She stared blankly at the message for a moment, jaw ajar.
When they had first met, Valeria had not known just how bad Alana was in the kitchen. For the better part of her childhood, both parents made sure that she had good nutrition, or at the very least during the hard times, they kept food on the table. What they neglected to do was teach her how to do so for herself. At least, in the most important way.
See, Alana never learned to cook. She had been a hard worker when she had a job, until she found a job that made it so that she never had to work hard again. After that, all of the meals were paid for and there were no thoughts or questions involved. Until the past year, when she went on a full blown budget to keep herself from having to think about an income. Now she subsisted entirely on ramen from the packet.
It was in a discussion about product that she confided the truth about her diet to the Puerto Rican woman, and while Valeria was by no means against the noodle dish, she had been vehement that there was ramen, and there was RAMEN. After her friend cooked the "proper" version for her, the cheap knockoff never tasted quite as good again.
Ah, to be blissfully ignorant.
Alas, it was not to be. The messages on her cell phone flickered into view one after the other, and Alana was beside herself. Every time Valeria introduced a new dish, she was hesitant to tell her the truth. She grew up in a lower middle class home, and by all accounts she was a B A S I C W H I T E B I T C H
Some of the flavors of the Orient, or even Latin heritage type meals were spiced just a touch more than her delicate palate was used to. Things like turmeric or saffron in any
normal amount were still more than she was raised to enjoy. A little salt, a little pepper, maybe some ketchup...?
Undeniably however, the food that her friend cooked was
always better than what she had been raised on. It was better than fast food, and at times, it was better than... well...
anything. So- even if it took her several days to stomach all of it due to her own overwhelmed taste buds, she always made sure nothing went to waste.
But she'd never had Bulgogi, and she'd
definitely never had kimchi.
"What is that?" she murmured, thumb dashing across the touch screen rapidly, swiping over the internet browser, keying in letters, searching up the names of the various things that were clearly not English. Bulgogi... Kimchi...
Kimchi...
"...is it like sauerkraut, but Asian??"
Oh, poor, sweet girl.
She flipped back to the message and started typing up a response.
[ Valeria <3 ]
Awww, you're so sweet! If you're already making enough and it's no trouble, I'd love to try it! Thank you so much for thinking of me!