My wife keeps a curry plant to flavor her beautiful Indian cooking. Our boys have taken to snapping off the greenest leaves and eating them raw. Their chewing fills the air with a sharp, fresh scent. Yesterday, the plant was brought indoorsโfrostโto spend the night on our low kitchen table. When the boys found it there this morning, they couldnโt resist eating curry patta (leaves) with their oatmeal.
The episode stirred a cherished memory from my earliest days in the Peace Corps (my wife and I served as education volunteers in Malawi from 1996-98). I arrived at theย school many weeks before the term began and decided to pass the unfilled days climbing Mt. Mulanje with a good friend, Mr. Smith. We hadnโt received our first monthโs allowance, so our supplies were limited, and on the last day of our expedition we had nothing left to flavor our Jungle Oatsยฉ but the dusty remnants from a tin of Rajah Curryยฉ. We laughed about it then, all the harder knowing how funny it would seem 20 years later to have eaten curried oats.

If you must eat them, curried oats are best enjoyed in a cedar hut at 6,000 feet, with a cold, sharp wind blowing down off Chambe peak or some other pointed summit. They are equally satisfying on the morning of autumn’sย first frost in the company of two young boys with adventurous palates. Either way, the Peace Corps hasย introduced me to an odd but joyful combination of oats and curry.
Read more about the Peace Corps experience, Malawi, and curried oats.


Leave a comment