81

Bon Appetit

Posted March 28th, 2006 in Reflections by M

Omosh has for the past few days been a man intimately acquainted with the nuances of suffering. His stomach has been objecting strongly to its contents, and has expressed this displeasure in powerful bursts of diarrhoea. Omosh has made his own beaten path from his workplace to the facilities, and periodically the rhythmic thumping of his footfalls as he plays Russian roulette with his digestive system, rushing frantically for the White Throne.

While Omosh equalizes the pressure within and without, those not on the know are wont to react differently. The most drastic of these was the old man found trembling under the bushes. Upon further questioning, the old man revealed that he had fought in Burma and he knew the sounds of an Elephant gun when he heard one.

But after a brief rule on his ivory throne, Omosh returns to his duties without the bother of washing his hands, and within no time is whistling merrily and tunelessly as he energetically applies his hands and knuckles to kneading the chapati dough. For Omosh is the head chef at one of our leading eating establishments.

As he kneads the dough he hails the arrival of Kamash with a hearty laugh. Kamash is supplementing his income from the catering industry by striking out with a bit of farming. In fact, it is from his farm that he has just arrived, having spent the entire morning digging and furrowing the soil. He did not posses any oxen but what was beyond question was that after a hard morning’s toil he indeed smelt powerfully like one.

A harried waitress collides heavily with Kamash and within moments the isles of a beef stew lie around the islands of Kamash’s big, muddy boots. A son of a soil most days, today he was exceptionally so. Earthy, loamy soil clung grimly to his boots. With a muttered oath Kamash stepped out of the stew, earth suddenly cascading.

The waitress, a believer in wasting not and wanting not, gatherers the beef and soil seasoning into a bowl and it’s back to the stove for some quick heating.

Someone comments about Kamash’s hand-eye coordination and Omosh is overcome in paroxysms of mirth. He takes his hands out of the chapati dough and slaps his grimy thighs with amusement before resuming duty. Tears roll down his cheeks and mix freely with the chapati dough

Kamash has by now removed his sweater and reveled that underneath is a vest whose pigment flits from white in odd areas to a golden brown underneath the armpits. Anxious to get to work, Kamash stuffs several bunches of kale under his left arm and a bundle of french beans under his right. Realizing that he needs to somehow carry the knife, a passing waitress is convinced to hold it in such a fashion as to allow him to grip it with his teeth. And it is thus Blackbeard sets off for duty.

Bertha the cook shrilly demands for Omosh to step on it. Bertha’s red eyes are the very image of the determined employee to work off a debilitating flu. As she deftly spins and flips the cooking chapati with her left hand, she blows her nose with her right. To introduce variety she occasionally changes hands.

Prudence clicks noisily as she discovers while slicing ginger she has inadvertently sliced a passing cockroach into half. After all of a second of thought, Prudence leaves little doubt that in for a penny, in for a pound. She proceeds on to slice the cockroach into quarters, then eights and soon the very finely chopped ginger seasoning is ready.

It is at this point the consignment of meat arrives. It is in a creaking cart being pushed by a beefy, sweating gentleman in a bloodstained white coat. The ashes from his unbelievably pungent cigarette are absently shaken off into the meat.

Omosh temporarily leaves the dough to inspect the meat. This he does simply by grabbing pieces from the cart and examining them from a range of a couple of inches. Some of the pieces of meat appear to be anatomically impossible to be beef or goat or sheep. The discovery of whiskers at the bottom of the cart triggers a fierce bargaining session and finally Omosh accepts the meat.

The butcher is stopped at the door by a bellow and a moment later he reaches into the air and easily catches the dog collar that has been tossed at him, as well as an admonishment to be careful what he forgot in his cart.

A trio of waiters appear with dishes from a tables they have cleared. They quickly divide the leftovers into three

1) White gold – Barely touched food & salad. These are promptly put on new plates and sent right out
2) Gold – Food sightly contaminated by tomato sauce, etc. This is rinsed in the rusted container in the corner.
3) Copper – Unrecognizable. Tomato sauce, chill, already been chewed, etc. This is converted into soup

And so before we sit down to our meal let us let Omosh hurry to relieve the tensions within

PIC OF THE DAY

Thank ye Ms K

After an initial panic, President Mwai Kibaki walks confidently after remembering that his fancy dress outfit, a clown, is safely in his office

En Vogue – Hold On (To Your Love)
  • http://www.guessaurus.com Guessaurus

    There is a cockroach in your blog M – run, squash the thing :D :D :D – just marking territory y’all

    Would you like it roasted or fried?
  • http://farmgal.wordpress.com Farmgal

    second!
    wont eat out for sometime…thanks M!

    =)) My dear, we both know you’ll have your usual and very solid lunch! Ugali wembe, kichwa mbuzi na tropical
  • http://prousette.blogspot.com Prousette

    third, off to read now…

  • http://prousette.blogspot.com Prousette

    Having been in the department chiefly concerned with making sure bellies are filled at meal times for a while now, I know what goes on in kitchens, what may happen accidentally or not. I have had my own share of accidents bila boots and all like the day we had visitors and my nicely fried beef decided to get acquainted with the floor. I knew that day why my mother always insisted on the kitchen surfaces being spotlessly clean, no shoes and that bird flu victims do not cook.

    Why oh why did you have to bring in diced cockroaches, and it is about lunchtime! Evil man!!

    :D So you served them fried beef, cooked ‘from the ground up?
  • Ms K

    LOL I won’t tell you about a certain maggot-infested meal I had juzi!!

    Do tell! There must be a reason why you went for seconds

    YAY!! The pics are back! And that one is a winner! LOL M you need professional attention!

    Si we go kula that cake at the new Java later?!

    I’m starting to starve myself in preparation

    Food is rinsed?? LOL I’m never eating out again!!!

    Haiya! Where do you live? Why do you think your salad is so clean? Omo with Powerfoam plus + PowerPearls
  • Ms K

    M you are now a marked man! How are we supposed to ever eat again?

    Kula mtakula!!!

    Kwanza there is a story I have about some beef we bought that tasted like a cross between liver and pork.

    That was probably donkey. Or Githae’s rat

    Trauma!

  • http://www.kenyanmusings.blogspot.com KM

    I am so not reading that post. I will say simply that I am 7th. Period,,,and I am out. I am of feeble heart.

    Yes you are! And no you are not!
  • http://chezmamamia.blogspot.com Mama Mia

    LOL@ white throne. Hilarious piece.

    I have always preferred home cooking anyways…. ok (I confess) I’m a sucker for comparing hotel bills with how much less it would cost to whip up the same (fresher, more savoury) meal at home.

    =P~ Aha! But do home cooked meals have all those nutritious additives?
  • jogoo wa shamba

    You are so nasty M! diced cockroach?i was just about to go to a “favourite joint” for a late lunch but thnx to you my appetite is gone kabisa. i will never eat out again!!

    :)) Boss, tomorrow you’ll he shouting ‘mimi Ngombe’ with the rest of us!
  • Shiroh

    I have protested against this post. Thanks Jehovah i don’t consume food from leading establishments rather those that Chrenyan described.

    luckily i have already eaten. I can imagine that chic blowing her nose with the other hand Yuck M.

    ;) Wacha wewe! You were at Mama Caro’s fyekaing 3 chapos and a goat head! Can you confirm or confirm these allegations?
  • Shiroh

    As HG, i ban any comment booking on this site. First position is reserved for HG.

    You just wait you reach 100! Utaona tu!

    On a lighter note , do you imagine meeting with that cockroach when eating.

    You’d be surprised how many organisms you’ve eaten in your lifetime and are blissfully unaware!
  • Cathy

    Hi M.

    I’ll be sure to nominate you for the KayBees http://kenyaunlimited.com/kaybee2006.

    That’s nice! Thanks!

    It’s a bit absurd that it is bloggers who will vote rather than the readers.

    Anyway, all the best. The winners will probably be those with the most friends on KBW but all the best anyway.

  • http://www.ntwiga.net/blog Ntwiga

    Yuk.

  • http://www.ntwiga.net/blog Ntwiga

    Actually, double yuk.

    Bon Appetit
  • http://amkeni-wakenya.blogspot.com deeply perturbed

    gross! gross! totally gross!

  • http://amkeni-wakenya.blogspot.com deeply perturbed

    on second thot yummy yummy!
    kwani what do we think we get in this places food from all places and with every kind of face.

    Exactly. Variety
  • http://wachirasam.blogspot.com sammie

    Aptly describes the scene at Westlands Market, Burma, Ngara Market, etc where the “employed” class go for lunch. Yaay! Finally a man who can speak for the people, unlike our politicians.
    Nice break from all that.

    Oho! Do you think the Hilton is any different?
  • Jezebelle

    Hey, if U guys survived boarding school food………this is nothing – besides, what doesnt killyou makes you stronger – ha ha ha
    M – one sick twisted ( yet funny ) bastard !

    Much, much stronger!!
  • I

    I: Whats for dinner?
    M: Chapati Mende, na soupu paka….
    wow… wow… i am not eating out for the rest of the month….

    Don’t forget the real hot dogs!
  • http://udi-m.blogspot.com Udi

    that cockroach is a source of protein. ama am i the only one who thought weevils in high school were a delicacy

    Don’t forget salts!
  • Jezebelle

    weevils were a sure source of protein and thx to four years of eatingweevil laced foods, my immune system is up to par !

    This post reminds me of some joint in Industrial Area backin the day…pretty popular joint by the way- but the meat they served was hard as hell…I mean u could chew on one piece for like 5 minutes and the dam meat would not budge…so one customer decided to ask what kind of meat it was……dude was thrown out of the establishment and i dont recall anyone ever daring to ask the same question ha ha ha

    You of course assume it’s meat … =))
  • eclipse

    M aki how can u do this to us…I was on my way for Sammy’s joint for hot chapatis but now all i can think of is diarrhoea! If i starve to death i will let my pple know its coz of u so that they hunt you down!

    Whiskers? dog collars?……….lemme go vomit!

    I’m sure you had your usual FILLING lunch!
  • eclipse

    On 2nd thots….I went to boarding..actually one thats ranked in top 5 of most notorious hell hole boardings in kenya ie naivasha B, Gilgil academy, Mumias Boys, Molo academy, Mirinda (one of these) and i survived and i eat at westi daily so what am i worried about? lemme rush for thos cockroach, whiskered, doeg meat infested, sweaty, diarrhoea smeared chapatis and enjoy them to the fullest!

  • Jezebelle

    eclipse.. I was in Molo Academy too – what year were U there ?

  • http://Nakeel.blogspot.com Nakeel

    Why are some pple pretending here and they were at some boarding schools with the worst cooked food not mentioning dirty ever sweating chefs? uji spiced with the big rat called Mice..

    M are you ready for war with mum’s when kids refuse dinner today?

    Kids eat dirt by choice … they can’t be helped!
  • eclipse

    @Jezebelle >> I neva said i was in molo A….i said i was in one of the 5 schools….cleard 1995! u?

  • Jezebelle

    @ eclipse – oh my bad ..myopia is a biach ha ha ha ha – 93 – Im an old crooner !

  • http://www.guessaurus.com Guessaurus

    already been chewed? Dude, you kilt me :))

    Boarding school did indeed make men out of our digestive systems (is that insulting digestive systems or men?) Oh well… :D

    I am sure we have eaten worse than cockroaches/mucus/sweat/ciggies without our knowledge (I balk at cats/dogs – although they are a better alternative, not that I know but…) so everyone, lets get stuck in -we might as well go to town – or is it the forest? and collect creepy crawlies and get on with it.

    M – you arent getting any awards for stating the obvious, actually we would rather not talk about it. Ama aje people :(

    Just some food for thought (pun intended)
  • Jezebelle

    @ Guess – I will not partake in the hunt for the creepy crawlies – however,feel free to invite me over for the meal made out of them – make sure u garnish them creepy crawlies with enough spices …and also lube me first with some alcohol…

  • Jezebelle

    Its like the dude who sells roasted maize….U know dude goes to the bathroom and theres not a tap or loo in sight…we knew what the deal was- we jus turned a blind eye ha ha ha

    Plus the smoke always makes noses run ….
  • http://www.ciikuandhermess.blogspot.com Ciiku

    I just reached halfway and then I had to stop and come and read the comments….
    [puke session coming soon]….. lemme go read the other half…… Oh Jeez!…. *groan*….

  • http://farmgal.wordpress.com Farmgal

    M lol @ ugali wembe…
    reminds me of some jokes sis used to tell….
    those kiosk jamaas would hola…nani matumbo na chapati? then they would slide the plate on the mabati table..kama ni yako you weka mkono and stop the plate…i hope you get the gist

    Nowadays they toss the plate like a frisbee ….
  • http://www.guessaurus.com Guessaurus

    @Jez (can I call you that -hmm, that took more letters than typing the whole works (sorry, living here, I even get my name shortened, by the last vowel, I got bored of trying to tell everyone that my name is *****a, not *****) … sorry got lost in the mini rant right there :(

    What I meant to say before I was sidetracked by… er.. me was : Its like the dude who sells roasted maize….U know dude goes to the bathroom and theres not a tap or loo in sight…we knew what the deal was- we jus turned a blind eye ha ha ha exactly…

    M here just pointed out what we have always known but ignored because we didnt wanna think of it that way. You know what they say about never sending your food back in a restaurant cos you will have pissed off the waiters, and in turn the chefs, which means that they are gonna get you back, irrespective of the Michelin rating of the place.

    Have you ever looked at the guys that deliver meat at your local Halal meat place – at their jackets – how bloody and dirty they look? Ever wondered whether that blood is all ‘cow’? Ever wondered how often that jacket is washed, and how much bacteria is cooking on it before it gets to your refridgerator? I know we cook the meat thus obliterating the whole bacteria thing, but I am just going on about what we can see, not what we cant see.

    You’d be surprised how reslilient some bacteria have become!
  • http://www.magaidi.com/diary Magaidi

    Aiyaiya M!..OK so no more ‘chapati n’gombe’, ‘risaiko’, ‘karanga chapo’, ‘ugali wembe’, ‘engine’ na matumbo to go. Well atleast the memory of this fades or hunger dictates, whichever comes first.

  • Jezebelle

    Thats why we are told to say ” Our Grace” before eating – with that said..Im about to go get me so ENO – Ya never know…

    Talk about being prepared :))
  • http://hkigutha.blogspot.com universally speaking

    I’m a firm believer in being safe from the things you are ignorant about. So, if that chapo/supu ya engine tastes good, keep at it, and let sleeping dogs lie.

    Besides, firing the elephant gun every now and then never hurt anyone (outside a 2 kilometre radius, that is).

    Or those in direct line of fire — such a gun going off in Burma has decapitated a horse in Ngong Racecourse
  • http://www.guessaurus.com Guessaurus

    @universally speaking – I am adopting you – check your mailbox for the checkbox :D

    :D I’m waiting …
  • mruhya

    A welcome break from the politix

  • mruhya

    …unpleasant but welcome

  • mruhya

    @eclipse – how apt your name is today!

  • http://farmgal.wordpress.com Farmgal

    ahhhh baording school…weevils were the other source of protein!
    plus extra salt from that sweaty cook ..I cant remember his name though
    oh this one time a chic chewed on a toe nail! how gross is that?

    One man’s sweat is another student’s flavour
  • http://www.blogger.com/profile/6588394 Mocha!

    Good Lord M!

    You have now tainted my visions of returning home and enjoying that ka-nyam chom or Karanga with Ugali or Mukimu I have missed all this years! EEWWWWW!

    Well … now you know why it tastes so goo!

    It reminds me though of the stories I used to hear and still do of weird stuff being found in foods like TV dinners, bread or milk. Like the rumours that were going around them dayz of ‘Maziwa ya Nyayo’, ati severred fingers or baby mice were found in them.

    Talk about Health and Safety in the work place……..this kind of establishment is :-&

  • http://milonare.blogspot.com Milonare

    I really laughed at that old man hiding in the bushes having been reminded of his days in Burma

    Hahahahahahahah eish Hehehehehehehehe

    Its frightening to think of what happens in those kitchens!!

    And what goes on in our poor stomachs!
  • http://prousette.blogspot.com Prousette

    Methinks the high school food was a little better though once in a while someone came across a whole snail in the veggies (ewww), not to mention hair in the morning tea and the copious amount of weevils, these never harmed anyone.
    In some boy school I know of no one washed their plate properly for a whole term and there was no typhoid outbreak or anything, you eat on the plate wipe excess “mafuta” with a piece of paper, run water over it or even leave it the way it was until the next meal.

    On a totally different note we used to hear that kerosene was added to the food to keep the students from getting “too hot in the loins”, and true there was a smell you would not quite classify as spicy when the food was served.

  • eclipse

    To summarize this whole discussion…M just brought up something we all know and all REALLY DONT GIVE A DAMN! ABOUT…so lets enjoy the meals we eat and hope God is taking care of us via the HCl in our stomachs…..and those who went boarding stand a better chance!

    What more proof do we need that God loves us than surviving lunch??
  • Jogoo wa Shamba

    @Prousette (incidentally, how do you pronounce the name?) was the kerosene really effective? there were such claims where i went to school but i tell you if there was any kerosene, it was having the reverse effect… gitch what i mean?

  • Jogoo wa Shamba

    @Eclipse – Now that you KNOW, i mean really KNOW :DL-) if you try to eat the meals again… wacha tu. God only takes care of your ignorance but now that you have been enlightened, YOU ARE ON YOUR OWN!!>:)

  • http://chrenyan.wordpress.com Chrenyan

    Friend of mine was recently up to the elbows in fish bones and fish flesh and enjoying the intricacies of the task when he discovered that the fish must have been carnivorous, for there dead center of the squishy fishy’s innards was a well-preserved, nicely fried fly (can’t type that tooo fast – ever shrubbed while typing?)!

    That has been his last visit to the joint…

    I seem to recall some episode in the states when someone found a finger in their meal — talk about fish fingers!
  • http://habarikenya.blogspot.com kritik

    aahh…. the joy of “nyanza dishes” pale westlands market.
    nothing like ugali na kuku choma.
    leta supu saucer…

    Sound like you have several years experience under your belt!
  • eclipse

    i feel u kritik! i visit mose’s choma joint…dont care if the fish is fly flavoured or the Ug is sweat seasoned…i will enjoy..

    jogoo was shamba ….pity ur stomach aint made of steel….btw might u be having the bird flu? being a bird n all?