"There is more simplicity in the man who eats caviar on impulse
than in the man who eats Grape-Nuts on principle."
-- G.K. Chesterton
Tobiko (flying fish roe) 12-30-14 |
"Under cover of the clinking water goblets and silverware and bone china,
I paved my plate with chicken slices.
Then I covered the chicken slices with caviar thickly as if
I were spreading peanut butter on a piece of bread.
Then I picked up the chicken slices in my fingers one by one,
rolled them so the caviar wouldn't ooze off and ate them."
-- Sylvia Plath, The Bell Jar
My husband gave me bacon jerky and a few jars of caviar for Christmas.
I gave him a few bottles of whiskey and some boxes of shotgun shells.
Tobiko caviar on mother-of-pearl caviar spoon 12-30-14 |
It wasn't exactly The Gift of the Magi, but in our cockeyed way, it was a touching gift exchange nonetheless.
Anyway, yesterday I cracked open the little jar of red flying fish roe, called Tobiko, for my lunch.
I ate the itty-bitty, glistening, jewel-like eggs all alone by myself on crisp griddled toast spread with a tiny smear of wasabi.
I am neither a caviar expert nor a caviar snob.
I just happen to like it. Not all of it. I have my favorites. I prefer the milder stuff, and the tinier the eggs better. I like them to "pop" when I eat them.
The big fat soft ones? Nope.
Basically I take the same approach with caviar that I do with wine. It's a simple formula: if it tastes good, I'll eat it. If it doesn't, I won't.
And this happened to taste very good.
Maybe today I'll try it with a tiny bit of jerky and see if it makes good bacon and eggs.
Maybe today I'll try it with a tiny bit of jerky and see if it makes good bacon and eggs.