In my second year in London, I was invited by an Indonesian Chinese woman to visit her in Guildford.
Her Caucasian husband (Belgian??) worked for Conoco, the American oil company I'd worked for in Singapore, Taiwan and London. He was away on an offshore rig in the North Sea, so she thought I could go and stay with her for the weekend.
I arrived on Saturday to find her having lunch: roast lamb the Western way, but with a bowl of fresh, whole green chilli by the plate. Like the Mauritian woman (in the blog https://piccola-chinita.blogspot.com/2026/02/the-nature-vs-nurture-of-food-12-chilli.html) eating her afternoon tea biscuit with regular nibbles at her fresh, whole red chilli, this Indonesian woman worked her way through the bowl of fresh, whole green chilli with each forkful of roast lamb.
For dinner that evening, she suggested having a takeaway curry.
Going through the menu at the takeaway counter, she said to me, "This curry called vindaloo, they say is very hot, but it isn't, actually."
After her derisive remark about the label of "very hot" for a vindaloo curry, she decided to go for the next one up, which is a phall (another one I'd not heard of, and which I've since discovered is not offered on the menus of a lot of high street curry houses, maybe because there isn't a huge demand for it).
Back at her house, she opened her carton of phall curry to find it a vibrant orange red colour. Her face lit up, "Now, this looks more like it!"
She put a spoonful of it into her mouth, then shot up from the table, dashed over to the sink, spat it out, rushed over to the fridge, yanked the door open, pulled out the largest bottle of Coca Cola, and glugged it in huge gulps.
When she turned round, her eyes were bloodshot and tears were streaming down her cheeks, as she squeaked, "My goodness, that was hot!"
It was a bit later that the thought sneaked into my head: maybe the man in the curry takeaway kitchen heard her scoffing at the categorisation of vindaloo, and decided to teach her a lesson by doctoring the phall to beyond how they'd normally serve it.
(Guildford, 1978)