For anyone who knows me (the "food Neanderthal"), you may already be shocked by the title of this article. So you may not be surprised to discover that I've invited the talented Karen McCann, author of Dancing in the Fountain: How to Enjoy Living Abroad, to share on the simple pleasures of the Mediterranean culture of eating.
———————————
โDo you have any idea how much fat there is
in a single almond?โ demanded an American friend who is in the throes of a deep
diet. โAs for olives . . . !โ
For one ghastly moment I looked down at my
plate and began to see my dinner as a minefield of calories, fat, salt,
cholesterol, mercury, white sugar and non-nutritive chemical additives. And
then I remembered Chris Bradyโs wonderful line in A Month of Italy: "There is never any talk of โlow calโ or
โcarbsโ or โproteins.โ For Italians, dissecting foods into these vulgar
terms is as offensive as breaking sexual intercourse down into steps and
sub-components.โ With Chrisโs words in mind, I came to my senses and tucked
into my dinner with renewed enthusiasm. If my years of living in Seville,
Spain, have taught me anything, it is that food should be treated as a welcome
friend, not an enemy.
The
Sevillanos consider it their God-given birthright to enjoy themselves every
day. They fling themselves into their social lives with the same zeal Americans
devote to their careers. Just meeting a friend for a cafรฉ con leche can take two hours, not counting the preliminary
debate about where to go for the best coffee at the best price. Lunch is even
more time-consuming; my record so far is seven hours one St. Patrickโs Day in
an Italian restaurant on the Costa del Sol. Dinners may last until four in the
morning. Late nights can run until dawn and not infrequently include walking
home through the silent streets, arm in arm with friends, and (if I am to be
totally honest with you) singing a medley of old show tunes, Beatles hits, and Besame Mucho. The neighbors put up with
it because they know that next time, they could be the ones serenading the
barrio.
I have never met a Spaniard or an Italian who was in danger of saying, in
T.S. Eliotโs famous phrase, โI have measured out my life with coffee spoons.โ
The essence of the Mediterranean lifestyle isnโt living in a particular
geographic region, itโs about how you live wherever you are. Itโs about eating
when youโre hungry, taking a siesta when youโre tired and
enjoying your wine without guilt or the nagging worry that Merlot really is totally
uncool. Like sex, eating for
pleasure isnโt something to be done indiscriminately, but it is something
youโll want to stay in practice for, so that you donโt lose your touch.
Guest blogger Karen
McCann is the author of Dancing in the Fountain: How to Enjoy Living Abroad. An award-winning journalist, author, editor and blogger, she has
been living in Seville, Spain, since 2004. Wanderlust has taken her to more
than thirty countries, including many developing or post-war nations where she
and her husband volunteer as consultants to struggling microenterprises. A
fourth-generation Californian, she lived in Cleveland, Ohio, with her husband
for two decades before the couple moved to Seville โfor a yearโ and decided to
make it their home. Today, she spends her time writing, blogging, painting, traveling the world and working on her next book.

Leave a reply to Randy Harwood Cancel reply