As a person who grew
up in a modest rural community in Darong, Sta. Cruz; I always love looking at
how my family and relatives survived during my childhood days where everything
we had undertaken, be it work or play, were all done with the spirit of simplicity.
From a traditional bahay kubo house we reside out of light materials to walking
1.5 kilometres to fetch potable water from a flowing source provided by San
Miguel Corporation, life in my early years was truly plain, simple and
beautiful.
And the foods were no
exemption. Since we don’t have electricity yet and refrigerator was a mere
imagination, we had to cook our dishes all in the evening so that we could
consume it the following day for breakfast and lunch in school. Which always
prompted my mother to cook the usual dish I love, inun-unan nga isda.
Almost every day we
consumed inun-unan. It formed part as a delicacy we always settled to because
aside from being easy to prepare, it cost lesser and it also taste really good.
Today, I still request my wife to cook it even if we could already have some
variety of dishes that we could choose to. Every time I climbed mountain or go
home after a long trip or a marathon, inun-unan will always be a ready dish in
our dining table. Even if it will be the only dish available every day, I will consume
it and will not refuse eating it for the rest of my life. It is the only dish I
know that would always ignite my appetite, no other dishes. It is beyond
compare.
What makes inun-unan
so magical for me? I guess it goes beyond the taste. More than being palatable,
inun-unan is the glue that bonded our family, especially my siblings, together
until now. It was one of the witnesses of our lives’ survival, a fitting
ingredient why we developed an extraordinary love for each other, no matter
what life and instances gave us.
At some point in our
home today my wife would cook inun-unan but refused to eat it sometimes. My
daughter Majesta, on the other hand, might have acquired my appetite as she
also love eating it. For all eternity, inun-unan will be a dish especially
designed for me and no matter what happens, I will always love eating this dish
I called “poor-man’s dish” because it allows me to reconnect with my past.
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