Category Archives: Bandwagons

First bite

We were at Forbidden City, the culinary capital of my childhood. I was around 12 years old. I’d just finished a bowl of steaming hot Sizzling Rice Soup — the only vehicle through which I’d willingly eat vegetables — and was about to tuck into a plate of Mongolian beef. Despite years of effort on my dad’s part, I’d been ordering nothing but Sizzling Rice Soup, Mongolian beef and Red Pop at Forbidden City for about a decade.

Dad usually had either mu shu pork (my brother, step-siblings and I always crowed in horror when he applied the “poison sauce”), the palace beef (“It’s almost just like Mongolian beef!” he’d tell me. “Just try a bite!”) or the Mandarin Jumbo Shrimp. That visit, it was the shrimp.

I don’t know what was different about that day. Was I hungrier? Was I maturing? Was I just trying to prove that I really didn’t like anything?

I suspect it was the latter, and the first taste of Mandarin Jumbo Shrimp proved me wrong. The shrimp was crisp and juicy, coated in a sweet and tangy sauce with a little bit of heat. It was heavenly. I almost wanted to try something else, just to find out if everything on the table was as revolutionary as the Mandarin Jumbo Shrimp.

I did not try anything else on the table. I don’t know if I even admitted that the shrimp was delicious. I went back to the Mongolian beef that night, but that single bite of Mandarin Jumbo Shrimp had changed the way I looked at food.

Take your young people to see “JoJo Rabbit.”

I wasn’t sure about Taika Waititi’s new movie, “JoJo Rabbit,” when I first read the premise. It’s about a 10-year-old German boy during World War II who aspires to be a Nazi. And Hitler is his imaginary friend. But I love Taika’s work and my fave Sam Rockwell is in it, so I knew I’d go see it.

It’s PG-13, but I debated whether or not to take the kids because of the subject matter. We decided to go after talking to someone I trusted who’d already seen it, and I’m so glad we did. It was a great entry point to talk to the kids some more about dangerous ideologies and what to watch out for in their online communities.

It was also hilarious and heart-wrenching, which is not something I ever thought I’d think about a movie about Nazis.