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The instinctive
joy that comes to us from our palate, together with our natural urge to
investigate and classify, not to mention the possibility and increasing
desire of having access to expensive consumption, has led to entire universes
building up around gourmet food and wine. Like the bar in Star Wars, these
universes are inhabited by both simple and complex organisms, organisms
of all races and religions such as journalists, associations, guides,
reviews, books, critics, sommeliers, gourmets, traders, producers, importers,
nutrition experts, dieticians, restaurateurs, consortiums, and so on,
together creating a Babylon of languages stretching between two extremes:
the Gluttons and the Wise. The first group includes those who on any occasion,
whatever the real or presumed level of refinedness of the dish and/or
place, reach the end of the meal with a haughty air and the fatal words:
"Yes, but it can't compete with a good old home-cooked roast".
This is perfectly justified criticism in its own way and as such no reply
is needed. They're right. The second group features those who like to
break everything down into particles. Beginning with comparisons between
Indo-European traditions, they conclude with a score card bristling with
chef's hats, forks, glasses, pineapples and all sorts of other useful
symbols. The procedure is scientific and as such not open to criticism.
Any further comment is useless: they too are right.
We Guardians
by statute and by vocation are careful to acknowledge Man's human side,
made up of the inclinations and mechanisms he is born with and which develop
with him, and of that hierarchy of external systems, created by history
and the environment, which we call Civilisation, Culture, Education and
an infinity of other names. As an individual and as a species, Man is
certainly evolving steadily, adding to and modifying his original baggage,
making changes to his faculties and the way of perceiving others, himself
and the world of phenomena. Many people try not to look closer at Man's
real nature, preferring to imagine him how they would like him to be rather
than what he really is. If we were truly honest with each other when the
umpteenth immigrant from God-knows-where slaps his sponge on our windscreens
at the traffic lights; if we remembered what we thought of doing to the
guy on the scooter who cut in front of us; if we really looked at and
tried to understand the phenomenon of violence in the stadiums, we wouldn't
be wasting time playing at being natural born peace-lovers and anti-racists.
These noble intentions are the product of that collective Super-We which
enables us to live together and believe in a future which is getting better.
But there is no point kidding ourselves we are already today what we hope
to become tomorrow. The biology we are born with in fact is many generations
behind our best intentions. It is essential that we know and recognise
our biology if we really want to pursue these intentions.
What conclusions
can we draw from this if we apply this humanistic mentality to gourmet
food and wine? All men are born with a taste for food and in an abstract
way are similarly attracted by flavour and quality. As the years go by,
however, in each of us develops what Luca Gargano so aptly described as
the Mental Palate. This expression refers to the action of cultural gratification
over the mere gratification of taste, the influence of the imagination
on the stomach. Just to give an example, we would attribute a wild Scottish
salmon, line-fished and smoked in the traditional way, with a hierarchical
superiority over similar produce. We may find satisfaction in the geographical
origin, in the type of cultivation, or in the personalised packaging -
in other words in an infinite quantity of factors outside the strictly
organoleptic characteristics of the food. Leaving aside the perception
of its actual superiority, our Mental Palate will be stimulated by the
satisfaction of partaking of a product known to few and consumed by even
fewer. We might say that the cultural gratification, in this case the
feeling of privilege, leads us to secrete the hugely powerful hormone
of Vanity, responsible for a great part of human satisfactions. In turn,
this acts by stimulating an enjoyment of cerebral origin which appears
to be directly sensorial to anyone who has not understood the trick. We
don't know whether the hormone of Vanity actually exists, but if it has
not already been noted and classified, we Guardians will take the liberty
of encouraging medical research in this direction.
Thus
the Pleasure we gain at table, though it may appear univocal, has compound
origins. Only in part is it physiological, while a variable and sometimes
predominating percentage of it is purely intellectual. We need to accept
this fact with serenity, as we do the others which describe how our mind
and body actually work, and attempt to draw the due consequences. If we
know we can rely on this dual order of stimuli, we can slip easily and
without feelings of guilt from the side of the Gluttons to that of the
Wise, passing through the intermediate shades and away from the main route
along the secondary paths, like the one which leads to the little fortress
of the Truly Refined.
As for
the study and criticism of wine and food, let us conclude by highlighting
a fundamental feature of our way of intending the Cosmos. The objects
of taste, whether we are talking about a bag or a patè, cannot
be evaluated with a procedure which goes from the detail to the general.
It only has sense to break down the overall view frame by frame if you
are playing a game or studying a code for transmitting single data, but
if you do this you need to know that the overall assessment may not be
the same as the sum of all the details. If you look at a sea lion standing
still, you would never imagine how graceful it can be when it swims. In
the same way a wine should be appraised in a single movement: by drinking
it. Is it good? Is it exceptional? Or is it like medicine? It is no use
starting with a consideration of the soils and the yields, going on to
examine the colour and the smell, describing and evaluating the tiniest
stimuli to the palate and nose, in the belief that you can reliably sum
together the marks for the single components of the product. The difference
between the first and the second method is just the same as between two
people in a meadow when one shouts: "A pheasant! How marvellous!",
and the other notes down: "A wild gallinacean of medium size"
and clamps a ring through its foot. A wine or a dish is quick to reveal
all its class or its tricks to the real connoisseur. Only afterwards can
he begin to take it apart, right down to the last element - and not for
the pleasure of pulling off the wings of a butterfly but for the pleasure
of understanding it. |