It always startles me how swiftly the days between Christmas
and New Year’s pass. Even when I find myself
attempting somewhat of a normal routine by going to work… it really is seldom
normal… and the days just melt into the other.
Maybe that’s my excuse for taking a lengthier holiday from this blog… or
maybe it’s because I knew this post had to be about something that makes me
tear up even at the first paragraph.
Saying goodbye.
Now, I realize the finality of our Christmas tradition is
not actually final. The house that has
housed every Christmas feast I have attended since infancy is not going any
place. I am grateful… and excited to see
the new life that it will start to have as my aunt and uncle make improvements
and warm it with their love and smells from the kitchen. It’s just… well… change.
(that is the Kugel on the right)
I spent Christmas Eve once again preparing the meat dressing with my mother and cousin. The house was
full of light and the shadows seemed to give way to the little things that
reminded me of what makes Christmas and grandmother’s houses so magical.
It’s funny. When I
think about Christmas as a kid, I think less about the stuff that I opened up
under the tree. I think more about the
gap between opening presents and eating dinner when I would go up into the
attic and play with my cousins. Indeed,
sometimes it was a huge letdown to have to break away from our scenario of some
Parisian apartment where we were hiding out from an evil stepmother, setting up
tea with the colored cups and Snoopy teapot, and go downstairs to eat the real
food on the real dishes.
I went up into the attic last Monday to retrieve the little
table and chairs for the little people eating the Christmas feast. Standing at the bottom of the
stairs and looking up those stairs is such a vivid step through time. The worn carpet, the drawings on the wall,
the trunk on one side and the old school bench on the other… and the smell..
put me back to 1982. There is nothing
like the smell of that attic. Well,
maybe there is. There was a room in
Beauport that came close. Old wood that
is heated by the sun, cooled by the winter, and locked up for more than half
the year. A little bit musty. A little bit dusty. But ever.so.completely.magical.
The toys are all still there. The tea cups and saucers. The desk with the alphabet chalkboard. The green jewelry box full of clip on
earrings and broaches. The shiny black plastic
cabinet with glass doors and silver knobs.
The stove made from crates and a set of drawers. The straw monkey thing that hangs on the
wall. A thermometer. Names etched into the ceiling. Plastic magnetic letters. A blue, yellow, and red wooden canister. So many memories. So much of what is glorious about being a
kid, about being a Brennan is locked into the essence of every one of those
objects. That attic – even for the two
minutes I spent retrieving the table and
chairs – was like stepping into a room of Christmas.
My grandfather made that attic as a playspace. First, for his children. And then for his grandchildren. My great-grandfather who helped to build the
house, supplied it with the school furniture.
Indeed, I believe he also supplied the chairs and table that I retrieved
for the dining room. He was a custodian
in the Worcester school system and recycled some of the furniture for his
grandchildren.
My grandfather recycled materials from his three decker to
build the attic. I recognize the carpet from pictures of the living room in their first floor apartment. The walls that made storage eaves were
from the cellar where he had those crazy parties. One of the party guests drew some very…
interesting chalk pictures… on the wall.
My grandfather took the pressed cardboard wall coverings and flipped them so they were
hidden inside the eaves… except for one random foot. It’s funny.
I spent years in the attic and I never saw that foot until this year
after going through all those party pictures.
It was an afternoon full of nostalgia and trying to figure
out what was missing from our traditional Mt. Pleasant Ave. Christmas. I kept looking in the refrigerator as if that
was supposed to inspire me as to what needed to be there… aside from the most
obvious absence. And probably on my
third or fourth peer into the fridge, I realized what we needed was some Bubby
tea.
I don’t know if I’ve mentioned this yet – for my non-family
readers. I called my grandfather – my Irish
Catholic French Canadian grandfather – Bubby.
I don’t know if it was because my mother was friends with a woman at the
time who was in fact a Jewish grandmother – or because I just had fun sounding
out the ‘b’ syllable with him, but my grandfather became Bubby. And he liked it so much he had it made into a
vanity plate for his car.
That’s why his iced tea recipe is called
Bubby Tea
Ingredients:
18 c. water
1 tea cup of sugar
2 shot glasses of lemon juice
Caravan Teabags – non clouding – 1 oz.
Directions:
1. Bring water to a boil.
2. Add teabag and remove from heat.
3. After tea cools (2-3 hours), remove bag.
4. Add sugar and lemon juice. Stir.
18 c. water
1 tea cup of sugar
2 shot glasses of lemon juice
Caravan Teabags – non clouding – 1 oz.
Directions:
1. Bring water to a boil.
2. Add teabag and remove from heat.
3. After tea cools (2-3 hours), remove bag.
4. Add sugar and lemon juice. Stir.
As you can see, this is definitely a recipe of nuance. That said, in spite of some empty cupboards,
all the ingredients for Bubby Tea were waiting for us in the kitchen. All, except, the special pot. It was believed that the secret ingredient to
this tea was a white pot. But… this pot was
used for decades and had a number of chips and dings… and who knows what
chemical was in that chipped paint. The pot was
banished from cooking in the last year… and disappeared in recent months, but
not before I took a picture of it.
We still manage to make the tea delicious without the
special pot. Maybe the delicious is
slightly different (as I’m sure it would be without the right tea cup or shot
glass, too). But it is still a constant
in winter, spring, summer, and fall. A
Brennan gathering is not complete without it.
Likewise, I know we have the ingredients of a magic Christmas, no matter
what changes. Maybe it’s the influence
of hours spent in that magic attic… or maybe, it’s the influence and love from a
pair of grandparents who made that magic real.