Today I woke to the smell of burnt toast drifting from the apartment next door. Not my own kitchen mistake this time, which felt like a small victory. Sunlight was pooling on my counter, catching the edge of a ceramic bowl I'd left out overnight. I like mornings when light does that—turns ordinary objects into little monuments.
I'd planned to make a simple dal, but when I opened the cupboard I found I'd bought red lentils instead of yellow ones. A tiny mistake that somehow felt significant. Red lentils cook faster, turn mushier, and I always associate them with the hurried weeknight dinners my aunt used to make when she was too tired to stand at the stove for long. I decided to lean into it. Sometimes the best meals come from small errors.
While the lentils simmered, I chopped an onion and listened to it sizzle in oil. There's a particular sound—halfway between a whisper and a crackle—that tells you the heat is just right. My neighbor's music bled through the wall, something with a steady drumbeat that matched my chopping rhythm for a moment. I laughed at the coincidence, then added cumin seeds and watched them bloom dark and fragrant.