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Good evening, Madam, Sir! Welcome to ‘The High’, where everything on the menu is set to give you a (legal) transcendental gastronomic experience. Shall I present today’s menu? Do relax, while I begin with the aperitif...
Today we have two choices of aperitifs. While we stock them both in ‘litres’, one of them is gaseous and must be inhaled.
First off, we have Pythian spring water delicately laced with ethylene and light hydrocarbons. This is the spring from which the Delphis of Ancient Greece drew their trances. They foresaw war and victory, foretold murder and rains.
Ancient, occult euphoria! Served with twelve seeds of Persian pomegranate.
The second is relatively recent and was quite in vogue in post Renaissance France – a 250 ml cylinderette of NOS (nitrous oxide).
As is typical of an aperitif, we have enhanced the sweetness through infusions of Hawaiian pineapple and mild Borneo jackfruit essence. Your dinner cabin will be temporarily sound-proofed, so you may laugh freely, should you wish to!
Of course, we’re not going to stuff you. This isn’t that kind of restaurant. We need you high and awake, so you enjoy all our courses.
And so we bring you some decocanised ‘Coca Leaf’ (prohibited in its purest form) from the deeeep Peruvian Andes. Just a few leaves (100 gm) will take care of your daily recommended intake of calcium, phosphorous, iron and vitamins A, B2 and E.
Just fold and place in your right cheek. Chew slowly.
Of course, you can wash it down with an 1899 bottle of Coca-Cola, chock full of coca leaf extracts.
In other words, pure cocaine. :-)
If you do insist on a comestible, may I present to you, a platter of four of the chewiest dark chocolate ‘Koekjes’ with a powdered nutmeg and cream cheese centre. This is a Dutch recipe from the 1620s and is recreated using fragrant coconut oil as a cohesion agent. As you bite into your fourth cooky (in Irish brogue), you will begin to experience a cocaine high. Bon appetit!
This not only aids digestion, it also gives you a high. Upon a tender Areca leaf, we place a sliver of lime. And then gently drop shavings of three and a half betel nuts, followed by Gul Receli a Turkish variant of the Gulquand, with Arabian date sugar, cardamom from Calicut and powdered white-pearl – all neatly folded into a conical taco.
This is a slow burn high that is also an effective aphrodisiac.
That’s about it, Sir, Madam.
I do understand that the right words generate a certain amount of buzz.
But you’re here for a different reason. A different kind of buzz.
And so, how may I serve you, today?
(Vikram Venkateswaran is a freelance writer, TV producer and media consultant. Headings, titles and captions are his kryptonite. He just moved to Chennai and hopes the city likes him and is nice to him.)
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