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Food and flavors are a great memory trigger. For me, my childhood memories of faraway Bangkok and Singapore are steeped in the foods that I strongly connect with that period in my life: steamed blood cockles with pungent sauce, pad Thai, pad see ew, pad lard na, larb, sour fish curry, kang keo wan, fish bladder stew, nasi goreng. Whenever I have my favorite childhood Thai dishes, the memories of monks clad in saffron robes wandering our street in the morning collecting their daily meal comes to mind. It’s the same with Charles whenever he makes black-eyed peas, fried chicken or cornbread. He’ll inevitably start talking about his mother at the dinner table. His fried chicken, black-eyed peas and corn bread may not be exactly the same as those that his mother made, but the connection is still there. And so one of our dearest friends, Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan, has spent the past year working on her debut book, “A Tiger in the Kitchen,” which is a memoir of food and family. It’s the ultimate cure for connection and culinary home sickness.
Come dinnertime anywhere in the world, how many family cooks are looking in their refrigerators or pantries and scratching their heads, wondering what to do about the evening meal? Sadly, many buckle under and surrender to buckets of chicken, huge burgers and fries, or blimp-sized burritos to feed the family.
Organization is the key to saving your sanity and relieving all the stress of completing this daily chore. Hi Ho, Silver! The Six O’Clock Scramble to the Rescue!