Cafe

Thought for food

Travelling and exploring traditional and staple food, especially in Asia, Canadian writer and photographer Naomi Duguid has co-authored six award winning books on food and travel. At the forthcoming GALF 2015, she will launch her first solo book ‘Burma: Rivers of Flavor’. Food, she explains to Café, is the way communities express themselves

Herald Team

Herald Café: From law to travel...tell us about the transition.

Naomi Duguid: The best way to understand a place, I think, is by looking at what’s there and asking yourself questions about the how and why. Food is fascinating and a wonderful route to understanding.

HC:Most of your books seem focussed on Asian/Southeast Asian cuisine. Are you personally fond of this cuisine?

ND: The first six books I wrote were in collaboration with my ex-husband. We looked at staple foods in many places, first in a book about Flatbreads, and then in a book about Rice. Well Asia is a heartland for both, and the Indian subcontinent especially. I find food and different communities' ways of expressing themselves in their food traditions so interesting, and nowhere is that more evident than in Asia.

HC: What makes your cookbooks so appealing?

ND: I know that people respond to the mix of stories and photographs, along with the recipes. I am interested in daily fare, home cooking, and in celebrating that, rather than in “palace food” or festive dishes. I want people to engage with the food traditions of others and appreciate them. And the best way, it seems to me, is through the daily home cooking repertoire.

HC: How did you collate the material for your books jointly with your ex-husband Jeffrey Alford as well as your solo book ’Burma: rivers of Flavour’?

ND: One of the important elements in making the books that we did jointly was that we each made solo trips and we also made trips as a family with our kids, starting from when they were very young. 

HC: What are your memories of your your first visit to Goa?

ND: We were in Goa about 12 years ago. We learned a lot about food, photographed rice cultivation and more, and based ourselves at Palolem. I’m looking forward to spending time in Panjim and to eating fish!

HC: Tell us about your book ’Burma: River of Flavours’. 

ND:The Burma book is very special to me, party because it was the first book I did on my own, but even more because when I began it, Burma was a place oppressed by its military-totalitarian government. People were very afraid of the authorities. In the course of the three and a half years that I worked on the book, things began to evolve in Burma, and as a result, people became less fearful.

The book starts with Burma Basics: some flavourings and ingredients that come in handy for assembling Burmese dishes. The cuisine reflects Burma’s geographical location and its history: it’s clearly Southeast Asian (fish sauce, shrimp paste, etc are essentials for many dishes), but there’s more than a hint of the Subcontinent, for example in the way shallots/onions are used to underpin flavour, and the use of turmeric, and more…

HC: Tell us about your next book, ‘Taste of Persia’.

ND:My next book, due in September 2016, engages with the Persian culinary region, that is, Iran and the Caucasus countries plus Kurdistan. Of course, Persian cuisine has had a huge influence on places much farther away from Iran, such as Pakistan and India, and also on the cuisines of central Asia from Afghanistan to Uzbekistan and beyond. But I wanted to connect the dots in the immediate region. Georgians, Azeris, and Armenians each have very distinctive cuisines, but they also share common threads with each other and with Persian tradition. That’s why I think of the area as a Persian culinary region. And it’s a way of contextualising, for as we know, food is fluid and evolves through movement of peoples, expansion of empires, and trade. Present-day foods in the region reflect that.

The book has travel stories and recipes, a chapter devoted to fruit, for example, because it plays such a huge role in the region’s cooking – one for breads, another for rice dishes, and so on. The vegetable dish repertoire is huge and the soup’s amazing.

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