The Primal Feast: Food, Sex, Foraging, and Love
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Susan Allport
Susan Allport is author of The Primal Feast: Food, Sex, Foraging, and Love and A Natural History of Parenting: Parental Care in the Animal World and Ours, among other books. She lectures widely on issues related to food and health.
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A Natural History of Parenting: A Naturalist Looks at Parenting in the Animal World and Ours Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Explorers of the Black Box: The Search for the Cellular Basis of Memory Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
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The Primal Feast - Susan Allport
One
AN EARLY-MORNING AROUSAL
It is 5:45 in the morning, and I have been awakened, as I have the past two mornings, by the sounds of a squirrel in the gutter near my window. It is searching for dogwood berries, I think, because a very old dogwood hangs over the house and because I have seen squirrels during the day rummaging through this and other gutters and eating those bright-red, lozenge-shaped fruits. Their mouths are stained red. Their teeth move as rapidly as the needle on a sewing machine.
Isn’t it too early for you? I want to ask this squirrel. No light at all is coming through the window at 5:45 on this day in mid-November. But I know the early squirrel gets the dogwood berry. That squirrels spend most of their time eating and searching for food is strange only to people who have their meals down to a regular three a day.
Anyway, I’m awake now, and it’s still early enough to get up and do something I’ve been promising myself I’d do for several months. I dress quickly, putting on wool socks, long underwear, and the warm fleece pants that I wear ice skating. Then I head outside and down into the woods behind my house. The crescent moon is bright in the sky. The leafless trees stand bold and black against the first pale, pearly light.
I walk slowly so that I won’t trip over any rocks or branches, but in fact I know this way well. It is the same path I take to the spring where I pick watercress or to the compost pile where my husband and I bring our wagonloads of clippings and prunings. Neither of those places is my destination, though, and I pass them both and begin to follow a stone wall that marks our property line down to the point where it intersects with another wall. There I see the tree that I intend to climb, a tulip tree about seventy-five feet high. It is split at its base into three tall straight trunks, and on one of the trunks, about a third of the way up, is a deer blind, a small metal seat placed there by a local carpenter who has our permission to hunt in these woods.
The carpenter also gave me permission to climb up to his isolated perch, though if he had any idea how much I like to have both feet on the ground and how little I like being up in something that sways when the wind blows, as this tree does, he might have done me the favor of saying no. I have climbed the tree twice now, during the day, and I know that the rungs screwed into the trunk are positioned so that the climb up is fairly easy. But still, one has, at the top, to hoist oneself up and over the wire supports of the blind.
And one has, of course, to come down. I would be enjoying myself a lot more if I didn’t know that. The first time I tried it, I started off with my hands and feet in the wrong position and wound up hanging from one of the trunks until I mustered the nerve and the strength to pull myself back up to the top and start over. My heart was still pounding when I got home, and my muscles were sore for days.
This morning it is so dark that I can barely make out the rungs. When I find them, they are strikingly cold as only metal can be. I climb quickly and am soon settled on the grid seat, with my gloves on and my binoculars ready, waiting. I check the time. It is a few minutes after six, and I watch as the marsh on my left, and then the apple trees surrounding the spring where the watercress grows, come into focus. What changes this land has seen, I think from this high vantage point. What changes this land will continue to see. The stone walls, rock-lined spring, and apple trees remind me that just one hundred years ago these woods were farmland. The bare understory of the woods, the fact that white-tailed deer have eaten all the young saplings with which a forest regenerates itself, makes me wonder what these woods will look like in another hundred years. No one knows,
a Cornell wildlife specialist who has been studying the question once told me, because we can’t make any predictions from the past.
He tells his students, though, that whatever the species composition is in the forests that their children and their grandchildren will walk through, it will be determined primarily by deer.
I look down at the forest floor, and the only low-growing plants I can see are white snakeroot with its flower heads, now fuzzy and brown, and winged euonymous, its small pale pink leaves hanging from its branches like the crystal drops on a chandelier. I don’t know why the deer pass up euonymous, or corkbush as it is also called, but I do know that white snakeroot contains the powerful and deadly poison tremetol, a compound similar to rotenone, the active ingredient in many pesticides. Deer, like other herbivores, have a great ability to detoxify compounds that would fell other animals, but even they are no match for tremetol.
So, I think, we may not know what the forest will look like in one hundred years, but we do probably know what it will taste like. Whatever trees and plants are allowed to survive and reproduce will have leaves and bark deadly enough to put off deer. A density of just eighteen to twenty deer per square mile starts to significantly change the forest understory. In these parts of New York, as in much of the east coast, deer populations are five to ten times that. It would be wonderful to think of that much wildlife just forty miles from New York City were it not for the long-term effects on the land and on all the other animals that live in these woods and are dependent on a healthy mix of plants for shelter, nesting materials, and food.
I fully expected to see some of these deer this morning, some of the many scores of deer that I pass every day on my walks or while driving in my car. In fact, I came out this early just to get an appreciation of what a population density of some one hundred deer per square mile looks like during the morning hours, the deer rush hours. I expected to be able to muse on the fact that only here in the United States, only now in the late twentieth century, are food supplies so abundant and available that we don’t have to bother with these convenient packets of protein and fat. And to point out that only because we are so removed from food production can we afford to let this one animal eliminate all the edible plants in our area, all the plants that we would need to survive if our supermarkets suddenly closed.
But my morning didn’t turn out the way I thought it would. I didn’t see any deer. I think I heard one warning snort of the kind that a deer makes to warn other deer that something is amiss, but I didn’t actually see a single white tail, a single flashy new set of antlers. Perhaps it was the bright blue socks that I had grabbed in the dark or my sneakers, which had never looked so white as they did dangling down from that seat. Or perhaps it was that the deer had already eaten everything there was to eat in this part of the woods and were on my lawn, sampling the rose of Sharon that I planted last summer and had forgotten to fence.
I don’t know. But what I did come to appreciate that morning, as I sat there on my high seat, trying to tuck my feet underneath me so that my shoes and socks would not be so conspicuous, was just how difficult it would be to actually bring dinner home this way. I understand very well the skills that it takes to grow food or prepare food, but somehow I never really appreciated the skills that it takes to hunt food. I don’t know what I was thinking: that hunters just set themselves up in trees, then pick off their quarry as the deer file by. But as I sat there growing a little hungry, cold, and tired of waiting, thinking of how much I’d rather be poking around in the spring for watercress, I was getting a new perspective on the traditionally male half of the human food-getting equation.
I found myself remembering some of the more remarkable hunting techniques I had heard about in the past year or so: hunters waiting for days at a spring or a fruiting tree; hunters in Kenya and Tanzania draping themselves in the red blankets of Masai herdsmen so they can move in close to zebra and gazelles without those animals suspecting their true intentions; Inuit hunters outwitting seals at their breathing holes with a method that resembles nothing so much as a cleverly orchestrated shell game. In it, two Inuit walk toward a breathing hole together and with carefully synchronized steps. Then, as they reach the hole, one stops and the other keeps on walking. The seal comes to think, naturally and mistakenly, that it is safe to poke its nose up for air.
Nature doesn’t give up its truths easily, a scientist once told me after spending five thousand hours in the field collecting data on the habits of a particular monkey. Or its foods, I thought, as I finally gave up waiting and began climbing down the tree.
Or its foods.
Two
THE DINNER PARTY
These thoughts about food and the quest for food began one night a few years ago, over a wine-dark lamb stew and a question posed by my husband. We were having friends to dinner, and at some point during the evening, he asked us all what role we would have played in a much simpler, subsistence society. In truth, no one in such a society would have had the option of spending their days in any other way than in the near-constant quest for food. But my husband got across the idea that what he wanted from us was what we thought our deepest talents were, what we could contribute in a subsistence society and be happy in the doing.
My husband was sure how he would have been occupied ten or twenty thousand years ago. He would have been a toolmaker and a tinkerer. He would have been busy inventing new ways to build shelters, haul water, pick berries, and scrape the meat off carcasses. There were no declared hunters in our group that night; our friends saw themselves as storytellers, shamans, or medicine men. But I immediately knew that I would have been a forager—a gatherer of wild foods.
I answered scavenger
at dinner, but I didn’t mean scavenger in the sense of one that feeds on dead animals. Rather, to scavenge or search for usable goods—in this case, food—at no cost. That’s how I spent my summers when I was much younger and working at odd, poorly paid jobs on Cape Cod. During a bottle-washing stint at the Marine Biological Laboratories in Woods Hole, I lived in a tent and ate the giant clams called quahogs that a friend and I used to dive for, then stuff with various store-bought and wild ingredients. My favorite at the time was quahogs with black beans and wild onions, though I now suspect it was something that only a forager could love. Other summers, with Euell Gibbon’s Stalking the Wild Asparagus as my guide, I fed my friends and myself on chowders and stews made from mussels and oysters I had collected and on pies filled with hand-picked huckleberries. By then I might have been a better cook (or at least I knew to add lots of butter and cream to my concoctions), and one of those summer chowders is still remembered longingly by a certain Epicurean in my family.
Still, I had never thought of myself as either a scavenger or a forager before that night. I was a writer, a wife, and a mother, and foraging was just something I do every now and then to put food—food that is a little different, a little more interesting—on the table. So I was surprised at how quickly the answer to my husband’s question popped into my mind—and how sure I was that it was right. It made so much sense that I suddenly found myself counting the ways in which I knew it was true.
I know that I am a forager because I can’t start work in the morning until I have settled the question of what I’ll be cooking for dinner.
I know that I am a forager because although I can’t remember where I parked my car in a parking lot, I can always remember the exact spot where I found a stand of ostrich fern, a patch of lemony curly dock.
I know that I am a forager because, during the summer while other people are off playing golf or tennis, I spend my time searching for mushrooms. There are others like me, I also know, because I’ve spotted them in the woods with their baskets and pails. I’ve read their articles on morelists and fine foraging in magazines. I’ve even seen a cartoon about them in The New Yorker. In it, three people are outside on a porch with rain pouring down around them. A man and a woman sit despondently with golf club and tennis racket in hand, as a very cheerful woman stands in the doorway. "Well, it has been a great summer for chanterelles," she says.
I know that I am a forager because the books I like tend to be about food and the effect that food can have on a person’s destiny. I’m thinking, of course, of Growth of the Soil, The Good Earth, and the chapter in Far From the Madding Crowd in which Gabriel Oak’s sheepdog eats a dead lamb and then uses his new-found vigor and energy to drive all of Oak’s sheep over the cliff. Some of my favorite movies also have to do with food: Eat, Drink, Man, Woman, La Grande Bouffe, Big Night, and Babette’s Feast, in which Babette, a French chef and refugee, teaches the people of a small village in Denmark that food is more than just nourishment. It is pleasure, forgiveness, gratitude, and love. And I can’t forget Ermo, a film out of Communist China, in which a woman who makes twisted noodles winds up selling her body, blood, and soul in order to buy her son a television set. One of my favorite pieces of sculpture, carved out of quartz by an Inuit artist, is also about food. It is called Four Hungry Bears Dreaming of a Whale, and I saw it on Baffin Island when I was on my way to an island in Hudson Bay to observe a colony of thick-billed murres. Four white bears are walking upright and in a straight line. A white whale seems to float above their heads.
I know that I am a forager because one of my favorite things about my house—a house with many charms—is that it has a small spring in the woods that is carpeted with fresh peppery watercress in the spring and the fall.
I know that I am a forager because my favorite color is green.
I know that I am a forager because of the profession I’ve chosen. For how better to describe science writing than foraging for discoveries in different fields, scavenging for the ideas and research of others?
Most of all, however, I know that I’m a forager because of a very peculiar mental tug or nag that food exerts on my brain.
Let me try to explain. Let’s say that I am snacking on a piece of toast or a cracker with cheese, but then I get sidetracked by something—a telephone call perhaps, or a request from one of my daughters to help her find her book or her socks. I put the half-eaten morsel down on the table or a windowsill and seemingly forget about it. But sometime later, something inside my head won’t let me rest until I’ve gone and retrieved that bit of food. I don’t need to try to remember where I put it down. I usually walk straight to the spot, guided by this peculiar sensation of unfinished ingestive business.
I can’t be the only one to experience this near-magnetic attraction toward half-eaten food. Everyone, I think, must be built this way. But none of the people to whom I tried describing this phenomenon seemed to recognize it. That is, until I spoke with Lewis Barker, a professor of psychology and neuroscience at Baylor University in Texas. I called Barker especially to ask him about this because I knew from his writings that he was interested in both food and memory and had, at one time, thought a lot about something he called the Mom’s apple pie is best
phenomenon. How, he wondered, had the taste, look, and texture of his mother’s apple pie gotten into his memory in the first place, and how had it managed to persist there for decades? Barker, I know, would have had a great deal to talk about with Marcel Proust. And with Lin Yutang, the Chinese writer who said that patriotism is the memory of foods eaten in childhood.
Sure, I’ve experienced that,
Barker said during a telephone conversation in which I described my mental tug to him. Then we discussed how losing food could provoke this tug, but not losing our glasses or our keys. Those we had to find by a much more conscious reenactment of our movements—or if that failed, a thorough search of the house. What did Barker think was the reason for that tug, that mental honing in on lost food? He had always attributed it, he told me, to the fact that he was a tidy person and liked to finish what he started. But he also thought it might have to do with the fact that his parents grew up in the Depression and that when he was growing up, he was made to finish everything on his plate.
But I’m a fairly messy person,
I told him, and I grew up with an indulgent mother.
He was quiet for a moment, and then he began to slowly muse. Okay,
he began again. So there could be an entirely different slant to this. Like other animals, we humans have evolved in order to solve survival problems, and the most important of these problems is finding enough food to eat. Our brains have evolved to help us in this search. They are wired to sense food and to remember where to find food. And even though we’ve spent the last one thousand or five thousand years in a city, our brains haven’t changed at all. They are still wired in the same way. We are still foraging animals.
You can really see this in children, Barker went on to say, because of their increased nutritional and calorie needs. From the time his children were very little, they had always known everything there was to know about the food in the kitchen and where it was stashed: the chocolates on the top shelf, the cookies in the cupboard. A teenager doesn’t know where the dishwasher is, but she knows exactly what’s in the refrigerator,
Barker observed. She may not know where to find an auto parts store, but she knows every place to eat in town.
That night at dinner, I repeated parts of the conversation I had had with Barker, and though my own daughter resented the comment about the auto repair store, she agreed to a very informal test of the idea that children have an increased consciousness about food. I asked both her and my husband to write down on a piece of paper the foods that were in our refrigerator. Not the foods that were usually in our refrigerator, but the foods that they knew to be in there that very night. I thought my husband would have a fighting chance in this little test since he had put the groceries away just the day before. But still, he listed only items that were routinely in the refrigerator—cheese, fruit, milk. My daughter listed the foods that were actually there—Brie cheese, blueberries, two percent milk, raspberry and cherry yogurt, packaged and bottled yeast, et cetera, et cetera.
The next time I talked to my older daughter, a teenager with a remarkable memory for the events of her early childhood, I also asked her what she remembered about the kitchen and its contents. She was puzzled because very little came to mind. Then, a day or two later, she called me from school with a rush of food memories. But they were outside memories, foraging memories, memories of her and her sister collecting honeysuckle and clover blossoms, acorns, and hickory nuts and stashing them in their tree-house or in empty flowerpots. I could remember those stashes too, remembered cleaning out those pots in order to fill them in the summer and stopping to wonder at the strange assemblages inside. My daughter had also asked her friends at school about their early memories regarding food. That’s the game that we all played,
she told me, finding food.
It is more than a game for children in other parts of the world. Among the Alor of Indonesia, children are not given any food between their morning and evening meals, and they soon learn to forage for themselves by scraping food from cooking pots, raiding the fields for vegetables, and collecting insects that would be spurned by adults. Young Tallensi children in Ghana satisfy their hungry stomachs by eating toads and snakes, animals that are disgusting to older children and adults and that they too will spurn in time. Young Hadza in Tanzania, hunters and gatherers who live the way all humans lived before the advent of agriculture, are active foragers, collecting berries, the fruit of the baobab tree, and digging for tubers. These children make significant contributions to their families’ resources.
It used to be thought that children only foraged for themselves in agricultural societies and that, in societies in which people lived by hunting and gathering wild resources, children relied on their parents for food until they were adolescents. But this was a mistaken view that arose among anthropologists when too much emphasis was placed on the studies of just one group of contemporary hunter-gatherers, the !Kung San of Africa’s Kalahari Desert. Among the !Kung, children do not forage because of the nature of the !Kung resources and the long distances that !Kung women must travel to collect food. It is more efficient for them to stay in camp after they are weaned and crack mongondo nuts, the staple food of the !Kung. Studies of other hunter-gatherers, though, including the Hadza, have found that even very young children are active foragers. My daughters would have been happy growing up with the Hadza, though they might have objected to the fact that only boys are allowed to hunt with bows and arrows.
So this thing that Barker and I share, this enhanced food awareness on the part of children, is part of our mental makeup as humans, part of our survival package as we foraged for food. And it seems only natural that we would be made thus, with built-in tendencies to search for food, and only natural that traits that help in this search—a memory for food, for instance, where one is likely to find it, where one might have stored or left it—would be strongly selected for by natural selection. But only in the last twenty years or so have biologists begun looking at memory, memory in