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“Hope is not the same as joy that things are going well, or a willingness to invest in enterprises . . .obviously headed for success, but rather an ability to work for something because it is good, not because it has a chance to succeed.” perhaps by Czechoslovakian Klavel Hevel.
Posted at 08:30 AM in Religion | Permalink | Comments (0)
I wanted one stinking cookbook for Christmas. I had asked my husband for a cookbook holder that fitted under the kitchen cabinets,which then held the cookbook at eye level. He mail ordered one and it looks like it will be a dandy. Because I love to collapse on the couch on Christmas with a good cookbook, even a bad cookbook. Over the years I had gathered that this was universally understood. I thought that if you requested a cookbook holder, a cookbook was implied. A cookbook was in the bag.
I have a huge number of cookbooks, and ones that will never be resold on e-bay or Amazon, because besides reading them like novels, I actually cook with cookbooks and I also write in them. For example, my Pie books have a lot of flour in them. My braising book has stew meat. Or I write, “Molly & Ed came to dinner, v. good week night meal, no radicchio, subbed asparagus. MDC liked, served with the purple , brown wine label .05/02/07” . A food journal would be too easy.
In addition to thinking, no one would give a cook book holder without a cookbook, just to be sure, I told my daughter that you could find out what cookbook I wanted on my Amazon wish list. She thanked me for telling her, and said that was very helpful. In truth it is nearly impossible to pick a cookbook for me that I do not have or want. But I thought I had arrived at the perfect solution. Several days later I was reviewing cookbooks on line, and I wanted to add to my wish list, so I clicked on My Wish List. My past list was gone. What does this mean? It must mean that some one bought me the books! Fabulous. That worked out well.
Imagine my surprise when I went through Christmas Eve, Christmas Day and there was not one stinking cookbook. How long would the gifter withhold the Amazon order? I am embarrassed to say that I made my daughter take me down to Barnes and Noble the 26th. Call it a Christmas tantrum.
The cookbooks were all picked over, except for piles of Rachel Ray and Paula Dean stacked on the floor. I did find a hidden gem: The Kitchen Diaries, by Nigel Slater. I was healed. Here is last night’s Onion soup recipe. For four, roast at 400 about five cubed, peeled, onions in about three tablespoons of butter. This could take 45 minutes. Stir now and again. The onions should caramelize somewhat. Put in a pot, with a half a cup of white wine, scrapping the roasting pan to include juices in the soup. Add broth, naturally from your freezer, and simmer 20 minutes. Pour over a piece of Italian bread toast in a bowl, with a little shredded Gruyere.
Posted at 09:39 AM in Christmas | Permalink | Comments (4)
Mirth
laughter: happiness or enjoyment, especially accompanied by laughter
[Old English myrgÞ . Ultimately from a prehistoric Germanic word meaning “pleasant, joyful,” which is also the ancestor of English merry.]
Encarta ® World English Dictionary © & (P) 1998-2004 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Christmas is the season for Mirth. Please remember that Christmas Day is the first of twelve days. The season lasts up until the sixth of January. Put your feet up, forget housecleaning (that is for you, not for me). Go to movies, read a book. Invite some one over for dinner. Merry Christmas.
Here is my Christmas card which reads: Come out Christmas, come out.
Thanks for being friends, Keep your spirits up, Protect your body, Say Merry Christmas often, Count your blessing.
Love Radish
Posted at 08:44 AM in Christmas | Permalink | Comments (0)
Happy Solstice. This is great. It is storming here. Winter has arrived. The tree is up, and my husband did the lights. That won him lots of points. He did it very efficiently and although there has been no real sunshine to observe thoroughly, he did a great job.
The last part of the story of the Christmas of ‘64 is that I lived through it with out my family. A Christmas of my husband and baby together was oddly satisfying. We were invited to John Stokes‘ house for Christmas dinner. My husband’s boss was a wonderful host. He had five screaming teenagers running around the house. His wife despised cooking, but together John and Edith put on a fabulous meal. Manhattans were Edith’s and my drink of choice then. John, I must mention here, was shot down twice during WWII over the Atlantic, somewhere between London and Brazil. Once he was in a life raft for two weeks.
You can imagine during the flood that the water from the tap was muddy. In those times we did not have the aisles of bottled water that me now do. The bottled water in town had to go to those whose actually had no water. John got up at 7:00 am Christmas day and drew water from the tap, he would let it settle, siphoned off the top, let it settle again, and again until there was no discoloration. And then he made ice cubes. We had clear ice cubes for our Christmas Manhattans. It was a Christmas gift I shall never forget. Merry Christmas to you John, over the white cliffs of Dover.
Posted at 08:48 AM in Christmas | Permalink | Comments (2)
In 1964 we moved to a town in Northern California. We might as well have moved to Alaska, which we almost did, as to such an isolated place. Arcata, a town of 7,000, was on the coast, and the locals referred to it as “behind the Redwood Curtain”, where the women were still wearing beehives. Time had left this town alone.
Four weeks after I moved there, I had my first child. My mother did not come, as she wanted my husband and myself, and the baby to get acquainted with each other better. I was nursing the sweet baby girl, when for some reason I decided to stop after eight weeks. I was tired of not sleeping. My idea was that she would sleep better through the night if she could get all she wanted of real milk. Hum.
We planned to travel back to my home for Christmas. My dad would call and say, I hope you make it, the weather is bad. But the weather had been bad since the day I stepped into the county. This town’s middle name was Rain. I told my father that we always traveled in bad weather, there would not be a problem. But I was ignorant of the 100 year flood. For weeks it had snowed in the surrounding mountains, and then the Pineapple Express from Hawaii arrived, melting all the snow. The rivers rose, and bridges broke, and there was really no highway left to San Francisco.
This was the day that I stopped nursing. But I had forgotten that, if you stop nursing, you had to sterilize bottles. It was 100 percent humidity outside, with the bottles boiling, it was 100 percent humidity in the house. The sliding glass doors to the deck were open in the hopes of some humidity movement.
My husband was away in Sacramento with our own state senator. Not only was I not going to my family home for Christmas, but I might be having Christmas with only my baby. I had never celebrated Christmas without my family, let alone without a husband. But, praise be to God, Michael came safely home, he and the senator the last men over the last open country road.
The moral of this story is travel with people in high places, and don’t give up nursing in a storm.
Posted at 08:17 AM in Christmas | Permalink | Comments (2)
Bestbloomingblogger.com interviews the Radish of Day 2 Day Radishes.
BBBC. Congratulations on your Second Year Blog Birthday. What a remarkable group of essays.
Radish. Thank you very much. I have enjoyed it quite a bit. It is nice to be singled out by such a prominent blog.
BBBC. Have you planned to do a book?
Radish. Oh I have a book. I am self published and you can have my 2006 book for $30.00, plus handling, which is $25.00. My 2007 book will come out shortly after the first of the year, but the price will go up to $50.00 shipping and handling. It is my stab at stopping global warming control.
BBBC. Where ever did you get your fine creative spirit.
Radish. I was not allowed to talk at the dinner table, so I typed in my mind.
BBBC. Has anything changed in the last year?
Radish. Yes I have given up writing about politics. My waist has gotten bigger.
BBBC. Tell me about your readership.
Radish. I love them.
BBBC. Well, can you tell me, if it is large?
Radish. I can’t.
BBBC. Well, we would like to give you our First Place Trophy for free form punctuation. (Applause)
Radish. Oh thank you. My family is going to be proud, they have been so supportive. This trophy is for you.
Posted at 07:17 AM in Day to Day | Permalink | Comments (10)
Yesterday we went to buy our tree. We have to be very careful with our choice as , we hope to keep the tree up until January 6, Epiphany. (When, tra-la, we can have more presents. Just kidding Michael.) Our tree has to be short as it is going on the kitchen counter. Already the trees at the grocery store are old and are shedding.
I talked to one woman who bought a tree the day before yesterday, and when she decorated it, all the needles fell off. She asked if it had ever happened to me, and yes, unfortunately, it had. She was going to have buy a new one. I and the people listening, told her to get her money back. She asked who had ever asked for money back for a Christmas tree?
The Christmas tree farms have all closed up as everyone has already purchased. This is the first year that my husband was not ready for the tree hunt passage of Christmas. We like to buy an unsheared tree. I like the hapless design of a branch here, a branch there, the imperfections giving character. We are a hard sell for a fake tree. The weather was miserable, only 45degrees, but rainy and windy. Hats on, and jackets zipped to the neck, we drove right over to a vegetable stand which was selling trees, and a very agreeably the young woman sawed off the top of a $30.00 tree, said, “that will be $20.00 and Merry Christmas.”
Posted at 12:32 PM in Christmas | Permalink | Comments (4)
Snow geese winter in our vicinity, having migrated from northern Canada. They have two main areas where they live; one north of us and one east of us. So during the year they go back and forth a little, but mainly they stay in their chosen spot for the season. All they do, as far as I can tell, is eat and poop. In Washington, in the Skagit Valley they feed on left over grain in the fields. Once part of the flock flew over us in the grocery parking lot, very impressive, but you did not see them at full strength. That was a birding moment.
Yesterday while Michael and I were driving, we saw the whole flock in flight. I am talking thousands. Maybe not the fifty-five thousand that winter here in Western Washington, but a lot. Most geese do winter here in the Skagit Valley. This is a birders destination point. We think of geese flying in the V shape. This was V, within V, within a V, within a V. Inside the V where an opening occurred, a V came to fill the space. The movement was fluid as waves on the beach. It was moving to see such a special sight.
Posted at 07:45 AM in Day to Day | Permalink | Comments (1)
I have a friend who yearly went through the Christmas season with me. By that I mean, we cooked Christmas Eve dinner of enchiladas, tortellini, Swedish meatballs, or what ever was the dish. We froze these three weeks ahead of time. We discussed gifts for our family. She worked so she had more money, so purchasing was a little easier for her. But she always had great ideas. One year she brought her husband a cherry picker. We had a joint holiday dinner with friends. We thumbed through magazines together and mused over our ideas. We thought about how to make the season spiritual without alienating our families.
Our husbands could never understand what all the hype was about. Just like kids who think food comes from McDonalds, we felt our husbands thought you opened the front door, and Christmas was just there. Christmas was our problem, money for Christmas was theirs. All our meals, all the wrapping, all the shopping, all the decorating, getting the lights on the fricken tree, sending the Christmas cards, dealing with scrabbling kids, entertaining our mother-in-laws. That last, bonded us forever. Our husbands had the holiday spirit and wanted us to entertain them, while we doing all this stuff. Stuff is the nice word. Christmas was our yearly final. But that was then, and now is now, and now my girls husbands are helping them with everything, alleviating all pressure.
PS. Weddings were our PhDs. Ah, but that is another story.
Posted at 08:23 AM in Christmas | Permalink | Comments (0)