I have neglected this blog, in spite of good
intentions. In spite of the fact I have
spent a fair chunk of 2013 cooking my way through the 20th
century. Some of those occasions were
taken from my grandmother’s recipe box or the cookbooks I swear belonged to
Rosa Alba. And certainly each and every
one of those meals deserved a blog. Or,
each and every dish deserved a blog.
Any writer is good at making excuses. I think it is second nature, just as much as
the idea of writing. It is curious,
then, that all of a sudden I find that idea itching my fingers to return to my
laptop and type up a reflection – before I’ve even finished my cooking.
I wouldn’t have thought the 1990’s would be the
trigger. It’s not really a decade that
returns very often with a smile. It was
the decade when I was a teenager and early twentysomething. When I was very lost and uncomfortable in my
skin. And with regards to food, it was
easily when I was taking out that sense of loss and discomfort by losing myself
in poor nutrition and the habits I have to undo today.
But it is a decade I remember. Indeed, the decade when I remember
cooking. Not just as a special treat
with my grandmother. It was one of my
every other day chores, as the oldest child of a working two parent
household. I learned and perfected my
pizza crust, which I started using to make calzones. Calzone has been a staple of my entertaining
menus… except, oddly, for supper club.
I can make that in my sleep.
And sort of did, actually, first thing this morning before coffee or
breakfast. But I have 8 people coming to
sit around the Brennan dining room table tonight… so in Brennan tradition there
will be ample offerings at all courses of the meal. What, of our traditions, I thought came into
our lives in the 1990’s?
Maybe it started in the 80’s, but I decided to make my Aunt
Lisa’s artichoke dip. That’s another
thing I can make in my sleep… and something I’ve varied every time with types
of cheese and adding spinach or spices.
But today I will go back to the original. With yogurt and more mayonnaise than I
want to think about. I have that in my
oft used Brennan cookbook, but I did find a card with Gram’s handwriting to
reference.
(the tip about the artichokes was an amusing revelation)
Of course that recipe is as much present as past. It is a staple. At every Thanksgiving, Christmas, St. Patrick’s
Day, random gathering that suddenly becomes a holiday. If Lisa isn’t there to make it, someone else
will step up and supply it. And usually
the supply is two dishes because it gets vacuumed up within minutes of landing
on the table, no matter the spread of other appetizers around it.
The other recipe I did find amongst my grandmother’s cards,
written in my cousin’s handwriting. I
laughed because I know the name was changed… probably because it was given to
my grandmother. But I figure its true
identity will be excellent fodder for dinner party entertainment. Sex in a Bowl.
(more notes... and the stains are hers, not mine)
It’s funny. Getting
the ingredients together for this one has put me back a few years. Maybe not even so far back as the 90s… but to
a time when I used instant cake mixes and instant pudding. I confess I am compromising this recipe by using
real whipped cream. The stuff in a can …
gross.
But as I stood at the counter stirring together the eggs and
oil for the Pillsbury goo, I reflected on how I spent a lot of time stirring
and cooking at that counter 20ish years ago.
I often fantasize about updating this kitchen. I’m not a fan of the 80’s countertops and the
linoleum. But I love the length of my
counter. And how the light attacks the
eating area through the French doors. I
thought of when I might have first had this glorious dessert… wondering if it
made an appearance at a 4th of July cookout, when that kitchen was
full of Brennans and the table covered with rotating courses that would fill
our paper plates. Coming in from the
pool with water dripping from our hair.
The dog or dogs weaving in and out looking for a crumb that would fall…
that would inevitably fall. The volume of one aunt only to be outdone with
another’s laughter. Smoke wafting from
the grill. Faces who are gone now…
through death or divorce or distance. When
we were all still kids and the world so unknown.
Cooking my way through last century has been an exploration
of flavor and the distortion of real food.
Of how we cook. How we eat. But tonight, the food will taste like those
shadows I saw of my kitchen.
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