I don't like the food here. It's not that I hate it... it is palatable. Aside from the assorted tropical fruits that we can get when in season, rice, beans, and chicken for every meal of every day are rather bland. I hadn't considered it before, but I have never seen a Haitian restaurant. Come to think about it, I believe I have seen a restaurant for every culture other than Haiti.
When I think of the foods that I have had here, 2 different things come to mind. I believe I've shared this before, but the repetitive menu of chicken, rice, and beans has been a blessing to me. So many people in this country eat to survive. If food is put on your plate, you eat it, and you eat all of it because you can't be sure when you will get your next meal. What is considered extreme measures in the states is unthought of as such here. A bug in your drink? Remove it and keep on drinking. Ants on your food? Blow them off and keep eating. When I step up to the kitchen bar only to see rice and beans again, it is a great reminder to me to be grateful for what I do have and pray for those who are not as blessed materially.
Yet, I have also been thinking of the bland taste of food. Like I mentioned, there is such a wide assortment of fruits and vegetables here in this country. I have fallen in love with avocados, figs (mini bananas), zabrico (like an apricot), and mango juice (the fruit, though... yuck!). You would think with so many unique flavors that the dishes would be tasty. Yet, in 4 months here I have come to find otherwise. It is not that our cooks don't like flavorful dishes, they just are unfamiliar with new recipes. They are stuck in a rut of what they've always known and don't know what they are missing. I've gone out on a limb to make some more flavorful foods (like guacamole!), but all of the Haitians were hesitant to try a new taste, and prefer to stick to the ordinary. They are missing out on what great things they could be having.
I find such a stark comparison to Christians who are hesitant to step out in faith when God calls us to do great things. Rather than taking a leap into the unknown and experiencing for ourselves what great things God has in store for us, we shrink back, hesitant that anything could be better than how we are currently living. We lack faith that God is there with us in the unfamiliar. Yet, He promises that He will always be with us (Deuteronomy 31:8), we only have to trust Him.
The various recipes that I am sharing with the cooks are not meant to shame them for not knowing or make them sick. I only want them to experience the joy of trying new foods. God wants the same for us... He doesn't want to bring us harm or humiliate us when we step out in faith. Rather, He desires for us to experience for ourselves His power in us and give us the pleasure of bringing Him glory. “We live by faith, not by sight.” 2 Corinthians 5:7