by KATE HUNTER
Last Monday, my friend Lou asked me over for lunch, ‘We’ll be healthy,’ she said, ‘I’ll cook you an nice piece of salmon.’
‘Lou,’ I replied, ‘We’ve known each other since we were seven. Have you ever seen me eat fish?’
‘Oh my God!’ she said, ‘Are you allergic?’
‘No,’ I replied, ‘I just don’t like it.’
There was a silence. Lou couldn’t have been more shocked if I’d told her I was actually a man and had been since primary school.
‘What if I make a nice soy dressing?’
‘No, really. I’d prefer a cheese sandwich.’
‘How can you not like fish? Did you have some off sushi once? Maybe you choked on a bone?’ Lou persisted.
‘No. I just don’t like the taste. It’s so … fishy. It makes me gag.’
It was beyond her comprehension. To Lou, fish is a treat, a luxury. I’ve tried to appreciate it, but I can’t.
Sometimes people will offer me some white fish – saying it doesn’t taste fishy.
‘What’s the point of that?’ I say, ‘If it’s not fishy, why are we eating it? Even the most unfishy fish will be fishier than chicken, so can I have some of that please?
I hate being like this. It’s so unsophisticated to not like fish. I’ve been to barbecues where my hosts have splashed out on a whole side of salmon but I blush and say I’d prefer one of the kids’ sausages.
I’ve been Barramundi fishing in the Northern Territory but ate bread and salad instead of the day’s catch.
At a pinch, I can choke down a prawn, but an oyster is my worst nightmare. I see an oyster and all I think is, ‘ear infection.’
Who knows where this aversion to fish comes from? My parents are big on it. Mum even likes tinned fish, which to me is cat food with fancy labels.