"Already, I have, unfortunately, delayed too long. I would like to see everybody please in the salon -- when all will be revealed."
Thus did
Hercule Poirot summon his fellow passengers (and murder suspects) for the
denouement of Death on the Nile.
It is time I did the same.
Yesterday in mystery in the kitchen, I challenged you to put
on your sleuth hats to discover why I did not find my just-cooked Mexican porcupine
meatballs to be very satisfying. Just like Agatha Christie, I presented you
with a likely list of suspects:
- ground pork
instead of hamburger
- arborio instead
of long-grain rice
- cilantro instead
of parsley
- omitting
pan-grilled cumin seeds
- omitting fish
sauce and honey for umami
- substituting
cumin for oregano
- adding serrano
and habanero
- the spice
combination of cinnamon, paprika, and ground cloves
- the cooking
method -- my adored Instant Pot
They were
all likely suspects, and everybody who enjoyed their roles as Jane Marple had a
go at almost all of the suspects, just as any Agatha Christie mystery would.
The discussion on the Facebook version of Mexpatriate was even more lively. I
tossed out several well-disguised clues to keep the discussion going.
I was impressed not only with everyone's enthusiasm (I shouldn't have been;
almost everyone enjoys solving a good mystery), but also with the mix of
intelligence and wit in the responses. You are a clever lot worthy of being
dinner companions.
I will confess that these two essays drew their inspiration from Neil Simon's
delightful sendup of murder mystery movies -- Death by Murder. In
the denouement, the host to the murder mystery, Lionel Twain (yes, it is that
type of script), chides his movie detective guests:
You've
all been so clever for so long. You've tricked and fooled your readers for
years. You've tortured us with surprise endings that make no sense. . . .
You've withheld clues and information that made it impossible for us to guess
who did it."
On
Facebook, I asked one of the guest sleuths, who was getting very close to
solving this minor food mystery, to remember her Aristotle. Go back to first
principles. What would be the first question a good cook would ask before
preparing a meal for himself? Or, more accurately, what would I ask? Because
that is the answer to the mystery.
Agatha Christie loved diverting her reader's attention to the extraneous. She
would then pull out one obscure inference and build her climax around it.
Just like I did. My hint was: "Almost everyone likes porcupine
meatballs."
The answer is not in the ingredients added or omitted nor in the cooking
method. I neglected to tell you that two Mexican friends thought the dish was
perfect. One asked for seconds. The other for thirds. From an objective
standpoint, the food was fine. (Even though I think the addition of either rice
vinegar or the fish sauce-honey mixture would have improved it.)
With my first bite, I knew immediately what I had failed to do. I had not asked
myself: "Why are you making meatballs? You have never liked
meatballs."
And that is true. I cannot tell you why, but I have never been fond of them. I
have had all sorts of meatballs throughout the world. Swedish meatballs. Meatballs
on pasta. Lamb keftedes in Greece. And in all manners of soups.
Perhaps, the more important question is posed by Marcus Aurelius. "Of each
particular thing, ask: What is it in itself, in its own constitution? What is
its causal nature?" To paraphrase the emperor, why on Earth do I not like
meatballs? They are an international culinary first principle.
I remember asking Susan, a one-time girlfriend, why she did not like the taste
of something. I do not remember what it was. But I do recall her answer:
"You are too analytical. I just don't like it."
It turned out that she eventually did not like me, either. And she had a long
list of analytical reasons to support her opinion.
But, in the matter of the meatballs, I will steal her first answer. I just do
not like them.
And thus is our mystery solved. I am just going to have to live with the
realization that no matter how I cook them, meatballs are always going to be a
flat experience for me.
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