Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Grandmothers, Love, Cabbage and Poppyseed



   
      My Grandmother's enthusiasm for gardening and cooking was a staple of my childhood.  Through the dual wider lenses of being an adult and her passing…I still see her organic joy of planting, nurturing and cooking as the core to her soul. Babbie’s passion never wavered…she looked as forward to the first turn of warm, black dirt as she did to prepping her canning jars. She adored daisies and the smell of fresh cut parsley could make her toes curl. At one house I lived in, soil, water and sun came magically together to create a truly, once-in-a-lifetime, magnificent herb garden. Twenty years after I had moved out, Babbie was still fondly raving about a particularly prolific and fragrant marjoram bush. When she was frail, going blind and nearing the end of this stay on Earth, I was blessed with the opportunity to give her the most absolutely perfect gift…“Dirt," “Tomato Leaf” and “Marjoram” scented hand lotions from Demeter Fragrances. I confess that I am often guilty of thinking that I give the very best gifts, maybe yes, maybe no…but for sure, if only this one time, I impeccably nailed it.
        
     Babbie loved to fall asleep to the sound of raindrops and often had me to go outside and put our metal trash can lids under her window before a nap.  She also loved traveling and visiting her near and far family often carrying seeds and plant cuttings in both directions.  This resulted in her frequently being detained in airports… pre PSA regulations…over suspicious items hidden in her suitcase… mushrooms from a cousin in Czechoslovakia …oregano from California and her favorite hostess gift… one gallon bags of poppy seeds.  Her criminal behavior also included an activity she and my father liked to share called “midnight requisitioning."  Normally, relatively upstanding citizens, these two would think nothing of raiding fields of onions, lettuce and corn or maybe an orange grove or two after dark.  Most of the time, they channeled their inner Robin Hood and stuck to commercial operations, but if a neighbor’s artichoke plant or strawberry patch looked “forgotten” then it became fair game.
      
     Babbie’s gardening methods were mostly organic, especially pest control.  One day there were a couple of blue jays raising a noisy fuss and eating seeds that did not belong to them.  The next morning there was one dead in the garden, how the bird died still remains a family mystery. Babbie took his little body and staked it out in the dirt, crucifixion-style, so the other jays would see what happened when you messed with her garden. After that, even the snails kept a low profile.
       
     She was sturdy first generation, mushroom picking, sausage making Eastern European stock, the first one to speak English in their Slovak enclave in St, Louis, Illinois. She tried to keep the bi-lingual thread going with her grandchildren, but the only phrases I have retained are, “Thank you,” “Good Night,” “Give me a kiss” and “Please get me a beer”…come to think of it, maybe that is all you ever really ever need to say. 
       
     Babbie loved to cook huge pots of rich and hearty old world dishes. Her fundamental ingredients were chicken, potatoes, caraway seeds, a head of cabbage and her beloved parsley. As children we were not very impressed with these dishes, but as adults whenever we are feeling a little bit punky, stuffed cabbage rolls, potato pancakes or chicken and dumplings are our go to cure.   

     My favorite dish was lush, rue based, meat-free vegetable soup we always had for Christmas Eve dinner. The tradition was that whatever you had on your dining table that night would be plentiful during the following year, so the goal was to include a bit of every vegetable you possibly could which added up to a copious pot of delicious. The abundance theme was carried out with a centerpiece full of assorted fruit, flowers and nuts.  Occasionally, one of us would try to sneak in some candy and then one special year a red paper heart appeared.
       
     Throughout my childhood, if I was being particularly stubborn or challenging my mother would often vent her frustration by chastising me with “You are just like your grandmother!” At the time, I took the comparison to heart with all the negativity it was zinged at me with.  Now that I am older and wiser, I can’t think of a better compliment. Right up to the end Babbie was enthusiastically outspoken and rabidly curious, always marveling at some clever new idea or sharing a fresh concept she had just heard or read about.  She worked hard most of her life, but she was able to make a living doing what she loved most, cooking and caring for others and a piece of her beauty-full heart went into every pot. She lived bitter, hard things…prejudices, challenges, and the crippling pain of burying a husband and three of her children, but she would still weep with joy over a field of daisies.  Babbie knew a full, well-led life held both great sorrows and great happiness and she always carried both equally with faith, humor and grace.
                                               
                                          Dobru noc Babicka, all my love,
                                                                 Majinka


From Garden Table: A Celebration of Bare Feet, Fresh Picked Tomatoes and Not Waiting Until Sunday Night to Grill, by Mango Dragonfly.  Available at Amazon.com

















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