Sunday, September 10, 2006

Couscousi

Googled myself and found this blurb I wrote for Viva Travel Guides:

How I ended up making couscousi in Naima’s kitchen is crazy, but so was life in Tunisia. My Austrian roommate Andreas, working as a soldier-extra on a Roman movie filmed in Carthage, met a loony Tunisian named Dali, whose mother Naima did industrial embroidery for big name Italian fashion designers (or maybe rip-offs) in a studio attached to their house in Soussa. Andreas, whose attempt at managing a café in Tunis had just buckled, decided to develop a line of windsurfing clothing instead. Naima would help him network in the textile industry. Andreas spoke English well, and some Arabic, but no French. I was therefore along for moral support and French-English translation. Naima adored Andreas, but when I showed interest in Tunisian cuisine, he was all but forgotten.

We were to prepare couscousi (couscous), the most typical of Tunisian dishes. Couscousi refers both to the granular pasta and the traditional dish that integrates it with vegetables and meat or fish cooked in a spicy tomato sauce. We had a gas burner, a couscous pot, and two giant headless fish. Couscous pots are aluminum and bulbous. This one was two feet tall and topped with a six-inch tall aluminum couscous steamer, the principle being that steam rising from the sauce in the pot cooks the couscous. 

We began with the steamer set aside and an inch of oil in the pot. Naima seized the first of a dozen long, shiny, dark green peppers. “Cut them like this,” she said, slitting the pepper lengthwise and dropping a pinch of salt inside. Eleven peppers later, she reached in gingerly to turn them as the skin blistered. When they softened she fished them out, dodging splattering grease.
Into the oil flew fistfuls of onions I’d sliced with teary eyes. She laughed at me, and the kitchen filled with the lovely aroma of frying onions. When the onions softened it was time to add tomato paste mixed with water, a ubiquitous ingredient in Tunisian cooking that must be handled carefully lest it overpower. She added chopped ripe tomatoes and a spoonful of powdery red pepper.

Our attention turned to making the couscousi moist and fluffy and ready to be steamed, hopefully avoiding the creation of a cohesive one-kilo mass of starch. “You,” said Naima, eying me pitiably, “will need to add a bit of olive oil so it won’t stick to itself. We begin very young learning to do this.” She sprinkled salted water over the top of the couscous. “With the hand like a fork,” she said, raking her fingers through the couscous over and over, “until the couscousi makes dough when one does this,” she squished a few grains together and they stuck. The couscous steamer settled into its place above the pot.

Into the pot went an outrageous quantity of chopped potatoes and fat chunks of orange squash. Finally Naima tackled the two slick and shiny headless fish that had been waiting in the sink. She wielded the serrated steak knife, her only weapon, and started scraping. The shimmering scales turned to gray sludge and dripped into the sink. I had never seen a fish cleaned, and her blunt instrument gave the process a kind of brutality that made me want to keep Naima on my side in a fight. After stripping the scales she attacked the dorsal fin, sawing until it relented and broke off. She then slit the belly and pulled out the purple and red guts.

“When will you return to the United States?” she asked me.

“In two weeks.” She looked up and her eyes flashed betrayal. She was hoping for a friend.

“That’s it?”

“That’s it.” She sawed away at the fish with furrowed brow, cutting narrow steaks from the head end, and wider pieces near the tail. She scaled the second fish and removed its fins. “Give me your phone number in the United States,” she said finally. “You must call me when you make couscousi for your friends.” She smiled as she gathered the innards and dropped them in the corner for the cat.
Naima coated the fish steaks with crushed garlic, salt, cumin and coriander, then found an old mayonnaise jar in the cupboard and started filling it with the red pepper used in the sauce. “Take this back with you,” she told me, “I dry the peppers and take them to the spice grinder. He brings them back to me like this, like powder.”

“But you have almost none left,” I protested.

“Every year I dry new peppers so it will stay fresh. Please, take it.” She added several pieces of fish to the sauce, and when the squash and potatoes were cooked she pulled them out. When the couscous was done she poured it into the serving dish and the sauce followed; it was brimming. As the fish fried on the burner, she integrated the sauce into the couscous until together they glowed orange. She flipped the fish steaks and arranged the squash, potatoes, and green peppers on top of the couscous. When the fish was done she added it to the display. “Taste a bit,” she said, and disappeared. I extracted a sauce-soaked piece of fish and slipped it into my mouth. I closed my eyes and felt the tomato, the warm red pepper, the musty cumin and coriander, and the mild white fish. It was all of Tunisia in one bite. Suddenly Naima was in the doorway chuckling. I cast about for the right compliment, but she didn’t need it. She had a necklace in her hand, painted with the symbol of protection from the evil eye: blue, white, and black. “Take this,” she said, “my daughter never wears it.” 

“Shukran, merci, and thank you,” I said, and the corners of her eyes crinkled before she turned away saying, “Bon, I suppose you should call the boys.”

Monday, June 19, 2006

Tunisian Routine

Week 4. The honeymoon is over. Sort of.

Time evaporates here. Even more so now that I've started teaching. In fact I'd be hard pressed to tell you what I've done since my last email. I've met a lot of people at Andreas' (Austrian roomate's) cafe (I have probably spent about half of my life in Tunis in this cafe. I love it. And the coffee seems to be getting cheaper and cheaper...). I've gotten lost in the Medina. I've spent days looking for a cheap CD player. I've learned a handful of Arabic words. I've been to the beach. I've observed a lot of classes. I've eaten so much couscous I feel like it should be bubbling out of my pores.

Last Friday I started teaching English, so I've had to cut back to only a few hours a day at the cafe. Fortunately I like my students, because otherwise I'm afraid would resent them terribly for putting an end to my decadent month-long extended vacation (mid May to mid June). Of course before I started work I heard all kinds of horror stories about students biting each other and throwing things, rich and obnoxious parents going postal, etc. etc., and I was visualizing a return to my life in Corsica. But so far my classes have been dreamy. The 13-17 year olds laugh at my bad jokes, and the 11-13 year olds are soft and cherubic. How much can they change in the course of a 3 week class? Ask me in 3 weeks.

I haven't quite figured out my routine here, but for the moment it goes something like this:

The sound of Andreas' alarm clock wakes me around 5:30. I have no idea how Ryan sleeps through it. It's piercing and fills the whole apartment. Andreas snoozes until...11 or so. Then (every morning) I wonder if it would really be too scandalous to go to the store and buy bread in my pyjamas. Every morning I convince myself to get dressed first, which includes ironing before breakfast, which I think should be illegal. We live on a hill overlooking the city, so on the way back from the store there is a view of Tunis wrapped in its sunrise-pink blanket of pollution, and I think to myself, 'how lovely. I think it was a good idea to move here,' or else, 'Whose life is this?' Then I go home, eat, finish planning my lessons and mosey over to the highway to hail a cab. Hailing a cab on a highway is hilarious. Also the fact that there are always people playing Frogger with their lives to cross the highway. I am surprised that there are not guts splattered over half the road and most of the cars. And then the Yellow Bus goes by, so packed with people that they are hanging on to the doorframe with one hand and the rest of them is dangling out over the highway. I seem much more concerned about this than anyone else. They will make it into town Insh'Allah. If Allah wills it.

Then I go to work, I teach for 5 hours, and am done by 1:30. Then I go into town and do errands. (Most of the time I don't actually do this, but I always mean to. Usually, the gravitational pull of the cafe is too strong for me. So I go there and 'Lesson Plan'. I plan my next mint tea, or smoothie, or I plan what music they will play next.) Then I go home for dinner, wondering why nothing on my list is done and saying 'roadwa insh'Allah'. Which is Arabic for mañana, mañana. After dinner it's time to go back to the cafe, or walk around downtown, and then suddenly it's midnight and time to catch a cab home.

This routine is of course punctuated by fun events. For example, one day last week one of the 4 dozen mangy cats in the neighborhood jumped in one of our windows and peed in my bed. Another time Ryan and I went to a gallery run by a retired military attache whose forehead occasionally furrowed into a perfect heart shape. He's looking forward to showing Ryan's work, which Ryan thinks is funny considering he's never seen it. Being from New York carries a ridiculous amount of weight here.

And now, I think it's high time to go back to the cafe.

Bislemeh, baby.

Friday, May 26, 2006

L'Arrivée à Tunis

Where to begin.... there's nowhere to begin, but if I start thinking about that I'll end up sitting in our apartment all day with flies buzzing in and out of my open mouth.

We are in Tunis, Ryan and I, and can be reached/visited at the following...

Résidence El Houda
Nord Hilton
Bloc D 3/1
1002 Belvedère. Tunis.
TUNISIE

At the end of three days we had an apartment, jobs, and a social schedule too booked to believe. Granted, the apartment is a little scuzzy, the jobs don't start until June 9, and the social schedule involves constantly wondering who you can trust (no one? everyone?) and scheming how to evade the undesirables. I apologize that this is a ridiculously boring account that doesn't begin to do justice to the past few days. Highlights:

*Haley and Ryan take a 22 hour boat ride from Marseille to Tunis and note remarkable similarities between these two cities. We arrived around 10 Sunday morning and were duped into paying 4 times too much for the taxi from the port to the hotel. Classic wetbacks

*Monday we went to Institut Bourghiba School (of redundancy) and verified we were signed up for Arabic classes in July, etc. There we met Saif and Tarek, who decided to take our apartment search personally. Saif allegedly found an apartment for some Italians last month who never got over this  kindness. 8 hours later we parted ways, still with no apartment. We felt almost guilty about it, but nothing was what we were looking for. We did see a decadent apartment with 3 balconies, 2 living rooms and a view of all of Tunis. But after careful consideration we decided that this was ridiculous and we could certainly find cheaper.

*Tuesday we found cheaper. Andreas the Austrian knows Omer the Macedonian who's married to Machin the Tunisian who's mother has an apartment to rent with no contract for 500 DT a month (417 dollars). Divided by three it's...cheap. And it's not far from A) work B) lots of chicha bars C) downtown D) the Sheradon. Andreas became our flatmate.  

 Chicha bar with Saif and Tarek

*Tuesday I also sprained my foot. And ate a really big sausage.


 
*Wednesday we moved in, observed classes at Amideast where we'll be working teaching English to kids, and went out with Andreas and Omer. At the party I spent most of the time talking to a beautiful French Algerian who is a free lance news correspondant in Iraq when he's not studying Arabic in  Tunis. He looked the part. I felt like he should have been carrying around a mic and a cardboard TV frame. His novel about American soldiers in Iraq came out last week. Bien sur.

*Thursday we went grocery shopping and started the futile process of cleaning the apartment, with the help of Judy the Cleaning Monkey. She does laundry, toilets, surfaces, dishes.... anything you want, JUDY does. (this cleaning product has a picture of a monkey on it and comes in 'Force océan' or 'citron'. We chose 'force océan'.)

 Haley and Judy

Ryan and Dinars

 Ry's room


*Thursday we also decided that the official food of Tunisia is Tuna. Everything you get comes with tuna: pizza, salad of any kind, olive oil and harrissa. Bring on the mercury. Welcome to Tunasia, have a brik à thon.

*Here we are, it's Friday, my foot is entirely healed, and we're about to go to Tarek's for couscous.

*Oh, and it's hot. Go go gadget sunblock.