Chicken Soup is Best for Early Convalescence
Dr Abe V Rotor
Living with Nature - School on Blog
Some time ago, a good old friend asked me, Abe
how can you go back to nature? Are you going back to the farm. Don’t you like
to live anymore in the city? Are you selling your car.
Yes, I answered. No
not my car, that’s my only car. Yes, I can live with nature. Oo nga
naman. We talked and talked, until we were back in our childhood – I
mean, childhood. This was when my father got sick. And this is how I came to
learn that chicken soup is good for one who is convalescing, yon’
galing sa sakit - nagpapagaling.
Chicken soup is good
for the convalescent. However, there are specifications of the kind of chicken
to be served. First, it must be native chicken. Karurayan is
the term in Ilocos for a pure white native chicken which does not bear any
trace of color on its feathers. It is preferably a female, dumalaga or
fryer, meaning it has not yet reached reproductive stage. It is neither fat nor
thin. Usually the herbolariochooses one from recommended specimens.
He then instructs and supervises the household in the way the karurayan is
dressed, cut, cooked into tinola (stew) and served to the
convalescent. He does not ask for any fee for his services, but then he takes
home one or two of the specimens that did not pass the specifications. (The
more affluent the patient is, the more chicken the herbolario takes.)
Tinola - chicken soup with green papaya and malunggay
Chicken soup as a
convalescent food is recognized in many parts of the world. Because of its
popularity, chicken soup has become associated with healing, not only of the
body – but the soul as well. In fact there is a series of books under the
common title Chicken Soup - for the Woman’s Soul, Surviving Soul, Mother’s
Soul, Unsinkable Soul, Writer’s Soul, etc. Of course, this is exaggeration, but
nonetheless it strengthens our faith that this lowly descendant of the
dinosaurs that once walked the earth of its panacean magic.
Try chicken soup to
perk you up in these trying times - with all the rush, tension, various
ailments, and expensive medication. Ika nga, bawal ang magkasakit.
But first, be sure
your chicken does not carry antibiotic residues, and should be of the native breed. By the way, I was a participant in the rituals
made by this good herbolario. I was then a farmhand and I was tasked to get the
karurayan. Our flock failed the test, but I found two dumalaga with
few colored feathers. I plucked out the colored feathers and presented the
birds to Ka Pepito. They passed the criteria. Three days after I asked my convalescing
dad how he was doing. “I’m fine, I’m fine, now.” He assured me with a big
smile. ~
Lesson on former Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM, [www.pbs.gov.ph] 8-9 evening class Monday to Friday
No comments:
Post a Comment