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Kyung-ran Jo - Tongue

Here you can read online Kyung-ran Jo - Tongue full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. City: New York, year: 2011, publisher: Bloomsbury USA, genre: Prose. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

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Kyung-ran Jo Tongue
  • Book:
    Tongue
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  • Publisher:
    Bloomsbury USA
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  • Year:
    2011
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    New York
  • ISBN:
    978-1-59691-651-7
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    5 / 5
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Tongue: summary, description and annotation

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An erotically charged, elegantly written novel that marks the first publication in English of author Kyung-Ran Jo, a literary star in Korea who has earned comparisons to Haruki Murakami. Emotionally raw and emphatically sensual, Tongue is the story of the demise of an obsessive romance, and a womans culinary journey toward self-restoration and revenge. When her boyfriend of seven years leaves her for another woman, the celebrated young chef Jung Ji-won shuts down the cooking school she ran from their home and sinks into deep depression, losing her will to cook, her desire to eat, and even her ability to taste. Returning to the kitchen of the Italian restaurant where her career first began, she slowly rebuilds her life, rediscovering her appreciation of food, both as nourishment and as sensual pleasure. She also starts to devise a plan for a final, vengeful act of culinary seduction. Tongue is a voluptuous, intimate story of a gourmet relying on her food-centric worldview to emerge from heartbreak, a mesmerizing, delicately plotted novel at once shocking and profoundly familiar.

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Kyung Ran Jo

TONGUE

A NOVEL

Translated by CHI-YOUNG KIM

JANUARY

The surface on which you work (preferably marble), the tools, the ingredients, and your fingers should be chilled throughout the operation

The Joy of Cooking

CHAPTER 1

LARGE PUPILS, TINTED CHARCOAL and light brown. My eyes once gleamed of strong resolve, shined with tense sensuality. I cant stand these eyesweepy eyes reflected on the bottom of the copper pot, eyes expecting something from someone despite the knowledge that disappointment will be the result. Please dont cry, I cant cry. I close my eyes, open them. Now its all right. I flip over the pot and hang it on its hook. Thankfully my tears are gone. Now I will myself to reach over to the rotating shelf where I keep various oils, select the bottle of extra-virgin olive oil, and turn toward the nine students who have gathered here at seven P.M., their clothes slightly rumpled from the day.

Gathered here at Wons Kitchen, which is outfitted with a ceramic stone pizza oven, refrigerator, dishwasher, coffeemaker, blender, mixer, food processor, electric rice cooker, gas stove. Assorted copper pots and stainless-steel pans hang from the ceiling in order of size, from large to medium to small. Along with glasses, a ventilation fan, food-waste compressor, electric grill, shelves, vent hood, heating station, island, backless stools, and a pot of vigorously boiling water.

Grandmother always had a large table in her kitchen. The family gathered around the rectangular wooden table, as simple and unadorned as a desk, and when night fell each went his way. Even after she moved to the city, Grandmother always kept a bamboo basket of fruit or vegetables in the middle of the table. By leaving ingredients where she could see them, she was inspired to make new dishes every time she passed by the table. Sometimes the basket would hold warm, just-cooked yams or potatoes, white steam wafting up. Grandmother was the best cook I knew, but she didnt do much to yams, potatoes, or pumpkins other than steam or bake them. She could have sprinkled cheese over them while piping hot or added broth to make soup or pure, but didnt. Grandmother would say these things are supposed to be eaten plain, because youre eating the earth. By the time I realized that Grandmothers words symbolized her life, her simple, beautiful life, she was no longer with us. Morning sunlight streamed through her east-facing kitchen windows, rippling through the pear and apple blossoms outside, and I would shield my eyes from the sun and slurp up soup of shepherds purse.

Beep. Its the oven timer.

I top the dough with sun-dried tomatoes, thick slices of mushrooms, basil leaves, and mozzarella rounds, sprinkle two tablespoons of olive oil over it all, and slide it into the preheated oven. It bakes for fifteen minutes until the cheese melts, the crust browning nicely, and then we have todays dish, sun-dried-tomato-and-mushroom pizza. Today I dont think I can make little snacks to share with the students or talk about the weather just like its any other dayuntil the pizzas done. I explain to the students how to dry tomatoes at home using their ovens. Sun-dried tomatoes have a more intense flavor and scent than fresh ones, but theyre an expensive specialty food. I still have ten minutes. I reach into the basket in front of me and hold up whatever my hand closes around first. An apple.

Variety and spontaneity are two of the most important things to keep in mind when you cook.

Everyone focuses on the apple Im holding at eye level. In the Middle Ages, monks believed that this fruit contained the will of the Creator. The apple was said to taste of nature, of mystery, of the shapes of clouds and of the sound of wind rustling the leaves on trees, but the monks forbade its consumption. All because of the sweetness that filled your mouth when you took the first bite. They believed this sweetness was a temptation, one that would get in the way of concentrating on Gods words. And after the sweetness dissipated, a tart, acidic zing lingered on the tip of your tongue. The monks thought this was the taste of poison, of the devil himself. This sweet, sour, tart taste of an appleits this taste Eve found irresistible.

If you dont like mushrooms, you can use an apple instead. Slice an apple into pieces about five millimeters thick. Youll be able to experience something different, in contrast to the mushrooms light blandness. Its a little sweet, but the crunch can be very refreshing. I wish Id picked up an eggplant instead. Ive never tried substituting an apple for mushrooms in a pizza. Lies. Was it his lies Id wanted? The first taste of an apple, the serpents wordsas sweet as honey. The second taste, banishment from the Garden of Edentart. Unlike other fruits that are soft when ripe, an apple should be firm. I slip the small paring knife from the knife block, the crowded home to twelve knives. Instead of cutting the apple crosswise, I slide my knife into it at a slant, creating a V shape, carving out an indent, and pop the piece into my mouth.

Its my first kitchen. In the beginning, I had everything in this kitchen, just like Grandmothers. Sunlight and plants and a clock and newspapers and mail and fruit and vegetables, milk and cheese and bread and butter, tall glass bottles filled with fruit-infused liquor and smaller bottles of spices, the homey smell of simmering rice and the aroma of herbs. And two people.

When we started looking for spaces that could be home to a larger kitchen for our cooking classes, I insisted on a wall of large windows. I didnt consider basement locations even if they were huge and the lease was dirt cheap. My desire for windows must have come from memories of Grandmothers kitchen. I believed that everything came in through the kitchen, and for that we needed to have tall windows that would guarantee good light. Even when I traveled I always looked for restaurants that opened onto the street. He was the one who found the two-story building rich with windows. My excitement reached new heights even before we finished renovating the kitchen to make it roomier. This was only three years ago.

Grandmother was right. Just having a state-of-the-art kitchen doesnt make the food taste better or the cook happier. The most important thing in a kitchen isnt how delectable the food is but how happy you are while youre there. And you always have to leave the kitchen in that contented state. When I was young I would bolt into the kitchen as soon as I got home, but right now I find myself backing out of it just as rapidly, as if an unknown force is yanking me out.

Startled by the second buzz of the timer, I drop the apple to the floor. A drop of off-white juice splashes on my calf. Im rooted in place, watchingPaulie, whos been lying quietly under the table, grips the apple with his teeth and scurries out. The V mark on the apples red peel looks like a stain that cant be removed even with bleach. If you cut an apple in half, youll discover five seeds as big as a watermelons, studded in a star shape in the middle of the round surface. Is it that I want to continue thinking that an apple isnt just an apple, that its a secret sign only I can see? I pull the crispy, well-baked pizza out of the oven, thinking, Ive come so fartoo far. I close my eyes, open them. I open my mouth to say, This is the last class.

Ive read so many books where the story starts with a man meeting a woman, and then they fall in love. But my story begins with loves demise. I used to read Hemingway for the simple reason of his being a gourmet. What Hemingway said is wrongit isnt only men who discover themselves after experiencing physical pain.

CHAPTER 2

DESCENDING DUSK AND COLD WEATHER and heavy snows and gusty windback when this was what January meant, I didnt actually know anything about the weather outside or the drifts of snow or wind. I was always behind windows, cradling in my hands a steaming cup of French-pressed coffee or a mug of cognac-enhanced hot chocolate. I would watch the heavy snow coming down in the late afternoon, dip a piece of warm buttered baguette in my hot chocolate, take a bite, and exclaim, Wow, theres so much snow! And that would be it. Hot and sweetthat was January. Heat and sweetness were also the first sensations to go.

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