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Michael Freedland

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Michael Freedland,

Michael Freedland

Opinion

Flight of what you don't fancy

Love it - or more likely - hate it, airplane food has tickled this writer's tastebuds

July 9, 2015 14:34
Ever try eating rice on a plane?
3 min read

It was seeing a rerun of a Seinfeld episode that got me thinking. Seinfeld, for the uninitiated, is a sitcom about a group of New York yuppies. All but one of the stars of the show were Jewish, which almost (but not quite) brings me to the point. In the episode which got me thinking, the series' only woman, the delectable Julia Louis- Dreyfus gets on a plane just as it is about to take off. She is seated by the stewardess who instantly greets her with an apology. "I'm afraid," she says, ''the only meal we can offer you is a kosher dinner."

It was, in more ways than one, an in-joke. It was also the funniest Seinfeld moment I can remember. Not because of the conversational humour but because of the situation in this situation comedy. You see, if there is one thing to rival Seinfeld in having only a select few who could hardly do without it, there is another much, much smaller, select few who cannot get on an aircraft without knowing that awaiting them is a well-wrapped meal of soggy meat and rice with the stamp of the Kashrus Commission . And I do mean well wrapped.

What made this moment so funny was the fact that one thing that would never happen was an airplane galley with a surplus of kosher meals. I've earned more air miles from my complaints about not getting my kosher meal than about anything else. Come to think of it, though, not actually getting the kosher meal could be regarded as a bonus.

The great joy when you do get that meal is not for the diner but for the other passengers. They are provided with a live show as good as anything on the small screen. Don't you always sneak a glance at the food eaten by the passenger sitting next to you? The kosher eater's neighbour is in for a treat. The trouble is he has to keep his laughs to himself.