Showing posts with label family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family. Show all posts

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Perfect Meal Revision


“Honey, I swear to god I wrote this out in ’96,” my mother sighed over the phone, digging an old slip of paper out of her recipe folder. 
“You found it?” I asked. 
“Yeah, it’s here. I can’t believe it! It’s a sign, you know? Now you have to make it.”
I had frantically called my mother Thursday night to ask for advice.  I had been assigned a paper a few weeks before where I was asked to make my perfect meal.  At first I had thought this would be a great opportunity.  Living with six other students in an on-campus house can get pretty stressful pretty fast. Kitchen time is coveted, and this assignment would give me the chance to kick my housemates out of the kitchen for an entire evening! And, in my opinion, a perfect meal wouldn’t have a budget, giving me
a reason to buy expensive ingredients that I knew I couldn’t afford.  For just one meal, I would refuse to feel guilty about spoiling myself. I would turn my shitty, spaghetti-sauce covered kitchen into a place where I could feel good about where I was and what I was eating.
My mom began cooking when she was in college.  As the mother-figure in her sorority house, she would send her friends to the grocery store with a list of all the ingredients she wanted for the week. They would pay for everything, and in return she would cook them all homemade pastas, hearty soups and delicate salads. 
In my house in Kalamazoo, things are much different.  We all have different appetites, different palates and different schedules.  I like to eat late, around 9—which is when I usually sit down to eat with my family at home—the rest of the house likes to eat early, about 6-ish, except for Ryan who likes to eat all the time, constantly taking over the kitchen with his whole wheat flour, wheat germ, protein powder and fat free hot-dogs he cooks over the fire, making the whole house smell like burnt mystery meat. 
At my home in Minnesota, I sit at the granite counter snipping the ends off of green beans and sipping wine as my mom whisks together a vinaigrette.  We talk about our days and rutabagas as we cook.  When my mother makes dinner, it’s an event.  There’s James Taylor and Carole King playing in the background, a fire in the fireplace, flowers on the counter, and my father steps in for a dance every now and then. I knew that was what I wanted, that sense of home and simplicity, here, in Kalamazoo where meals were usually rushed and frustrating. 
I called my mother because I couldn’t decide and because we hadn’t spoken in over two days, way longer than maternally acceptable.
“I think I should make breakfast. Eggs benedict or something. I’ve never made hollandaise or poached an egg on my own before.”
“Meh.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“That’s not your perfect meal, Hannah.”
“I love eggs benedict Mom. You know that.”
“Yeah, but it’s not what you’ll feel proud of later.” 
“You don’t know me,” I responded, knowing that she was undeniably right. 
“Han. Make mushroom risotto.  You’ve never made it all on your own.  And you’ll remember how to make it for the rest of your life. And there is absolutely no way you can feel bad after eating risotto. Especially if you throw in a wad of butter at the very end like the Italians do.”
It was perfectly obvious. Mushroom Risotto was my perfect meal as a child, before I became a vegetarian. And now that meat was off the table, I found a lot of comfort eating it with my family, one of the only meatless-meals my parents and younger sister loved eating as much as any meat-based dish. 
My mom first made mushroom risotto when she was in her early 30s, when I was just five.  She wrote the recipe down from her Italian sister-in-law, Zinni, who assured her it was the way real Italians made it.  Serendipitously, my mother found the piece of paper she had written the recipe down on fifteen years ago.  
“I’ll scan it to you. You won’t understand my directions, it’s in the short-hand I use for all my recipes. But I’ll explain it to you.”
I thanked my mom and went to bed happy that I had made a decision, and hungry for the delicious dish I had craved consistently as a child. I resolved that I would make the dinner for my housemates the following night, and fell asleep dreaming of little button mushrooms that would soon be dancing in my belly. 
I woke up Friday morning with my throat throbbing and my nose dripping with mucous.—
I’m not going to lie, I shamelessly cried about it. I think I was just worn out.  I had been organizing a big poetry event on my college campus and I had been getting very little sleep to keep up with my homework and my social life. 
Two of my empathetic housemates witnessed my breakdown and took pity on me.  Max and Emily insisted that they stop by the local People’s Food Co-op for the majority of the ingredients and the nearby one-stop giant grocery store Meijer for the parsley and fresh mushrooms when they went to get their weekly groceries.  They didn’t let me resist their kindness.  Max wrote down my list of ingredients while Emily made me some tea. 
As they drove off, I drifted off to sleep for the next six hours, hoping I would wake up somewhat revived. 
***
Sunday was a beautiful day in Kalamazoo, and the perfect day to make my perfect meal. I had recuperated from Friday’s sudden sickness, the poetry event I had organized had gone well and I was on a high from all the beautiful sunlight coming through my house’s windows.  I had invited all my housemates to my meal, knowing that Ryan would disapprove of all the butter and cream, the other Hannah wouldn’t be able to make it because of dance, and that Renjie never made it home before 2am anyway, so it would just be Max, Emily and Melissa. 
Before the actually cooking started, I had to set the scene just how I wanted it.  Our perpetually dirty kitchen had to be clean if this was going to be my perfect meal.  So I set out scrubbing down the stove, tackling the giant pile of dishes in and next to the sink, sweeping the floors and putting away the dry dishes.  My mother has similar, sometimes obsessive habits, cleaning the kitchen before our cleaning lady, Dasha, arrives and always opening the window a smidgen before she begins to cook. I also couldn’t start making my perfect meal without opening the small kitchen window a  crack, grabbing a handful of berry scented candles and some music to play in the background. 
I wanted that. I wanted to be at home with her while I cooked.
I lit the candles, turned on some music, poured myself a small glass of boxed wine and started to cook.
It turns out risotto is a lot harder than I remember as a kid. The ingredients are simple: arborio rice, unsalted butter, olive oil, a large onion, wine, chicken broth—which I substituted with mushroom broth—white wine, cream, Parmigiano-Reggiano, a little bit of parsley, dried porcinis and fresh mushrooms.  But the process is rough.  
“Risotto is always the same, except for the liquids and how you finish it,” I remembered my mother telling me as I sauteed the chopped onion in the butter and olive oil in my housemate’s beautiful red pot. I added the plump rice and coated it in the buttery mixture.  I slowly poured in the white wine and stirred the golden-mixture for several minutes. I started to get anxious. 
The liquids need to be hot when you add them to the risotto, that’s key. That’s where the patience comes in.  I had started heating the mushroom broth, but I didn’t know if it was quite hot enough.  The risotto was supposed to stay just short of boiling.  I hesitantly added a cup of the broth to the rice.  I was shocked at how quickly the rice absorbed the liquid.  I constantly stirred the rice with one hand while the other scooped the almost-boiling liquid into the pot. 
I set down my wooden spoon on the counter and saw the unopened package fo porcinis. I had forgotten to reconstitute the mushrooms! They needed to boil in water for twenty minutes in order to be ready to add to the risotto. As I reached for a new pot, three of my housemates walked in to the house. 
The sun was setting and my candles were not sufficient lighting.  I reluctantly switched on the fluorescent lights I hated so much. I have nightmares with bad lighting.  I felt my mother’s perfect atmosphere slipping away from me as Max started stirring my rice, Emily danced to the music, and Ryan stared at his chili heating up in the microwave.
“Guys, I’m sorry to be a bitch, but I really need you all to leave the kitchen.”
I felt horrible. I couldn’t add the liquid fast enough, I had been rude to my housemates, and I was getting sweaty from all the stress. 
But suddenly, as the others retreated to their corners of the house, the risotto started tasting right.  It was slightly creamy, yet a bit al-dente, just like I remembered it.  I was getting close. 
I pulled the barnacle-esq porcini mushrooms off of the burner, strained them, and gave them a rough chop. I added some of the leftover liquid to the risotto like my mother instructed and was feeling much better. 
I had forgotten to saute the fresh mushrooms. 
I was so disappointed.  As I watched the fresh mushrooms saute into beautiful brown clumps, I felt my risotto going from that perfect al-dente to a mushy, sticky consistency. 
Pissed, sweaty and hungry, I added the mushrooms, cream, grated cheese, salt, pepper and parsley to the pot, threw in a clump of butter for good measure, and called my housemates down for dinner, embarrassed by what I was serving them. I wanted them to taste my childhood and I was certain this wasn’t going to be it. 
I set the table with some lovely Michigan tulips I had bought from my favorite local coffee shop, Waterstreet Coffee Joint and lit some candles on the table.  I pulled the golden rustic bread out of the oven that was also baked and purchased from Waterstreet and we sat down to eat.  
As Max, Emily and Melissa ladled heaps of risotto onto their plates, I started passing the bread.  
They all thanked me for inviting them and I shrugged, hoping it was edible. I wondered what I would tell mom about my failed attempt.  I absentmindedly took a bite of the mush. 
It may not have looked like my mothers, but it sure tasted like it. 
It was just as creamy, just as mushroom-filled as I remembered it. I had been freaked out for no reason, and my friends seemed to be  enjoying it.  It was then I realized how silly I had been.  In search of my perfect meal, I was searching for my mother, for my perception of perfection, something I now know I cannot achieve.  But what I did found was friends who care enough about me to buy my groceries for me when I’m sick, who get out of the kitchen when I ask them to, who put up with my silly love of good-lighting, and who take the time out of their day to eat my mush of a meal. 
We laughed throughout dinner, finishing all the bread and all of our piles of risotto.  As the meal ended, we turned up the volume on my speakers and danced in our living room until our stomachs hurt from too much cream and just enough laughter. 
The next day was Valentines day.  I got a text from a friend saying I had a package in the mail center. It was a Valentine from my mother. Inside was a package and a plastic bag full of dried morel mushrooms and a card that read, “For next time.”

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

My Mother Should be Taking This Course.



My mom sent me this email and recipe for Gnudi. She called me to catch up last week and has mentioned the dish the past two times as well. She also gave me a link to The Spotted Pig version of the recipe, the Spotted Pig being a restaurant Sam Sifton mentioned in one of his critiques we read for this week. Maybe I'll make it for our potluck? 
"So, gnudi. I think I may just be obsessed with the word (Italian for nude) but after seeing the David Rocco episode on Cooking Channel I can't wait to make some and they are vegetarian, so I think it's something you should add to your repertoire.
    First, here's the recipe I saw him make: David Rocco
    Second, while looking for his recipe I came across this blog and version of gnudi from famous NY restaurant The Spotted Pig. Thought you'd enjoy their unique method (letting moist gnudi sit in semolina flour overnight to make a noodle-like outer shell) and also the blog itself (The Paupered Chef): The Spotted Pig
    Reading through the reviews/comments at the end, there's mention of the need to re-drain the ricotta through cheesecloth (also to use sheep's milk ricotta, but I think that would make it expensive for the college budget and doubt that it would make a huge difference.) I am going to experiment before you come home so I can try my gnudi out on you!"

Critiquing the Critic

    I couldn't help compare Sam Sifton's writing to that of  the notorious A.J. Liebling.   In the first critique I read by Sifton, he had just visited Ai Fiori.  Like Liebling, his writing was undeniably beautiful, vivid and eloquent.  However, my immediate reaction was: pretentious. When he described the restaurant on the ground level of the hotel with "farmhouse tables, rustic food and shouting," I found that unbelievable. From the one photo posted on the article, the restaurant looked anything but.  Although he gave the restaurant three stars, he said the risottos were "not magic but [. . .] hardly clunkers."  He said the meal tasted of "wealth and self-satisfaction." I loved when he got so excited about the forks "set in high-European manner" but by the end of the article, I wasn't sure if he was being serious or bitingly sarcastic. 
     The second review I read only grounded my initial feelings more. Sifton described Bar Basque having an extremely uncomfortable atmosphere, and said it "evoke[d] a future in which everyone lives inside a mobile device." His skill for writing was still evident when he described the food, his cod dish was accompanied by "baby root vegetables [sitting] around the plate as throw pillows might surround a feather bed." But I was still not convinced.  While I felt that Sifton's writing was much more accessible than Liebling's, I still felt cold; I didn't feel that these stuffy-seeming old, white, rich men were capturing what I have always considered to be good food. 
But as I delved deeper, I connected with Sifton. In his Hey Mr. Critic series, he became human, just as Liebling did for me in his New Yorker articles. When a local couple mourns the loss of one of their favorite hole-in-the-wall restaurants, I was worried Sifton would respond by suggesting they check out a new $60 per person French Haute cuisine restaurant with a view of Central Park, 8 courses and all the Bourbon they could drink and to screw Dim Sum. But he knew the exact restaurant they were describing. He lamented with them, admitting he "ate there in the heat of summer and the slush and cold of February and all months in between, for years." Then he took it a bit too far, comparing losing a good restaurant to losing a loved one or a family member. But then I thought about the restaurants that I've loved that have left, a place called Nora's in particular. 
     It was about ten minutes from my old house, and my family's top choice for family dinner outings.  They had a salad bar that my sister and I loved, with homemade macaroni and cheese, creamy cheddar molten on the inside with browning bubbles on top. My sister particularly loved the pop-overs which for some reason—we have no idea how she came up with it—she referred to as 'Buffalos.' My mother would order the Pork Chops and my dad the Walleye and for desert we'd split a turtle sundae. After dinner we played 'shadow tag' in the parking lot until our stomachs cramped from too much food and laughter. Seven years later we still talk about how great that place was and how lame the new French place is that took its place. 
     I was starting to get Sifton. His next Hey Mr. Critic article I read talked about how to get the "Maximal Flavor for Minimal Cash." While he did let people know about the $50 options, it turns out Sifton knows that the best way to get cheap, good food is to look for those small, unnoticed ethnic places that are rich with flavor and culture. I liked that he had an opinion on restaurants that offer reservations vs. places that don't and actually created a dialogue with his readers, making me laugh out loud when he posed the discussion: "That is a subject you can argue about in the comments below if you like, at least if you’ve been to the restaurants a bunch and can write a civil sentence about them. (Otherwise: step off.)"  You can tell his readers like him by the comments they post on his critiques. Even when they have something negative to say, they are usually formal and polite.  This may have a lot to do with his audience, but I also think it has something to do with his honesty, his humor and his accessible writing. Even if I was a well-known food critique and my job was to let my readers know the truth about good food and the "intersection of eating and health," there is NO way I would tell my audience I consumed 24,560 calories. But that's what I enjoyed in Sifton's writing. His honesty. That he talked about his family, that he defended his lack of vegetables. That he posted a YouTube video to all the haters commenting on his health article. That he admitted that sometimes he has a bad day and heads out for chicken wings and beer with some reporter friends. 




Tuesday, February 15, 2011

For Next Time


      “Honey, I swear to god I wrote this out in ’96,” my mother sighed over the phone, digging an old slip of paper out of her recipe folder.
      "You found it?" I asked. 
My mom and I sitting on a bench. 

      “Yeah, it’s here. I can’t believe it! It’s a sign, you know? Now you have to make it.”
I had frantically called my mother Thursday night to ask for advice.  I had been assigned a paper a few weeks before where I had to make my perfect meal.  At first I had thought this would be a great opportunity.  I could eat meat!  I would have a reason to buy expensive ingredients that I knew I couldn’t afford.  I could kick my housemates out of my kitchen for an entire evening! 
      But as I flipped through my homemade composition-notebook bound recipe book for inspiration, I quickly realized this would test my indecisiveness, my lack of pro-activeness and my inability to settle for anything less than perfect. 
      I wanted to make meat. I wanted to find a way to feel good about eating a food I love, a food I believe should be consumed by humans in a healthy, moderate, sustainable way. I wanted an excuse to visit the farms in Kalamazoo, MI where I had been purchasing my local eggs from for the past seven months.  I knew where my meat came from in my hometown of Minneapolis, but I was ashamedly ignorant of my current surroundings. And really, I was just craving a delicious breakfast sausage, covered in peppers.  Or eggs benedict, made with REAL thick cut, locally raised, grass fed bacon. Even meatloaf sounded appetizing. 
      But what to pick? There were too many options. I haven’t eaten any meat—besides the occasional sushi binge—since I was home this summer when my mother could afford to purchase meat I could justify eating.  
      I called her because I couldn’t decide and because we hadn’t spoken in over two days, way longer than maternally acceptable. 
      “Don’t cook meat. You won’t be happy in the end.”
      “What? Why mom? I would visit the farms, I’d be okay with it.”
      “You’ll feel bad. You’ll cook it. It’ll taste good. But you’ll feel bad. Make something that you know will make you feel happy when you eat it.”
      “You don’t know me,” I responded, knowing that she was undeniably right. 
      “Han. Make mushroom risotto.  You’ve never made it all on your own.  And you’ll remember how to make it for the rest of your life. And there is absolutely no way you can feel bad after eating risotto. Especially if you throw in a wad of butter at the very end like the Italians do.”
      It was perfectly obvious. Mushroom Risotto was my perfect meal as a child, before I became a vegetarian. And now that meat was off the table, I found a lot of comfort eating it with my family, one of the only meatless-meals my parents and younger sister loved eating as much as any meat-based dish. 
      My mom first made mushroom risotto when she was in her early 30s, when I was just five.  She wrote the recipe down from her Italian sister-in-law Zinni who assured her it was the way real Italians made it.  Serendipitously, my mother found the piece of paper she had written the recipe down on fifteen years ago.  
      “I’ll scan it to you. You won’t understand my directions, it’s in the short-hand I use for all my recipes. But I’ll explain it to you.”
      I thanked my mom and went to bed happy that I had made a decision, and hungry for the delicious dish I had craved constantly as a child. I resolved that I would make the dinner for my housemates the following night, and fell asleep dreaming of little button mushrooms dancing on my eyelids.
      I woke up Friday morning with my throat throbbing and my nose dripping with mucous. 
      I’m not going to lie, I shamelessly cried about it. I think I was just worn out.  I had been organizing a big poetry event on my college campus and I had been getting very little sleep to keep up with my homework and my social life. But I also just really wanted to go for a relaxing walk downtown to get my groceries before cooking a meal by myself, two luxuries I’ve rarely allowed myself to experience this year. 
      Two of my wonderful wonderful housemates witnessed my breakdown and took pity on me.  Max and Emily offered to go to the local People’s Food Co-op for the majority of the ingredients and the nearby one-stop giant grocery store Meijer for the parsley and fresh mushrooms for me when they went to get their weekly groceries.  They didn’t let me resist their kindness.  Max wrote down my list of ingredients while Emily made me some tea. 
As they drove off, I drifted off to sleep for the next six hours, hoping I would wake up somewhat revived. 
***
      Sunday was a beautiful day in Kalamazoo, and the perfect day to make my perfect meal. I had recuperated from Friday’s sudden sickness, the poetry event I had organized had gone well and I was on a high from all the beautiful sunlight coming through my house’s windows.  I had invited all my housemates to my meal, but had asked them politely to stay out of the kitchen while I cooked, something that otherwise would never have happened, as the kitchen is a common gathering space for the seven of us. 
      I started to prepare my meal.  But before the actually cooking started, I had to set the scene just how I wanted it.  Our perpetually dirty kitchen had to be clean if this was going to be my perfect meal.  So I set out scrubbing down the stove, tackling the giant pile of dishes in and next to the sink, sweeping the floors and putting away the dry dishes.  
      I’ve started becoming more and more like my mother since I’ve started living on my own, and I’ve stopped resisting it.  I enjoy cleaning now, I find it relaxing. My mother cleans before our cleaning lady, Dasha, arrives.  I also couldn’t start making my perfect meal without opening the small kitchen window a crack, grabbing a handful of berry scented candles and some music to play in the background.  When my mother cooks, it’s an event.  There’s James Taylor and Carole King playing, a fire in the fireplace, flowers on the counter, and my father steps in for a dance every now and then. 
      I wanted that. I wanted to be at home with them while I cooked. 
I lit the candles, turned on some music, poured myself a small glass of boxed wine and started to cook. 
Filtering the liquids. 
      Risotto is a lot harder than I remember as a kid. The ingredients are simple: arborio rice, unsalted butter, olive oil, a large onion, wine, chicken broth—which I substituted with mushroom broth—white wine, cream, Parmigiano-Reggiano, a little bit of parsley, dried porcinis and fresh mushrooms.  But the process is rough.  
      “Risotto is always the same, except for the liquids and how you finish it,” I remembered my mother telling me as I sauteed the chopped onion in the butter and olive oil in my housemate’s beautiful red pot. I added the rice and coated it in the buttery mixture.  I poured in the white wine and stirred the golden-mixture for several minutes. Then I started to get anxious. 
The arborio rice starts to absorb the liquids.
      The liquids need to be hot when you add them to the risotto, that’s the key. That’s where the patience comes in.  I had started heating the mushroom broth, but I didn’t know if it was quite hot enough.  The risotto was supposed to stay just short of boiling, my mother had told me.  I hesitantly added a cup of the broth to the rice.  I was shocked at how quickly the rice absorbed the liquid.  I constantly stirred the rice with one hand while the other scooped the almost-boiling liquid into the pot. 
      Then I realized I had forgotten to reconstitute the mushrooms! They needed to boil in water for twenty minutes in order to be ready to add to the risotto. As I reached for a new pot, three of my housemates walked in to the house. 
      The sun was setting and my candles were not sufficient lighting.  I had to turn on the fluorescent lights I hated so much. I have nightmares with bad lighting.  I felt my perfect atmosphere slipping away from me as Max started stirring my rice, Emily danced to the music, and Ryan stared at his chili heating up in the microwave. And I needed to add liquid to the rice!
      “Guys, I’m sorry to be a bitch, but I really need you all to leave the kitchen.”
   
The re-constituted porcini mushrooms. 
   I was even more like my mother than I thought. I had kicked people out. I felt horrible. My I couldn’t add the liquid fast enough, I had been rude to my housemates, and I was getting sweaty from all the stress. 
      But suddenly, the risotto started tasting right.  It was slightly creamy, yet a bit al-dente, just like I remembered it.  I was getting close. 
      I pulled the porcini mushrooms off of the burner, strained them, and gave them a rough chop. I added some of the leftover liquid to the risotto like my mother instructed and was feeling pretty good about my dinner. 
      I had forgotten to saute the fresh mushrooms. 
Delicious rustic country bread from WaterStreet. 

      I was so disappointed.  As I watched the fresh mushrooms saute into beautiful brown clumps, I felt my risotto going from that perfect al-dente to a mushy, sticky consistency. 
      Pissed, sweaty and hungry, I added the mushrooms, cream, cheese, salt, pepper and parsley to the pot, threw in a clump of butter for good measure, and called my housemates down for dinner, embarrassed by what I was serving them. I wanted them to taste my childhood, and I was certain this wasn’t going to be it. 
      I set the table with some tulips I had bought from my favorite local coffee shop, Waterstreet Coffee Joint and lit some candles on the table.  I pulled the bread out of the oven that was also baked and purchased from Waterstreet and we sat down to eat.
As Max, Emily and Melissa ladled heaps of risotto onto their plates, I started passing the bread.  They all thanked me for inviting them and I shrugged, hoping it was edible. 
      It may not have looked like my mothers, but it sure tasted like it. 
Setting the mood with candles and tulips. 
     It was just as creamy, just as mushroom-filled as I remembered it. I had been freaked out for no reason, and my friends loved it.  It was then I realized how silly I had been.  In search of my perfect meal, I was searching for perfection, something I now know I cannot achieve. But what I found was friends who care enough about me to buy my groceries for me when I’m sick, who get out of the kitchen when I ask them to, who put up with my silly love of good-lighting, and who take the time out of their day to eat my mush of a meal. 
      We laughed throughout dinner, finishing all the bread and all of our piles of risotto.  As the meal ended, we turned up the volume on my speakers and danced in our living room until our stomachs hurt from too much cream and just enough laughter. 
      The next day was Valentines day, and just as lovely as Sunday with the sun and the birds out from hiding.  I got a text from a friend saying I had a package in the mail center. It was a Valentine from my mother. Inside was a package and a plastic bag full of dried morel mushrooms and a card that read, “For next time.”

Thursday, February 10, 2011

An Acquired Taste

Carol Daly isn’t domestic. And she’s proud of it.
My grandmother, affectionately referred to as Grams, is not your typical grandma. She is a feminist, an art-lover, Brooklyn-bred, ethnically-Jewish-now-agnostic-who-likes-to-talk-about-string-theory and she is loud. You know Grams has arrived before you see her. Now that all three of her sons are grown, she frequently brings up her lack of maternal nature and how she never got the whole mothering-thing.
Grams will be the first to tell you she can’t cook. She can microwave. And she can put together appetizer trays, pineapple and strawberry fruit bowls, cheese and crackers, potato knishes, shrimp and plenty of toothpicks. When my father and his two younger brothers were growing up, she would make them liver and onions, boxed mashed potatoes and white bread. My father’s idea of fancy was a SaraLee All-Butter Frozen Pound Cake. The only thing Grams prides herself on in the kitchen is a handful of traditional Jewish foods we eat for Christmukkah every year. She can make a pretty mean Kugel, a kind of sweet, baked noodle casserole, brisket with mushrooms and onions, and potato latkes. But now that you can buy those at Crossroads Deli, she usually does that instead.
When I was ten, she took me to New York City to “see where I come from.” We went to the Museum of Natural History, played checkers on a Circle Line Cruise, saw the World Trade Center a few months before it collapsed, and spit off the top of the Empire State Building, aiming for the brown specks below us.
But I mostly remember those events through pictures. What I really remember is Katz’s Deli.
Grams had trouble finding food we could both enjoy in New York. She had already accidentally revealed to me that there are anchovies in caesar salad and scolded me when I smooshed my leftovers into ‘polyjuice potion’ at a restaurant close to our hotel. Katz’s Deli was her final attempt at finding a place we could both enjoy.
I ordered the half-pound cheeseburger, not realizing that it would be twice the size of my head, and got some coleslaw that I refused to touch due to my distain for anything with mayo. Grams bought us some New York style cheesecake to share and mumbled something with the word sandwich at the end. We sat down with our trays at a booth in the back. I got through about a third of my burger and couldn’t finish. But I did have some room for cheesecake, of course.
I reached my fork out towards the fluffly, cream-colored wedge. But just before I dug in, Grams grabbed my arm.
“Nuh, uh. Not until you try mine.”
“Your sandwich? What is it?”
It was really pink. Not pink like ham, but more red, like raw beef. It was on a giant slice of white bread with nothing else, just a whole-lotta meat.
“It’s a special kind of beef, Han. Now, don’t freak out . . . but this sandwich is made from cow tongue.”
I think I dropped my fork. I hope I did. I had never heard of a tongue sandwich. It looked like normal deli meats, it couldn’t be that bad. And I really wanted some cake.
Grams cut a small corner off and handed it to me. I took a small bite.
It tasted like beef, only more muscle-y and salty. I didn’t mind it. But then I started thinking about it. I was chewing on something that had chewed on something else. My tongue was tasting another tongue. I started picturing a bunch of cows out in a field chewing on human tongues, mooing in pleasure. I wasn’t hungry for cheesecake anymore.

* * *

My father takes after Grams. He doesn’t cook, he mixes. While my mother braises, butchers and broils, my father fetches the white wine from the basement and pours it into glasses filled with ice cubes. He can grill, fry and scramble, but he can’t set a table properly. He does the dishes and takes out the trash, but when it comes to daily family meals, he does the prep work and the clean up, but tends to back away from the actual execution.
When my mother used to go out of town for business meetings, the task of feeding my sister and me fell on my dad. This meant one of three things: take-out from King’s Wok, the sketchy Chinese place that uses oil as a sauce, baked ziti from the nearby Sbarro, smothered in cheese and breadcrumbs, crispy on the top from sitting under the heat-lamps all afternoon, or he would try and scrounge something together from scratch.
Like Grams, my father has a repertoire of things he ‘dabbles’ in in the kitchen. He can grill—that’s his thing. Kebobs, grilled corn, smoked salmon, he’s got those down. And he can make some mean eggs. He never breaks a yoke that isn’t meant to be broken. But those are his only real comfort zones. When it comes to cooking for me and my sister, he had several go-tos. Simple spaghetti, noodles stuck together because they were overcooked, Jack’s Original frozen pizza with extra shredded cheddar sprinkled on top, and—it makes me cringe now to think of them—those horrible ‘Kid Cuisines,’ the pre-portioned frozen meals that came in the fun blue trays and always had a fun, colorful desert in one of the quadrants.
My memories of my father’s cooking exploits tend to involve microwaves, lots of carbs, cheese and a lot of laughter. Leftover smörgåsbords and kraft mac and cheese in front of the television followed by tickle fights. But it’s not the food that I find myself missing now that I’m far from home, it’s those spray-milk-out-of-your-nose moments that we always seemed to have.
Now that I can cook for myself, I rarely eat my father’s meals when I’m home on breaks. The only food we make together is on random, lazy, sun-soaked Sunday mornings when we both find ourselves with time we didn’t know we had. I sit at the kitchen counter in my pajamas, my legs dangling off the edge of the stool while my father gathers the ingredients that Grams always had in her cupboard: Manischewitz Everything Matzo, a few eggs, a bowl filled about half-way with luke-warm water and some salt and pepper.
Now, matzo brei is definitely an acquired taste. My mother and sister can’t stand it. Most people I’ve met don’t like to eat matzo brei. They have to eat it over Passover, a set of Jewish holy days, when options are limited. Once you’ve had or heard of matzo brei, you understand why it’s not something most people drool over.
The dish consists of soggy matzo crackers scrambled with eggs. That’s it. I’ve heard that some people doctor it up, but really, simple matzo brei is best. My dad would let me break and soak the matzo, letting the cracker fragments bob up and down in the bowl of water, getting murky from all the salt salt. My dad whisks the eggs up with a fork, a skill that I always admired as a kid. I could never get my wrist to move that fast, and whenever I tried I would always spill the yolky mixture on the counter.
Once the matzo is almost-mushy and the eggs are sufficiently scrambled, they both would go into a heated pan on the stove with a distinct sizzle sound as they hit the scalding metal. I’ve tried to make the traditional Jewish dish on my own, but I can never scramble it just right. My dad has just the right amount of patience to get it golden and just a little crisp on the edges.
When the brei is finished, we sit together at the counter and eat. It tastes like bland, over-salted scrambled eggs, the most distinct flavor coming from the garlic and poppy on the everything matzo. Its not as good as my mother's brioche french toast or even my own breakfast concoctions. But there's something about sitting with my father at the kitchen table, just the two of us, eating the food his mother made him as a child.




Monday, January 24, 2011

Papa Pete & the 819lb Tuna

I told my Dad I mentioned my Great Grandma Daly and her career as a Tuna fisherwoman and he sent me this photo of his father—my Papa Pete—catching a Tuna on The Anytime, my family's old fishing boat off of Cape Cod. Crazy, right?


Sunday, January 23, 2011

An Acquired Taste

My father doesn’t cook, he mixes. While my mother braises, butchers and broils, my father fetches the white wine from the basement and pours it into glasses filled with a few ice cubes. He can grill, fry and scramble, but he can’t set a table properly. He does the dishes and takes out the trash, but when it comes to daily family meals, he does the prep work and the clean up, but tends to back away from the actual execution.

When my mother used to go out of town for business meetings, the task of feeding my sister and me fell on my dad. This meant one of three things: take-out from Kings Wok, the sketchy chinese place that uses oil as a sauce, baked zitti from the nearby Sbarro, smothered in cheese and breadcrumbs, crispy on the top from sitting under the heat-lamps all afternoon, or he would try and scrounge something together.

My father has a repertoire of things he ‘dabbles’ in in the kitchen. He can grill—that’s his thing. Kebobs, grilled corn, smoked salmon, he’s got that down. And he can make some mean eggs. He never breaks a yoke that isn’t meant to be broken. But those are his only real comfort zones. When it comes to cooking for me and my sister, he had several go-tos. Simple spaghetti, noodles stuck together because they were overcooked, Jack’s Original frozen pizza with extra shredded cheddar sprinkled on top, and—it makes me cringe now to think of them—those horrible ‘Kid Cuisines,’ the pre-portioned frozen meals that came in the fun blue trays and always had a fun, colorful desert in one of the quadrants.

Our favorite mom-is-out-of-town-so-now-we-can-eat-what-we-want meal was my dad’s veal parmigiana. And by my dad’s, I mean he put it together. They came in a kit that had the breaded veal cutlets, a plastic-wrapped package of sauce, a few slices of mozzarella and partially-cooked linguini. All my dad had to do was stack the ingredients on top of each other and bake them for

several minutes. My sister and I would gobble those down like nobody’s business, getting sauce stuck on the corners of our mouths.

One evening, my overly-curious six-year-old sister asked my father what ‘veal’ meant. I kept chewing on the chunk in my mouth while my father kept washing a spatula over the sink. My nine-year-old self had never thought about what veal was, I guess I just figured it was chicken. My mom had ordered chicken parmigiana at restaurants before, and I assumed veal was the kid version or something.

My father turned around from the sink with the sponge still in his hand, suds dripping down his wrists. My sister slurped a noodle up off of her fork.

“Veal is cow, girls,” he said.

“Why don’t they call in cow parmigiana then, daddy?” Mara asked.

“Well, because it’s a special kind of cow sweetie.”

“What kind of cow?”

“Baby cow.”

My sister instantly started to cry. I didn’t really get it. The veal didn’t taste like a baby. It tasted like meat. Baby meat must taste different.

“Why’d they make us eat the babies, dad?” my sister sobbed.

“Because it tastes better, Mara. Don’t you like it?” dad said.

“Not anymore!”

I remembered my favorite scene in one of my favorite movies, the live-action Madeline, where the girls realize they’ve eaten their beloved chicken, Helen. They girls decide to be ‘vegetablearians’ and chant chicken noises at the top of their lungs before Miss Clavel calms them down.

After dinner, my sister and I kept calling ourselves vegetablearians and waited eagerly for my mother to come home so we could tell her the news. Needless to say, our new stance against meat infuriated my mother and put my father straight into the dog-house.

My memories of my father’s cooking exploits tend to involve microwaves, lots of carbs, cheese and a lot of laughter. Leftover smörgåsbords and kraft mac and cheese in front of the television followed by tickle fights. But its not the food that I find myself missing now that I’m far from home, its those spray-milk-of-your-nose moments that we always seemed to have.

Now that I can cook for myself, I rarely eat my father’s meals when I’m home on breaks. The only food we make together is on ramdom, lazy, sun-soaked sunday mornings when we both find ourselves with time we didn’t know we had. I sit at the kitchen counter in my pajamas, my legs dangling off the edge of the stool while my father gathers the ingredients: Manischewitz Everything Matzo, a few eggs, a bowl filled about half-way with luke-warm water and some salt and pepper.

Now, matzo brei is definitely an acquired taste. My mother and sister can’t stand it. Most people I’ve met don’t like to eat matzo brei. They have to eat it over Passover, a Jewish holy day, when their options are limited. Once you’ve had or heard of matzo brei, you understand why its not something most people drool over.

The dish consists of soggy matzo crackers scrambled with eggs. That’s it. I’ve heard that some people doctor it up, but really, simple matzo brei is best. My dad would let me break and soak the matzo, letting the cracker fragments bob up and down in the bowl of water, getting murky from all the salt salt. My dad whisks the eggs up with a fork, a skill that I always admired as a kid. I could never get my wrist to move that fast, and whenever I tried I would always spill the yolky mixture on the counter.

Once the matzo is almost-mushy and the eggs are sufficiently scrambled, they both would go into a heated pan on the stove with a distinct sizzle sound as they his the scalding metal. I’ve tried to make the traditional Jewish dish on my own, but I can never scramble it just right. My dad has just the right amount of patience to get it golden and just a little crisp on the edges.

When the brei is finished, we sit together at the counter and eat. It tastes like bland, over-salted scrambled eggs, the most distinct flavor coming from the garlic and poppy on the everything matzo. Its not as good as my mother's brioche french toast or even my own breakfast concoctions. But there's something about sitting with my father at the kitchen table, just the two of us, eating the food his mother made him as a child.