Parents biggest
nightmare is handling a teenager especially if they are a rebel. This is one
such phase, where the teenager assumes “I know it all” and of course parents
presume “I am the best parent a child can have with my amazing parenting skill”
Quite recently,
we were talking about various cuisines across the globe and why the Asian
cuisine is the best. As we sat discussing on the spice levels, I recollected
one particular incident that happened to me during my High School. We had moved
to India a year back and were still adapting to the new environment. My school
used to get over by 2:30 PM and we were back home by 3:00 PM.
Mom was the best
cook I have ever come across and there is no denial to that. Our lunch boxes
were a delight to all my classmates, since it was filled with yummy stuffed
parathas, which people would not have even heard of. This was before the
internet era. Yup no YouTube channels, no google browser. In short no computers.
Most of the time, I would end up not eating since my tiffin box was in demand
and I would be handed over rice stuff which I could not eat. My mom
was aware and hence it was compulsory for me and my brother to have rice and
veggies once we are back from school, as dinner at our place was again tiffin
items.
On one
particular day, not sure why; but I was annoyed with mom for some odd reason.
Guess a teen doesn’t need a reason to throw a tantrum and I was definitely sulking
a lot. I had made up my mind, that I will be making Maggie for myself and
eating. This is one item which was very rarely found in our household. I stormed
into the house, freshened up and said “I am having Maggie. Don’t worry I will
make it.” My mom looked up from her book and said “There is curd rice and
potato fry. Eat that for now. We will see about Maggie over the weekend.” To
ensure my mom is convinced with my reasoning. I picked up the sauces that my
uncle had bought from USA and said “I want to try this sauce as it says it’s
the spiciest of sauces. Want to understand how spicy it can be? “My mom was
getting irritated. “Once can you listen to me. Why do you need to argue for
every single thing I say? That’s going to be spicy and why do you want to try
it.”
Even as a teen,
I used to eat a lot of spice. Hence, I scoffed since American food is the blandest
of the lot and they find jalapeno spicy. I remembered once my uncle’s friends
told me how he had made spicy food. And they were talking about lemon rice. After
a good five minutes of argument, my mom said that I am going to learn the hard
way and stormed off to read a book. I was happy that I won the battle. Who is
she kidding? I have been to US eaten their street food and what not. Everything
is filled with cheese. The peppercorns are not spicy, and neither are their
green chilies.
My 2-minute
Maggie was done and with a grin, (which was bigger than the grin of the
Grinch who stole Christmas) I added three drops of the sauce. As I pour the
sauce, am wondering why they have such a small nozzle for the bottle. I mix it
well and take it in a bowl and sit opposite my mom, whom I am sure had an eye
on me, but acting as though she is hooked to the book. She gave me a glare and
said “Night when all of us are having dosa, gun powder and chutney, you better
not ask for it. You will need to finish the curd rice which is for you and no
one else will have it.” I just nodded happily, since I was happy with my
current achievement of winning a battle with my mom and got to eat Maggie,
while my brother was eating curd rice.
I looked at her
and took my first bite into the yummy Maggie. I could feel a slight burning
sensation in my tummy. No way !! not possible. Guess, the burning sensation is
as I have not eaten on time. I stood up, went to the kitchen and searched for
butter. I added a dollop of butter and mixed it and slowly came back. After all
the fiasco, I did not want to react in front of my mom. I took a bite and vola
its sorted. Wasn’t that easy?
I ate and took
my next bite and slowly I could feel my face turning red and I could feel my
ears burning. But I was not ready to accept defeat. I paused for some time and
took the next bite. And that was the last straw. I burst like an eruptive
volcano, cos honestly by now I was burning all over. The sauce was so hot that
three drops was enough to set me out like a wildfire. I started howling and crying.
My vison was blurred, could not feel my tongue and lips and could feel smoke
coming out of my ears. My mom immediately pulled the Maggie bowl dragged me to
the washbasin asked me to rinse my mouth and took a bottle of cold water from
the refrigerator and made me gargle.
She ran to the kitchen
and picked up the bottle of homemade ghee and rubbed it on my tongue, lip and
asked me to sit silently. After about 15 minutes she just looked at me burst
laughing and said I was a scene out of Tom and Jerry cartoon and wish she could record
it. Well; variety is the spice of life and guess I understood it as spice is
life. As I calmed down, my mom handed over a plate of curd rice. My evil plan
was to skip one meal of curd rice. I ended up eating
curd rice for the whole week
I still did not
want to accept defeat. I looked at mom and went “Listen, how should I know a
product from US would be so spicy? Especially when major population does not
eat even a bit of spice”. My mom could not control her laughter now. “Well,
that’s why there are ingredients mentioned in the bottle. Basic common sense is
to read it and understand what has been put in it. That’s all to it”
I finally
accepted defeat and after this incident, I decided before I bury that bottle,
let me check what’s mentioned in the ingredients, which caused me to cry. The
sauce had the world’s two spiciest chilly in the ingredient. No wonder the
cover of the bottle had a picture of a devil with flames coming out from his
mouth and ears. Yet the ignorant or rather know it all me decided to experiment
with it.
And with that my
dream of eating Maggie stayed a dream for quite sometime till I moved to a
hostel during my undergraduate. And yes you can never beat your mom in a
battle.
Superb piece of writing as Always.
ReplyDeleteAs always perfect
ReplyDeleteAwesome writing puri
ReplyDeleteHaha nicely done ✅
ReplyDeleteWonderful article, made me nostalgic
ReplyDeleteMom's always right... keep writing .❤❤
ReplyDelete