Andorion, on 03 January 2020 - 01:33 AM, said:
amphibian, on 02 January 2020 - 09:26 PM, said:
My father grew up in the countryside of Nepal and what he says is that they are at least fifteen different kinds of rice, mostly wild rice variants, in the 1950s and 1960s. The rise of basmati as a near mono culture for him has been something he disliked. I grew up mostly in the USA, yet he made sure we had lots of dal and rice variants.
And we never ate rice plain. *Shudders*
Rice monoculture is a problem yeah. It has become a thing with the widespread use of HYV seeds. Lots of older people talk about the huge variety of rice that used to be available in the past.
And yeah, no one has just plain rice. Put dal in it! Or vegetable stew we call jhol. Or meat curry. or fish curry. Mix it all up. Rice is there to serve as a base to other stuff
I looked up one of my favorite childhood Iranian-American restaurants (Iranian cuisine being the source of what became biriyani in India). They're not only still thriving, they've opened up a second location that's close to my (surviving) elderly relatives. 'Our Basmati rice is directly imported from the bottom of the Himalayas. We prepare our rice in the same manner that our ancestors made it hundreds of years ago, through which most of the fattening starch is rinsed out. The result is an extremely light, fluffy-textured, virgin-white rice that tastes like no ordinary rice.' Granted, I renounced all refined carbohydrates almost a decade ago now, so I won't be eating the rice (or the delectable falooda with rose-water). But the sour cherries (even dried) are probably a yes, given their low glycemic load (tart cherry likewise being one of the few fruit juices that won't cause blood sugar to spike if not eaten with ample fiber)....
'sour cherries. More than any other nation, I think we love sour.'
https://www.youtube....h?v=ysYGCtGYGdc
But what was really making me happy enough to post something here---I went to the NYT Sunday Review (op eds, usually of higher quality than their regular columnists) in search of insight on the possibility of WWIII, and found a bizarre series of poetic 'editorials' about some sort of dystopian sci-fi hellscape. For a few moments I literally thought I might be inside a nightmare. Then I read: 'Novelists, poets and artists imagine life in the age of surveillance.' Lol....
https://www.nytimes....rveillance.html
This post has been edited by Azath Vitr (D'ivers: 05 January 2020 - 07:21 AM