Atlantica - 01.05.2007, Side 29

Atlantica - 01.05.2007, Side 29
28 a t l a n t i c a on the fly Ever tried to make steamed veggie dumplings inside a volcano? Or how about a chicken pot pie? Neither did I, until arriving in Chã das Caldeiras, a community at the base of the still- active, 2,829-meter Pico do Fogo in the West African island nation of Cape Verde, where I currently volunteer at the local agricultural co-op. The dumplings and pot pie may sound delicious (they are), but cooking in Chã is not as easy as it sounds. This small village (elevation 1,629 m) of 600 inhabitants is situated inside a volcanic crater that last erupted in 1995. Homes have neither electricity nor running water. The only transport to the nearest city, São Filipe, is a two-hour ride in the back of a pick-up, usually in the company of caged chickens or 50-kilo bags of cement. My kitchen in Chã is a simple affair. There are two tables; a bowl full of ripe tomatoes, green peppers, onions, carrots, garlic cloves, and eggs; a bucket of water; a shelf teeming with groceries; and a gas stove, which has two settings: hot and hottest. Though the stove is great for cooking rice, anything requiring low-heat – like making a good white sauce – is difficult. (My mac and cheese just hasn’t been the same.) As a small, rural community, Chã does not have the selection of imported groceries found elsewhere on the island, nor does it have irrigation, which makes the availability of produce spotty. With this in mind, I made the decision after arriving that since the best foods aren’t coming here, I must go – literally walk – to find them myself. My quest has taken me to just about every loja (store) on the island in the past eight months. They seem to carry 99 percent of the same stuff, but each store has a unique one percent, be it powdered sugar, soy sauce, extra virgin olive oil, or saffron (a recent acquisition). Every store has a certain flavor; some have more items from Portugal, France, or Holland, others Brazil or the United States. My favorite lojas are the American ones, where I can occasionally score a comfort food like real maple syrup or taco shells. Getting to the stores for these ingredients, however, often requires a long walk. When walking on roads, I sometimes can get a boléia, a hitch, but mostly it’s one-foot-in-front-of-the- other through the lava, forests, and coffee plantations of the surrounding countryside. Take spaghetti with pesto sauce, for example, a favorite of mine. Only in Mosteiros, a small city about 13 km walk from Chã, can you find good Italian pasta. So, twice a month or so, I scurry down the trail to buy pasta. Fresh basil, however, is in the other direction, through three massive lava fields, in a small village called Estância Roque. Fresh basil isn’t the only thing on my mind during the 10 km, three- hour walk from Chã to Estância Roque. Awaiting me at the loja, on the shelf to the right of the basil, are seedless California raisins – the only ones I can find on the island. I use these to make oatmeal raisin cookies, but the oats, along with the pine nuts for pesto, can only be found in São Filipe, a two-hour trip from Chã on the lone pot-holed, lava-rock road. In all, a 46 km walk and a four-hour round-trip later, I am finally able to make oatmeal cookies and a pesto sauce for good Italian pasta. I started to cook because of my near-insatiable appetite, though my appreciation of the craft’s subtleties came later. I have no secret recipes and am willing to talk about food with just about everyone. The majority of the weekly conversation I have with my parents is in foodspeak as I describe to them, in detail, what I’ve eaten in the last 24 hours. Last week, we talked about my “most-perfect” (quoted exactly) tuna salad sandwich – “drained Cape Verdean tuna, lots of onions and garlic, mayo and mustard, a Portuguese roll, and fresh-ground pepper” – and a bowl of spicy gazpacho I had that particular day. Not to be outdone by lunch, dinner featured a fresh salsa, black beans and brown rice, and sautéed chicken on hand-made corn tortillas. And dessert was fudge with walnuts. Don’t get me wrong: none of these obstacles to culinary bliss bother me too much. I’m just the person for the mile-high walk with a backpack full of groceries and fresh produce, through the lava fields, forests, and clouds. I’m doing just fine, thank you, making chocolate cakes (with white frosting) by candlelight on my hotter-and-hottest gas stove, and drawing rainwater from the cistern next to my house. It’s the little surprises that are the best part though, like finding nice green beans outside Estância Roque – which make a great accompaniment to a fresh, kilo-sized tuna steak. a il lu s tr a ti o n b y l il ja g u n n a r s d ó tt ir Confessions of a Mile-HigH gourMand By Sam Weeks
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Atlantica

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