個人資料
正文

I Gave Up Baking

(2017-04-08 20:50:25) 下一個

You know the feeling that things you thought

bullsh*tty suddenly start to make sense and

things, even exciting discoveries, that used to

make sense no longer do? I have felt that way

a few times in recent years but today I will

focus on bread-baking.

 

It appealed to my sense of accomplishment and

yearning for freedom. An amatuer could do it well.

Michael Pollan, in his book "Cooked," described

how after trials and errors he made decent Tartine

bread. Moreover, the American baking scene is

teeming with inspiring stories of self-made

free-lance entrepenures. Last Dec, I read about

one guy who quited his IBM job, went up to

Portland, OR, opened a successful bakery and

wrote "Flour, Water, Salt, Yeast."

 

I dabbled in baking artisan bread a few times with

mixed results. As interest grew, I invested

in the art with more reading and tools of the

trade. I disclosed my ambition to a friend and,

after enthusiastic encouragements, she warned:

"Watch the electricity bill grow, though."

 

Well. I don't have to now. I give up and it's not

because I suck at it (I do). Wheat is fattening

for me (and likely my son), as I have discovered

over time. This is one big deal. Since my great

awakening to health, I have chosen to eat to live

and not the other way around.

 

Then I read 

 

    “The wise man then followed a simple way of

    life – which is hardly surprising when you

    consider how even in this modern age he seeks

    to be as little encumbered as he possibly can.

    How, I ask you, can you consistently admire

    both Daedalus and Diogenes? Tell me which of

    these two you would say was a wise man, the

    one who hit on the saw, or the one who on

    seeing a boy drinking water from the hollow of

    his hand, immediately took the cup out of his

    knapsack and smashed it, telling himself off

    for his stupidity in having superfluous

    luggage about him all that time, and curled

    himself up in a jar and went to sleep.  And

    today just tell me which of the following you

    consider the wiser man: the one who discovers

    a means of spraying saffron perfumes to a

    tremendous height from hidden pipes, who fills

    or empties channels in one sudden rush of

    water, who constructs a set of interchangeable

    ceilings for a dining room in such a way as to

    produce a constant succession of different

    patterns, with a change of ceiling at each

    course? Or the one who proves to others and to

    himself that nature makes no demand on us that

    is difficult or hard to meet and that we can

    live without the marble-worker and the

    engineer, that we can clothe ourselves without

    importing silks, that we can have the things

    we need for our ordinary purposes if we will

    only be content with what the earth has made

    available on its surface. If they only cared

    to listen to this man, the human race would

    realize that cooks are as unnecessary to them

    as are soldiers.”

 

from Seneca the stoic and that sealed the deal.

[ 打印 ]
閱讀 ()評論 (5)
評論
7grizzly 回複 悄悄話 Wow. High praise indeed. Please be sure to thank him for me.
Leaving the tribe, intellectually at least, seems necessary to gain
different perspectives, e.g., on health.
暖冬cool夏 回複 悄悄話 回複 '7grizzly' 的評論 : I showed your writing to my husband this morning. He, who is a very picky guy btw, also complimented on your English writing. His comments are like "your great variations in structures and words", "脫離了中國人寫英文的影響和結構,比你(me)高幾個level”. Just some input, as I know he won't comment here. Happy reading and writing!
7grizzly 回複 悄悄話 As for Seneca's writings, I think I should read some everyday.
7grizzly 回複 悄悄話 Thank you again, my friend for liking and your kind words.
But please don't feel more justified not cooking for loved ones ;-)
For me, I try to influence people around me, mostly my son and dad, what's good food and life style.
The results have been mixed but I am hopeful.
暖冬cool夏 回複 悄悄話 A very interesting article and self-enlightening discovery. I am just lazy at cooking these days, and I only bake when my daughter is back home or when I have guests. As you mentioned in the last post "為道日減", simplicity is what we shall be after. Again, I like your writing, your word choice and structure, though I have to read more than twice the Seneca part to understand it. Thank you for sharing.
登錄後才可評論.