Dinner with the DyingIn the past few months, I’ve had occasion to share food with those preparing to enter eternity relatively sooner than I am. Yesterday, I was visiting a terminally ill aunt when dinner arrived. The nurse put down the tray, lifted the lid, and murmured (somewhat impoliticly I thought), “Yuck.” I actually whacked her on the arm and said, “Hey! That’s not going to help. Have you ever tasted this stuff?” She hadn’t ever eaten the food at her hospital (!), so after my aunt had a spoon of everything and announced, “I don’t want any of this,” the nurse and I dug in.
There’s nothing novel about blasting hospital food, but this was, for me, a new nadir of what’s considered edible. Here’s some of what we had.
• Deconstructed ravioli. The pasta part of the ravioli had been pureed and ice-cream scooped into a bland mound; even less appetizing was the meat sauce and filling, which also had been ground up and plopped on the plate. The two half-globes – one beige and the other orange-red – looked like no food I’ve ever had, and the complete absence of seasoning rendered both surprisingly similar in taste. It was eerie.
• Mashed potatoes. The best thing on the plate. No salt, no butter, though apparently made from real spuds and looking like regular food, so points for that.
• Zucchini puree. A lime green mass looking a little like jell-o, it was squash put through a blender or food processor, but with so much corn starch added to thicken it that it was impossible to eat without an immediate sip of water to lubricate the tasteless pulp on the way down. “Vile,” I said. “Vile,” the nurse agreed.
I can’t say I expected to be wowed, but the flavors were so flat, the textures generally so unnatural and unappealing, that it’s not surprising my aunt is not eating. She’s “failing to thrive,” but thriving is hard when food, one of the main reasons for living, has been largely removed from the menu. I’ve got no fixes here; I understand the medical necessity of a limited hospital diet; but it’s not surprising those who eat it may seem to lose the will to live.
"Don't you ever underestimate the power of a female." Bootsy Collins