I’ve always wondered about comfort food—is it a specific type of food? The way Chinese Food is, at least as far as my apathetic Western pallet can tell, a specific type of food?
For a long time, I associated the term so closely with macaroni and cheese that I wouldn’t have put it past myself to point at a pot of elbow pasta and cheddar syrup and say, “please pass the comfort food?” Then it was linked to mashed potatoes and I thought “comfort” cuisine must have a Thanksgiving significance. Then I learned that BBQ chicken and collard greens comfort Southern diners. And one Sunday morning in college, someone glanced at my plate-sized waffle and clucked, “comfort food?” and I figured it must equate ‘hangover food.’
There is an element of nature versus nurture in defining comfort food. As a general rule, “comfort foods”are carbohydrate-based. I could pick a different comfort food any day of the week; I think my physical cravings manifest as emotional cravings based on what my body needs. Sometimes I want desperately for red meat—a temporary iron deficiency? Sometimes I can’t stop thinking about apples with peanut butter—low blood sugar? And sometimes I crave spaghetti, a carbohydrate through and through, even in whole wheat noodles, but it doesn’t always sound appetizing without Boca burger ‘meat’ sauce—not enough protein?
I think I like Latin American food so much because I like the taste of multiple saturated flavors blended together. Hot or cold; homemade, ordered, or microwaved, it tastes simple and complete at once. It sustains—nature. And yet, I recognize instantly the memory, the nurture associated with cheese melted on a tortilla. No meat, no beans, no salsa. In the toaster oven for two and a half minutes, fold in half, nibble. The crisped edges and soft, warm center remind me of sitcoms on the couch after school with my mom. I relish every bite—hold the relish.
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