Have you ever thought the tin of peas in the supermarket needs to be rescued because some absent-minded shopper has left it among the tomatoes? Lana has. Nicky won’t eat sweet food before midday. Food quirks. We all have them. But when we were discussing our lists around the office, it was me who rattled off a list longer than the Magna Carta.
I’ve come close on several occasions to climbing into a confined space and sobbing uncontrollably after burning my toast slightly beyond ‘brown’ and venturing into ‘crispy black territory’. It’s the kind of food misadventure that I just won’t stomach. It sends me bonkers.
I have no idea why I have so many OCD moments when it comes to eating or food preparation. I remember my first rather distinctly as a child. This is the part where I recline on my metaphorical therapy couch. Join me, it’ll be a hoot!
I was raised on a cattle station where we used to kill our own cattle for beef. I had no qualms helping my father cut the beast up and into various meat servings. Rump, shortbread, ribs. The tongue. Oh the tongue was the best part! Yet when it came to eating steak I abhorred it. It was always fault-lined with gristle and tough and chewy. I don’t like to chew. If I could unhinge my jaw and swallow my food whole, I would.
My mother knew that if I wanted a meat sandwich she had to cut the meat so finely that it almost existed entirely on the quantum level and couldn’t be viewed side on lest it be rendered invisible. She knew this. When I asked my father to cut me some meat for a sandwich (I was very young) he would lop it off in 2cm thick cuts that could be used to stabilise a wonky table.