Comfort food is an edible hug. It can be most anything, but it automatically
transports you to a place and a feeling.
Normally that feeling is of warmth and love. That comfort food feeds the soul its
fuel. I have enough comfort foods in my
life to write dozens of these entries.
But I need to start with a 62 mile bike ride for a salami sandwich.
When I was a teenager my family lived in Luxembourg,
a cycling-crazed nation nestled between France, Germany and Belgium. My Peugeot road bike was my freedom on which I
explored most of that country. As a
fourteen year old I spent virtually all daylight hours on my bike, often
hanging out with friends, but just as often out in the countryside soaking in
sycamore-lined roads through miles of farms and miniature, story-book villages,
castle ruins, and vineyards. I would
stop and eat from time to time and one of my favorite snacks was a simple
salami sandwich on a baguette with butter and a Coke. A summer day could hardly be better enjoyed
than out in the middle of the European countryside with my sandwich and my
bike.
This past summer my family bought me my first road bike
since college. I have been riding it
with childlike joy throughout the Santa Cruz area, particularly enjoying its
beautiful coast and feeling like I am 14 again.
I am blessed with some great friends who also road bike, so we planned a
big ride around Monterey Bay. I figured
we could make it a family event – the guys would head out at sunrise, circle
the bay and meet our families at a park on the other side. I knew immediately what I needed for my
picnic lunch – that salami sandwich!
We had a stunningly gorgeous ride – the
sunrise silhouetted the cement ship of Aptos, migrant workers picked
strawberries in Watsonville backdropped by the Bay, seals barked at Moss
Landing, the tourists strolled in Cannery Row, and golfers went for par in
Spanish Bay. The most surprising part to
me was the way the farmland brought me back to Luxembourg. The soil mixed with morning air creates a
scent that only comes from a farm.
Almost 30 years later, here I am again – exploring on a bike, cruising
through farmland, using all my senses to remember it all. And there’s a salami
sandwich waiting for me.
After a morning on the bike, we pull into the park and are
greeted by our families. My stepdaughter
pulls out a giant sandwich she made, and I know it’s for me. If it weren’t for the soreness, I would swear
I was 14 again! The kids run and yell,
occasionally running past the picnic tables to snag a carrot or a chip. The adults are charmed by the grins and
giggles of the infants. The dads relax,
telling our wives of the beauty of sunrise, the colors of the surf, or how
“easy” 62 miles on a bike really was. As
I eat my sandwich, savoring the combination of brie, salami and crusty bread, I
am in the Luxembourgish countryside again with a world to explore, surrounded
by family and friends and a life of dreams ahead of me.
The Sandwich
Comfort foods can change, they can be dressed up and altered
to meet our evolving tastes and needs.
The salami sandwich of my youth really was nothing more than a handful
of salami on butter-slathered baguette. In
my 20s I discovered it dressed up in Paris – add arugula and some brie and you
have a wonderful adult version of the same sandwich – and it tastes beautiful
as you stroll around Notre Dame’s exterior.
My post-ride comfort sandwich was much the same – a crusty baguette,
lots of butter, a few large slabs of brie and more salami than you think is
appropriate. Partner that with some San
Pellegrino mineral water, some chips, carrots and follow it with some amazing
chocolate chip cookies – now that is an edible hug.
1 comment:
What a beautiful day that was. :-)
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