a little caramel coloring and high fructose corn syrup.) They also have
sampled a wide variety of “churros,” or chips, that are usually some heinous
shade of orange, contain obscene amounts of MSG, and come in fluorescent green
packaging. My rule is that if it is not American, I might consider letting them
try it. Any form of homemade Mexican dulce (“merengues” as they are called on
the beach) are free game as long as they seem reasonably sanitary.
Then there are the comfort foods. I don’t want every meal to
be a new experience, so in this first two weeks I have kept our home meals
simple and familiar. This is also because I have no idea how to cook Mexican
food. (I entertained the idea of trying, after reading a few chapters of Like
Water for Chocolate, and having an extensive conversation with an old grandma
in the market who sold me squash flowers and assured me that it was “muy facil,
rapido” to make any Mexican dish; but my meek attempt came out like a generic
stir fry) Last week I went to the grocery store and stocked up on Cheerios,
milk, pasta and tomato sauce, ham for sandwiches, and frozen chicken nuggets.
All Josie wants is a bagel and cream cheese, but so far I have had no luck in procuring
a bagel (and I am not willing to bake in this climate with so many good bread
stores on every corner).
Today is the Fourth of July. I had almost forgotten the
holiday, and planned on ignoring it, until the kids realized that it was coming
up and started planning an elaborate celebration. They have been rehearsing
their “show” for three days now, and we have invited over everyone we know in Merida for a “cook out
cabaret.” On the menu? Potato salad, hamburgers, hot dogs, watermelon. Tomorrow
we head west to Chiapas
and I don’t expect we will have as much gringo fare at our disposal. Perhaps
Sopa de Lima will soon become a comfort food. And, of course, there will
always be Coca-Cola.
Awesome! Food sounds great and they sound like they are pretty adventurous eaters to me. I think Ben would live on tortillas and cheese!
ReplyDeleteHey, don't feel quite as bad about the Coke. Don't forget that south of the US border, most bottled sodas still use SUGAR. So it also taste SO much better than what we now have here and instead of rotting their entire system, it's just the teeth. ;-)
ReplyDeleteThe trip sounds awesome!!! I love love love love the food in the Yucatan.....