Veto Omelette

Aparna P, reporting from the United Nations Security Council (UNSC), authors a culinary satire on the power of veto – where five permanent chefs spoil every broth.
Character Sketch
UNSC

An angry omelette holding a gavel that has the words veto written on it.

Description of the dish:

A golden, fluffy omelet – crisp hypocrisy exterior concealing a runny, undercooked center of unresolved conflicts. Five swirls lie on the top of the dish, forming perfect veto symbols on the top. The dish is served on a blue and white plate, that suspiciously looks like the UN flag. It is a popular UNSC breakfast special

Ingredients:

  • 5 privileged eggs (P5 brand. Price: worthless)
  • 1 cup diced sovereignty (finely chopped, uneven distribution)
  • ½ cup crispy hypocrisy (pan-fried in Gulf War oil)
  • 1 tablespoon “peacekeeping” cheese (imported from Global South)
  • A pinch of Chapter VII flakes (for decoration only, not edible)
  • 1 slice of stale UN Charter bread (1945 vintage)

Preparation:

  1. Pour Gulf War oil into the Permanent Member pan and heat it well until it smokes and sizzles.
  2. Crack P5 eggs into a bowl and blend it with the help of the Neo-Colonial Blender (Françafrique edition).
  3. Blend on Humanitarian Intervention speed until the yolks form perfect veto symbols.
  4. Sauté sovereignty on high heat until the borders become unrecognizable.
  5. Mix in hypocrisy discreetly using a Diplomatic Spatula.
  6. Cook on high flame (but never enough to actually let it set).
  7. Sprinkle peacekeeping cheese – just enough to be publicized by the media.
  8. Garnish with Chapter VII flakes ( will disappear on contact with reality)

Plating:

  • Place omelet on UN toast
  • Drizzle with Selective Intervention syrup.