Reader 5.21.1981
Prophet
Sharing
The
Noted East San Diego vegetarian restaurant
& its remarkable
founder
I
won’t say that this isn’t any way to run a restaurant. Maybe it
is. But I’m sure this isn’t the way most restaurants are run. I’m
in the lobby of the Prophet International Vegetarian Restaurant at
4:13 pm. on a Wednesday afternoon. The front door is locked; it won’t
reopen until about 5:30. All over the floor of this antechamber are
Prophet employees as well as Marianne Makeda Cheatom, the Prophet’s
founder, sole owner, Supreme Matriarch. Everyone’s kneeling
Oriental-style, feet tucked underneath himself or herself. Suddenly
they clap in unisons, once or twice, then they begin chanting in
Japanese. They’re “channeling light,” one to the other. When
the ritual concludes a few minutes later, some of the employees
sprawl out on the pillows beneath the statue or Quan Yin, goddess of
mercy. Others wander off and read for a few minutes before the dinner
hour begins. Cheatom says the Prophet is as much an ashram as an
eatery, and this daily scene is one of the things that backs up her
words.
Cheatom
also says that when she was ten she had a vision she would
open a restaurant. I tried to pin her down on this; I asked if she
meant she had an actual vision, or was it more of a daydream?
And she gazed at me, heavy-lidded and grave, and said, No, of course
it was real. The anecdote is classic Cheatom, and just when I’m
about to discard it as hyperbole, I think of the other vague, spacy,
New Age dreams which she’s not only had, but realized. Besides the
Prophet, this city’s oldest and most venerable sit-down vegetarian
restaurant, there’s also the African crafts/cultural center which
she opened last summer on a formerly dead corner of Gold Hill. And
also the reggae music which she’s now promoting, both on her own
radio show and in a resuscitated Normal Heights theater.
This
is a woman who’s not easily forgotten. When she sweeps into rooms,
people turn to look at her. She’ll be thirty-nine years old this
July, but you could never tell her age from her face, which is
smoother than a teen-ager’s, nor her body, which is short and
compact, but not vegetarian-skinny. Her skin is very dark, at least
as dark as Hershey’s chocolate syrup, and it throws off glints of
charcoal and blue and persimmon, depending on the light that shines
on it. These days she wears her hair in “dreadlocks”, the spiky
curls which are the badge of the Rastafari religion. Her eyes are set
in deeply chiseled sockets and her stare is one of the most
distinctive things about her. She fixes listeners with a stare so
direct, so intense, so mesmerizing, that you feel as if she’s
taking in all the details before her, as if they’re the most
important thing in the world.
She
says she was born blind, the unwanted child of a forty-five-year-old
maid and her chauffeur/shoeshine husband, who themselves were the
poor black offspring of Texas and Louisiana farm families. At the
time of her birth in Paducah, Texas, and her quick recovery from the
blindness, (Cheatom credits a folk remedy administered by the
midwife: the application of her own infant urine to her eyes), her
mother worked for a family of white, liberal bankers who urged the
Cheatoms to seek a better life in San Diego, then pulsing with
wartime industry. Cheatom’s father came her first, quickly securing
a job as a stock clerk at the Naval Air Station. Soon, just a month
after Marianne was born, he moved the rest of his family westward and
into a rented house at 7675 Chesterton Lane in the black section of a
brand-new Linda Vista.
Although
her father moonlighted by buffing shoes at Fred’s Shoe Shine on E
Street downtown, the family had little money. Yet Cheatom still
remembers, warmly, “Linda Vista was really country then. Even
though the houses were just cracker boxes, I remember there were huge
lots, and peach trees. My mother was always working in the garden,
and she’d have the best tomatoes and the best food.” The small
community of black families all knew each other, sharing baby-sitting
and other communal projects. “To bake a cake, you’d go around and
ask for an egg here, butter, there.” Only Cheatom’s own acute
sensitivity isolated her. “I was real different. I had psychic
visions at different times. I didn’t like to eat animals,” she
says.
When
she was about thirteen, her two brothers (both in the service)
scraped up enough money to purchase a house hear Central Street in
East San Diego, which at the time also hadn’t lost its rural
character. But family troubles were building. The senior Cheatoms had
never fully adjusted to being transplanted from the South; now drink
began to devour the best part of them, and a few years later the
family moved to a rented apartment in Logan Heights. The immersion
into the world of the concrete urban ghetto “totally freaked me
out,” Cheatom recalls. “It was terrible. I didn’t know what to
do. I didn’t want to get into that black jive. I saw fights all
around me. I used to shrink myself down in the size to escape.”
Eventually, however, the change forced her to become more
extroverted, witty, even glib. By the time the family left the
apartment to move to a rented to-story house in Logan Heights, she
had already begun a attract a coterie of loyal followers.
“I
started mediating and I forgot all about black consciousness and the
whole original trip I was on”
She
now idolized the beatnik poets. While her classmates at San Diego
High boogie to rhythm and blues, she nursed an avant-garde taste for
jazz, and she installed the first stereo system in the neighborhood
into a spare room in the house, which she decorated with “lots of
rattan, lots of cane, lots of brass” and that unique,
quasi-Oriental style now in evidence at her restaurant. She named the
room “The Den,” and soon teen-agers from all over the
neighborhood were joining her there. As her predilection for the
foreign increased, she began to dream about becoming an astronomer or
an anthropologist.
Pragmatism
prevailed. When she graduated from high school, she had no money, no
hope of attending a four-year college. But “I thought there would
always be room for black people in the kitchen…. Also, I come from
long line of excellent, excellent cooks – several of my aunts and
my mother.” Ironically, her mother had always figured that Cheatom
enrolled in Mesa College’s culinary arts program, and before long
she was getting into trouble for ignoring recipes and improving. She
also studied restaurant management at Grossmont College, and she
finally secured a job as a cook at Scripps Hospital.
“Then
my consciousness began to change,” she says. The year was
about to 1966, but when she recounts these facts of her life, you
know that if she’s master cook and mystic, she’s a sorry excuse
for a historian. She sheds details as loosely as she flings spices on
work full of some exotic sauce. It may have been 1965 or 1968. Who
knows or cares? What she remembers – what was important – was
that the sixties were ripening and change was in the air. Black
people (no longer Negroes) were on the march, and the Beatles were
singing about an expansion of mind which was to hit this charismatic
young woman from Logan Heights with the force of religious
conviction.
Not
that she had ever been unreligious. Raised a Southern Baptist, she
had converted to Catholicism while a teen-eager and was contemplating
a further switch to Judaism when friends urged her to visit the home
of Transcendental Meditation ™ initiator Beulah Smith in Coronado.
“By this time I’d gained this cool ghetto front. And I didn’t
believe it. Didn’t believe it.” She went, and wisecracked, but
attended another lectured on TM by an El Cajon chiropractor. After
that it didn’t take her long to leap to the faith of the East. “I
started meditating and I forgot all about black consciousness and the
whole original trip I was on.” Soon other friends introduced her to
the (Indian) Vedic literature and she became a full-fledged hippie.
“I was a love child! And you got remember that there were no blacks
being hippies except for Jimi Hendrix.” She grew her hair into a
natural, became a total vegetarian. She quit job at the hospital
because she could no longer stand to cook animal flesh.
Instead,
she returned to school to study photograph and finally landed a job
at the Ortho Microfilm Company in Kearny Mesa. It turned out to be a
garden of building flower children. “Just by chance, there were a
lot of high-consciousness people there,” she explains. Together,
they trekked to love-ins, traded gurus. Cheatom began studying Zen
and about this time she had her second “vision” of operating a
restaurant. She says she was sitting under a tree in the back yard of
the house she was renting in Encanto. Suddenly she saw “everybody
coming over to my house and eating. I just kept feeding everybody.
And I realized that there should be a place where all people of the
New Age can come in and get charged up.” This time her thoughts
kept returning to the vision like a well-used mantra.
It
was a vision which clashed with the plans she had loosely formulated
up to that point. She and her Aquarian gang had read about communal
living in Life magazine and had resolved to join the action. They had
more or less pooled money to buy some land in Oregon, and Cheatom
says, “I was practically gone.” Still, this restaurant
thing... it fascinated her. Her pals thought she didn't have a prayer
of getting it off the ground, but they cheerfully agreed to help. And
one day in the darkroom at the microfilm company, she changed upon
the name. “Most people think I named it after Kahlil Gibran's The
Prophet. But actually, I was in the darkroom, reading this book
by a Sufi master. It talked about 'the prophets and the messengers in
the new age.' And that's how the name occurred to me.”
The
name was about all she had; she lacked any savings or credit. Still,
she and her roommate, Richard Van Natta, trudged down to the office
of the San Diego Business Outreach. “They looked at me like I was
crazy. We looked different. Richard had long hair and I had a short
natural.” Nonetheless, two young bureaucrats helped the would-be
restaurateurs apply for a loan from the Small Business Administration
– only to have the SBA promptly reject the application. “The only
places to eat vegetarian food in San Diego at that time were the
House Of Nutrition cafeteria downtown and Harpo had something at the
beach. But the SBA said there was no market in the city for
vegetarian restaurants. You know they just didn't want someone young
and hip and black to do it.”
Undaunted,
she tried to improve her credit rating. “I did all these
establishment things that I was really against.” Her landlord
agreed to sell her the house in Encanto and even told officials at
the Federal Housing Authority that she had put a big down payment on
the property (she hadn't). But although she got the FHA loan, the SBA
rejected her a second time and Cheatom began to turn to alternative
sources of financing. A friend's mother lent her $2000 and from other
friends and relatives she collected enough to bring the total up
about $5000. At the same time, she and Richard searched for a
location. They found a grubby storefront in the 4400 block of
University, a sad stretch of gun shops and liquor stores. “It had
been a barbecue pit, and it was ugly. It was one little building.”
As 1971 drew to a close, she and Van Natta quit their microfilming
jobs and began to work full-time at painting and cleaning the
uninspired shelter.
They
finally decided to test the waters on New Year's Eve. Somehow word of
new vegetarian alternative had leaked out, despite Cheatom's firm
intentions to keep the unpublicized event quiet. When they opened
their doors for business that first night, patrons were lined up in
the street. “It was chaos”, remembers Patricia Arpajou.
Arpajou
is a statuesque, very blond young woman who first met Cheatom
seventeen years ago, when Arpajou was just fourteen. They became fast
friend, and Arpajou toiled in the kitchen on that first night of the
Prophet's operation. There, the inexperienced love children
frantically jammed the dinners into the kitchen's one conventional
oven. Those first costumers had to wait for what seemed like an
eternity, but Arpajou recalls that they remained cheerful. “Marianne
is just such a good cook that they didn't seem to mind.”
For
about three months, Arpajou continued to work her job in the post
office and then to hasten back to the Prophet to work for free during
the evenings. She was one of the several young people who did the
same thing. Cheatom says the restaurant stayed open until ten o'clock
and the young people then have to wash all the dishes by hand and
clean up, a task which not uncommonly took until four or five in the
morning. “Sometimes we'd sleep there. We never got to go home. We
worked like Dogs at that place.”
“Sometimes
we'd come out and say, hey, all the dinners are free!' We were stupid
hippies.”
In
the beginning they experimented wildly. “We served a lot of
Balinese food, like gado-gado. Also we were really into Japanese
cooking. We did a lot of tempura.” Near the cash register they sold
herbs and – for a while – shoes. “Yeah! We introduced
Birkenstocks to San Diego. It was great. But after a while it got too
hard to stop and measure people, particularly when the restaurant was
busy.” Bookkeeping was nightmare, so the staff didn't do much of
it. They preferred their own eccentric system of accounts. “We used
to give half the food away. Sometimes we'd come out and say, 'Hey,
all the dinners are free!' We were stupid Hippies.” Cheatom laughs.
“We didn't Believe in making money.” They also believed in
communing with nature, so periodically they would shut the restaurant
doors for several days or even longer, pile into their half-ton
International van, and head for the mountains or Mexico.
After
several months, the SBA finally came through with a loan of about
$15,000, money which instantly evaporated in payments for the
building and to the restaurant's creditors. Still, Cheatom says she
never lost sleep over the threat of the restaurant closing. “There
were a lot of tight times. But since I never had anything to lose in
the beginning, I don't panic too easily. Plus if you put everything
in the hands of the Creator, you know that even if it did have to
close, it would be the right thing.”
She
certainly never let the demands of business obscure her attention to
the Creator, although at times it seemed like His incarnation changed
from month to month. Today the Prophet has a room of individual
dining cubicles (“private meditation dining room”) next to the
main (original) room full of tables, and on the walls of that first
room hang photographs which could illustrate a text on the world's
religions. There are picture of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi and Swami
Prabananda and Rama Krishna and Madame Blavatsky of the Theosophical
Society. Next to them is a photograph of Cheatom and a Chinese master
(Mr. Liang) with whom she studied T'ai Ch'i (today she knows about
seven martial arts). Here's Sai Baba (“I learned about him from one
of his top disciples, Indra Devi, who had a yoga institute in
Tecate”) and there's Swami Sachitananda of the Integral Yoga
Foundation. “I was searching , man!”
Cheatom
doesn't now degrade any of the various religions which she has
embraced. She simply sees them as variations on the central truth of
love and unity, variations wrought by the geographic and cultural
differences of their adherents. She says her only reservation, as she
skipped from Hinduism to Buddhism to Taoism, was that those religions
didn't reflect the cultures of black people. So it was inevitable,
after scaling the religious pinnacles of Japan and China and India,
that she would eventually turn her sights toward Africa.
First
she studied Yoruba, an African back-to-nature religion which
flourished upon transplantation to Brazil. She even began a
pilgrimage to Africa, but on her way she stopped in Rio de Janeiro
and simply stayed near the Brazilian city for several weeks. (She
returned to infuse Brazilian cookery into the Prophet's menu.) Then
about four years ago the creed of Rastafari came to her attention. It
was devotion at first sight.
For
here was a religion, the Jamaican born sect of black visionary Marcus
Garvey, which not only included big dollops of the kind of mysticism
which fired Cheatom's soul (a lost tribe of Israel, promised escape
from sinful Babylon, a goal of universal oneness). Rastafari also was
a celebration of (primarily Jamaican) black culture – and one of
its chief tenets was the advocacy of “natural living” and the
consumption of natural foods. It might as well have been tailor-made
for the restaurant owner.
If
the body of Rastafarian dogma also included one or two sticky
wickets, Cheatom found ways to sidestep them gracefully. Take the
Rastafarian use of marijuana-smoking as a sacrament, for example. On
the one hand, here you had Cheatom – teetotaling, jogging, fasting
Cheatom – who was never believed in taking any drugs, not even
those as commonplace as aspirin or cough medicine. Since the
inception of the Prophet, she had prohibited diners from smoking
anything there. And on the other hand you had hypnotic-eyed,
Medusamaned Rastamen, swaying to their reggae, wrapped in clouds of
herb and puffing at their huge ganja (marijuana) spliffs and passing
them on to their children. Inconsistent? Not at all, Cheatom says.
She says she's never passed judgment on the sacraments of other
cultures. Plus, few real Rastas use ganja in its correct
sacramental form. Instead, she says a lot of contemptible urban
Rastas wear the distinctive “dreadlock” hairstyle but don't take
the Rastafarian message to heart. Finally, she adds, “People in
Jamaica can handle marijuana. It's their way of life. But Westerners
get a hold of something and we don't know how to handle it. We're
excessive with everything we do.” Besides, the whole question of
ganja is peripheral. “The real high is love and you don't
need anything to get to that.”
And
so her natural disappeared; she grew her own dreadlocks. She acquired
a Rasta teacher, a Jamaican holy man and musician named Ras Midas.
Touches of Rastafari – a photograph of the worshipped former
Ethiopian emperor, Haile Selassie; a Rasta bumper sticker – began
to appear in the University Avenue restaurant. Along with them came
increasing signs of respectability and even acclaim: restaurant
awards, nationwide publicity, visits from vegetarian luminaries. “Lot
of stars have come here over the years,” Cheatom says. “George
Harrison has been here, and so has Gloria Swanson. Her limousine
pulled right up to the curb one day and she had lunch. Dick Van Dyke
eats here from time to time, and who else? Oh yeah, Dyan Cannon.”
She shows off a activist Dick Gregory. “We’re really, really
tight…. Hey! I’m in with some heavy people. Heavy!”
The
photograph of her and G Gregory hangs next to the religious figures
in the room just off the Prophet’s main dining room. In the
restaurant’s first year or so of existence. Cheatom and her cohorts
acquired this extra space and used it primarily as a yoga center, but
soon needed the extra room for waiting customers. So she abandoned
the yoga center, added the first of the private dining cubicles, and
used the extra space for waiting area. When she also acquired the
adjoining storefront on the side of main dining room, she converted
that entire space in current lobby. Now its atmosphere is replete
with lushness, eccentricity, the exotic. An enormous red satin dragon
named Uplifting hangs from the ceiling along with a pair of negative
ion fountain burbles amidst feather and plants and icons and tropical
fish. Gorgeous kimonos are pinned outstretched on the palm-matted
wall.
“I’ve
always liked to create environments,” Cheatom says. That’s why
she conjured up the idea for the dining area. Visitors ushered into
the, doff their shoes and sit on the floor. Each cubicle has a
different personality. There’s the chakra room adorned wit a large
batik covered with the India chakra symbols. There’s a room named
after Bilal, the first Muslim, complete with an ancient prayer rug
(point east toward Mecca), Ethiopian basketry, and the game of wari,
the national game of Antigua.
Cheatom
says that same urge to transform drove her to look twice at the
squalid, empty building at the corner of Thirtieth and Beech streets
in Golden Hill. She leased the property several years ago and for
while just used it as storage space. But the thought of how the
building might be reincarnated tantalized her, so she would steal
spare hours to work on it, usually alone. “Sometimes I would take
carpenters down there with me, and they would just laugh.” And as
the building shaped up, so did Cheatom’s dreams for what it might
become, “ an expression of Africa culture.”
“I
figured if those other cats could organize themselves, why can't we?”
When
she finally saw an exhibit of Nigerian terra cotta and bronze art at
a San Francisco museum, she resolved to open the store in Golden Hill
as an African import center. She named it the Baobab, and it opened
last August. Now woven reeds cover ceiling, giving the room the
feeling of a breezy hut. Wood decorates the walls. Among the wares
for sale are African baskets and other ornaments, reggae music, books
such as The Holistic Handbook, Aloe Vera Heals, and
Tissue Cleansing Through Bowel Management. A juice bar and a
roof-top eating area are scheduled to open this summer, and Cheatom
says in July she'll help stage a community festival in front of the
store.
These
days, the Baobab also is often strewn with notices for one of
Cheatom's upcoming reggae concerts. Rastafarians regard the popular
Jamaican music as a way of spreading the word of Jah (Jehovah), and
by last fall Cheatom decided San Diegans weren't being exposed to
sufficient quantities of reggae. So she donned the additional cap of
promoter. She staged her first concert last November at the
International Blend in North Park, where the response was warm enough
to encourage her to continue.
At
the beginning of this year, though, one apparent setback befell her.
In preparation for a major concert, she decided that the
International Blend was too small, so she rented the larger Bear
State Theatre at Tenth and E streets downtown. But after heavily
advertising the event, she discovered that Christafari, a local
reggae record store proprietor, was planning to stage another reggae
concert at the theater just one week ahead of her event. Outraged at
the near-conflict of scheduling, Cheatom called Christafari. “And
you know what he said to me? He said, 'Now Marianne, why don't you
take a deep breath?' I told him, 'Why don't you take a deep fart!'”
she snapped. But it didn't take long for her to regret and feel
mortified by the shattered good vibrations. “You can't talk love
and not live it. I salute Chris and I wish him the best,” she says.
She says she expressed sympathy rather than glee when the fire
marshal stopped Christafari's show, mid-concert, and cited a lack of
the proper fire permits. That development also forced the panicky
Cheatom to scramble for an alternative site for her event. She had
recently leased the Adams Avenue Theatre in Normal Heights, and
although the interior was a shambles, Cheatom decided, with less than
a week left, to relocate her concert there.
“I
slept and lived for a week in that theater. We just had to paint and
paint and paint and disinfect. We would lose people in the bathroom
for hours!” Although the paint was still wet when the band arrived,
the concert went on, successfully. Since than Cheatom has presented
such groups as Steel Pulse and the Rebel Rockers there. “It's no
smoking. It's not a bar or a club. It's really a temple,” Cheatom
says, “It's a place where you can go and get healed by music.”
And more, she promises. She's just bought the movie screen from the
doomed Roxy Theatre and she plans to show African and Jamaican films,
and to produce dance in the theater, along with feminist happenings,
choral music. And she's combining all that with one final form of
diversification, a weekly two-hour radio show called “Reggae
Fever”, sponsored by the Prophet, hosted by Cheatom, and aired
Sundays on XHRM radio (92.5 FM).
Now
she's sitting in the station's studio on Market Place, taping the
show to be aired on Mother's Day two days hence. Her co-host is a
member of the production company she formed to help her stage the
concerts, a friendly young man in dreads named Damaja-Le. Their
ad-libbing is so loose that it seems almost completely unstructured.
Now, while a song plays, she reminds him that she wants to give away
some dinners on the upcoming holiday.
“O.K.
We'll do that next. How many do you want to give away? One? Two?”
She
reflects for about three seconds. “Make it tow to the first caller,
and two to second. Or would four to the first be easier?”
“Yeah.”
“O.K.
Four to the first caller. Then we'll give four more away right at the
end of the show.” A moment or two later, she has a new thought.
“But yeah, they have to work for this.” She decides that, as an
educational exercise, the meal winners will have to come up with the
answers to two questions. Brow furled, she scribbles down: What was
the name of the organization that Marcus Garvey started in Harlem
back in the early part of this century? Who founded the cradle of
Rastafari on the Pinnacle estate northwest of Kingston in 1941?
Of
course, all the new activities often take her from the restaurant. To
some extent they've also removed other key employees, who now
schedule their time between working at the restaurant, tending the
store, and assisting at the theater during concerts. “I figured if
those other cats could organize themselves, why can't we?” Cheatom
asks. But Cheatom's presence still completely dominates the
restaurant, according to one of its managers, Cynthia Morris. “She
can come walking in the place for five minutes and know if something
is off. She can walk by a wok and say, 'That's missing.' Or she can
walk by a drink and say, 'Did you put that in?' At a glance, she'll
notice if there's honey missing from one of the tables or if one of
the candles is off. She knows this place like the back of her hand.”
Morris
is a tall, quiet woman with a wide, serene brow who was eighteen
years old when she first met Cheatom back in 1968. “She knew so
much. She cooked. She meditated.” In short, Cheatom bowled Morris
over. Morris subsequently left San Diego for a few years, but when
she returned in 1973, she joined the bustling crew at the vegetarian
restaurant and she's been there ever since, cooking, acting as
hostess, managing the books, functioning as Cheatom's private
secretary. Morris says as long as the restaurant exists, she won't be
able to conceive of leaving. When I ask her why, she points outdoors,
at the street. “I've been out there, and I'd much rather be in
here. I've worked as a secretary for seven years. I picked fruit for
a while; I cut trees up in Oregon. But I've learned so much here,
spiritually and intellectually. This place is ours.”
Legally,
it's still solely controlled by Cheatom, although she formed the
Baobab and the concert production company as corporations in which
key employees hold some stock. Cheatom says, however, and employees
seem to confirm, that all the businesses function like one large
family venture, one with all the subtle complexities of family life.
Indeed,
most of the employees have been there long enough to feel like
relatives, and many are actually related. Cynthia Morris's brother
Rob, who works the juice bar, has worked at the Prophet for seven
years. Pat Arpajou, who helped Cheatom on opening night, still works
there, along with two nephews of Cheatom's. Cheatom claims employees
basically run the Prophet. “They tell me what to do,” she
asserts. Yet they seem to defer substantially to her judgments; when
I asked to borrow a menu, for example, Morris told me politely but
firmly to ask the boss. Furthermore, they seem to screen Cheatom from
outside annoyances, to form around her a gentle but effective
phalanx.
This
particular morning they're cooking, as usual, without her. They've
arrived about 10:30 to start preparing lunch; just before the doors
open at 11:30 they kneel down in the lobby for a short version of a
Japanese prayer. The ritual insures that all the in-house vibes are
good, Morris explains. When the doors open at 11:30, two customers
already are waiting in the street. Within a few moments, orders are
rolling steadily into the kitchen.
It's
a crowded but organized space; clean but stripped of any of the
offbeat ornamentation to be found on the other side of the Japanese
curtain. At the wok stove, Adesina Ogunelese, who has cooked under
Cheatom's tutelage for the past five years, is stirring up a large
batch of sauce for the vegetable-nut loaf to be served this evening.
Around the corner, another worker is lovingly assembling one of the
Chinese salads. She lays a bed of Chinese greens in a red enamel box,
then shreds daikon (Japanese radish) over them. She deftly
extracts Chinese cloud ears, forest mushrooms, snow peas, water
chestnuts, green pepper, and carrots from various plastic containers,
then she arranges the vegetables in beautiful symmetry on the green
and white foundation, garnishing the finished product with red
cabbage, green onions, sesame seeds, parsley, sprouts, radishes. She
tops it off with sweet miso-based dressing and a flower. Flowers go
on every dish served here. “Makeda believes you eat with your eyes
first,” Morris explains. “If something is presented to you really
nicely, you want to eat it.” Morris looks at the food in front of
her and sighs. “To work with these gorgeous fruits, with these
wonderful fresh foods, is like a work yoga. It's like a karma
meditation,” she says happily.
Indeed,
Cheatom marshals supplies for the restaurant as carefully as one
would for a holy feast. “I try to deal with people who are in
alternative businesses,” she says. Much of the produce comes from
Sunburst Farms, an organic Santa Barbara operation, and she also buys
some fruit and vegetables locally: lettuce and artichokes from one La
Mesa gardener; papayas, jicamas, bananas, coconuts, and pineapples
from another man who buys them in the Tijuana markets. Cheatom uses
no sugar in her cooking; instead she acquires some honey from her own
hives and some from other local beekeepers. The Prophet uses eggs
only for souffles (“I haven't gotten together how to do a souffle
without 'em yet,” Cheatom says ruefully), but those eggs come only
“from local ground-scratching chickens.” Goat and soy milk, and
rennetless cheese come from the Altadena Dairy. Prophet workers bake
the restaurant's distinctive beet-herb bread from flaxseed, beets,
and whole wheat stone-ground flour from the Deaf Smith mill in Texas.
And those workers boast that the Prophet was the first vegetarian
restaurant in town to serve pita bread; the staff talked the owner of
the Middle Eastern Bakery into producing a whole-wheat version for
the restaurant.
Sometimes
after twelve, Cheatom finally bursts through the back door. She's
just returned from her cabin retreat in the Cuyamaca Mountains and
she's dressed casually, in khaki shorts, a camouflage-patterned
T-shirt, and thongs. But true to form, she gives the simple garb a
weird elegance by combining it with a bright red and yellow knitted
cap, with necklaces and hair ornaments and bracelets and beads. “Hey,
everybody! How's it going? God, the mountains were so beautiful. And
the flowers were out. I meditated, then I jogged, then I meditated,
and I be going along and catch these whiffs of the lilacs. And I saw
this bi-i-i-i-g red-tailed hawk. It was eating some smaller animal.
It was great!”
Someone
presents her with a tall frosty glass filled with a thick,
emerald-green smoothie made from spirulina plankton (rich in protein
and vitamins). Two dewy, perfectly shaped mint leaves adorn the top
of it. Then Cheatom leads me to one of the private dining cubicles
where she plunks down on one of the floor cushions.
I
ask about her nutritional philosophy. The Prophet's menu today runs
the vegetarian gamut, featuring everything from a “Dr. Benesh
Hygienic Combination Dinner” (featuring only food combinations
approved by the San Marcos chiropractor and nutritionist) to a $5.95
“raw dinner” (freshly cut vegetables stuffed with such things as
nut butter) to special drinks like the Wheatgrass Hopper (“a
celestial way to drink wheatgrass”) to more standard meatless
cookery. She answers that she thinks it's difficult to prescribe one
path for everyone. Some bodies can take more abuse than others. Even
meat-eating (by other people) she seems to regard tolerantly,
“although it's always seemed to me that anyone with any
intelligence would know that if you cut a potato in half you get
another potato. But if you cut a goat in half you don't get another
goat. It's dead.” Her only absolute, the bottom line, is “real
basic,” she asserts. “People should know you should eat a natural
diet – one that's not processed, devitalized, stripped, canned,
demineralized.”
“I
love my employees, and they love me in return... sometimes I take
them out jogging with me after work.”
If
she hasn't found the one true food over the years, she sounds like
she's learned some crucial lessons about management. “When I first
got into business, I had a really bad attitude,” she says. “I
thought money was the root of all corruption. Then one day I was with
this hip person who was really against money. And he lost his
toothbrush and he almost went off.” It made her rethink her
premises and she says she concluded, “When you start thinking
universal, you realize that money is just energy. . . . So I decided
I'd channel making money in a New Age way. 'Cause you're taking care
of your family. You're creating employment at a time when jobs are
really tight.”
Working
out pay schedules for the young people who started off as volunteers
apparently required careful thought. Now Cheatom says Prophet
employees who live with their parents earn the minimum wage, while
those on their own need more, and get it. She indicates that more
important than the monetary compensation is her attitude toward those
employees. “There's no hierarchy. There's no division,” she
insists. “I love any employees, and they love me in return.” She
says that's why she provides a small gym in back of the restaurant.
“Sometimes I take them out jogging with me after work.” That's
why she insist on closing the doors between lunch and dinner to allow
for prayer, meditation, recharging. “They don't know the difference
if I'm the boss or not. If they do something wrong, and I glance as
it or taste, I'll correct it. But I don't put that fear in 'em.”
Indeed,
when she breezes into the kitchen that evening at dinnertime, the
workers do seem happy to see her, though to me it looks as though
they don't exactly treat her like any old workmate. When she asks for
something – an ingredient, a spatula – two or three people
eagerly hasten to search for it. At the moment, she tastes the rich
vegetarian stroganoff cooking in one of the two huge woks. The
kitchen has run out of sherry, and the missing element plainly annoys
her. She tries to compensate by tossing pinches of several powdery
spices into the caramel-colored sauce, but she grumbles that there's
no real substitute for sherry.
“How
about Chianti?” her fellow cook offers.
“No,
never use red wine in the place of white wine. They taste really
different,” she instructs.
Finally
Morris offers to drop everything and go out and buy the sherry, to
which Cheatom happily assents. She has changed now, into white
slacks, a fiery cloth blouse, and a bright orange bandanna.
Characteristically, she hunches forward slightly, her weight on the
balls of her bare black feet, like a runner ready to burst forth from
the starting line.
Adesina
Ogunelese transfers the finished stroganoff to other containers, and
Cheatom prepares to cook the African ground nut soup, so popular with
Prophet regulars that the staff hasn't been able to rotate it off the
menu in a year. “Bon Appetit has begged us to give them the
recipe. Do you know you're the first person outside the staff that
I've shown this to? God, you're really special,” she tells me with
that blazing, direct charm, and meekly, I agree not to reveal the
exact ingredients to anyone.
So
I won't, but I couldn't describe how to make it even if I listed the
component foods, not give the way Cheatom works. She cooks like an
artist splashing colors on a palette, not like some plodder painting
by number. She never measures out ingredients. She stirs, and she
adds things, and she simmers them, and she tastes. She says it takes
her years to teach an apprentice this process which she calls “physic
cookery.”
“It's
a heavy process,” Ogunelese concurs. “Because it's by feel, by
taste. It's internal cooking.”
Cheatom
continues, “Cooking is the highest art, and if you cook with
spirit, you're cooking for the soul of that person. 'Cause you have
to be a conscious cook. That's what I want, conscious cookery. You
can kill people with the way you cook, or you can change their
consciousness. It's soul-to-soul. The vibrations are heavy.”
Reggae
music fills the bright busy room. The smells from the steaming
entrees and potatoes and vegetables commingle and waft around the
kitchen and scent the various members of the Prophet family. The
rich, heavy mixture of peanuts and liquids and spice in Cheatom's wok
is ready. In a few minutes, Cheatom will rush out the door, off to
tend to another project. But first she offers me a bowl of the soup.
And to me it tastes like she has created something quite
extraordinary.