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The Second-Best Sauce
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"There's no sauce in the
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world like hunger." You may think that your grandmother made that up, but
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actually it was Cervantes in Don Quixote , about 400 years ago. Neither I
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nor any of my friends are ever hungry except for a few hours on Yom Kippur, so
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I am unable to test Cervantes' proposition. I will concede it to him,
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however.
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I want to
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talk about the second-best sauce, which is "belonging." Food tastes enormously
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better when it is eaten in a place where you are accepted as a special person,
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special for something other than the color of your credit card.
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Iwas struck by this proposition about a month ago when I
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spent some time with my son in Los Angeles. In the space of two days, we ate
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four meals--lunch and dinner and then lunch and dinner again--in the same
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restaurant. My son thought the food was great; I thought it was only pretty
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good. He seemed disappointed that I did not share his appreciation of the food.
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A little later I realized what the problem was. The restaurant was a gathering
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place for people in "the business," meaning the Hollywood movie-and-TV
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business. My son was one of them. When he came into the restaurant, people
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slapped him on the back and said, "Great show, Ben!" And he slapped someone else on the back
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and said, "Great show, Tom!" (or whoever). This was his club, and that made the
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food taste great. But it was not my club.
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I can see
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many other examples of this in my eating history. The most obvious is the White
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House Mess. To eat there one had to be either a fairly high-ranking official of
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the administration or the guest of such a person. That is, eating there gave
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one a strong sense of special privilege. (When I was there we hadn't yet
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learned that access to the privileges of the White House could be sold for
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cash.) And this sense of belonging made the food taste great. But the cooks
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there were not graduates of the Cordon Bleu. The pièces de résistance
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were the cheeseburger, the hot fudge sundae, and the Tex-Mex food on Thursdays.
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Objectively speaking, one could get better food at any of six restaurants
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within two blocks of the White House. But the judgment of the food in the White
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House Mess was not an objective judgment.
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One doesn't have to eat in "high-class"
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surroundings to get this delicious feeling of belonging. For some time after we
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were married I used to tell my wife about the great meals prepared by Freddie
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the Cook. That referred to my college days. I had been the dishwasher at a
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fraternity house. The waiters were all members of the fraternity and ate the
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same meals in the same dining room as the other members. But I was not a
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member, so I ate in the kitchen with the other kitchen help who were not
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students and who were all "colored," as we used to say. We in the kitchen felt
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that we were getting the best of everything, better and fresher food than was
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served to the members upstairs. What it all was, I no longer remember, with one
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exception: For dessert I often had a quart brick of vanilla ice cream bathed in
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the wonderful syrup extracted from the sugar maples around Williamstown, Mass.
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But Freddie was really a mediocre cook.
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There was a time, probably
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now past, when medium-price restaurants would advertise themselves as serving
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"home cooking." They were trying to play upon the memory of home cooking as
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having been very good cooking. But the odds were against your mother having
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been a very good cook. It was mainly the feeling of having been part of the
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family that made the food there seem so good in retrospect.
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Good
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restaurants exploit this feeling. They know that you will enjoy the food more
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if the headwaiter greets you as "Mr. Jones" without having to look in his book
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when you come in. That is, if your name is Jones. Otherwise, to be called
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"Jones" spoils the meal.
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Ihave eaten in some three-star restaurants in my
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time--almost always on someone else's expense account. Only one of those meals
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was memorable. That was in a restaurant off the Champs Élysées where I ordered
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in the belief that it was veal with rice. Quelle horreur!
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Surely there are exceptions
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to my general rule. There must be people with palates so fine that even
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blindfolded they could tell the difference between food from La Tour d'Argent
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and food from McDonald's. And there probably is some food so good that even I,
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eating it in a strange place, would recognize its merit. But, in general, my
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rule holds. If you are not hungry, eat where you belong!
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