Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Tender, Love and Care

My sister, Meredith will remind me every couple of months of all the things she wants me never to forget. She begins “Remember when we were…” and I can predict what’s coming next: the memory, and then the laughter, and as of late, a promise to make those memories again. In fact, once she turned 20 in January, we began having these sessions more frequently than ever.

About two weeks ago, she drove from Raleigh, NC to come visit me here in Fairfax. She wanted to explore the city, so we did. She wanted to meet my friends, so she did. But most of all, she wanted to cook all of our favorite meals, so of course, we did.

The last night she was here, we made her favorite meal: chicken tenders and macaroni and cheese. We hand-breaded the chicken tenders with bread crumbs to put a healthy spin on it, cooked whole grain macaroni and cheese from a box. As we worked side-by-side in the kitchen, I thought about the simplicity of the meal, the hardly-noteworthy, difficult-to-ruin components of the dinner.

As she poured dry noodles into boiling water, I asked her, “Why is this your favorite?” even though I knew the answer.

“Duh!” she said, “The food man.”

We both laughed at the mysticism of The Food Man, who was actually a representative from Five Star Distributing and drove from house to house in a mobile-freezer. He’d stop by once a month and Mom would order big boxes of food: danishes, hamburgers, chicken tenders, and then The Food Man would let us go out to the freezer truck to help find the food. We loved everything about it: how he’d show up in all white holding a note pad to write down our order, the plastic hanging strips that separated the door of the truck and the freezer, how frosty they were, how majestic of an entrance.

Meredith said, “Chicken tenders and macaroni and cheese is just a perfect combination of food. Oh, and the barbeque sauce!”

She’s talking about Dad’s own concoction: a mixture of two different barbeque sauces combined into a plastic bottle with a spout. We use it for most meat: the tanginess of it perfect for chicken, the smoky spice ideal for coating pork chops.

When I suggested rolling chicken tenders in Italian breadcrumbs and baking them, just to try it out, I was sure she’d be hesitant to modify any characteristic of her favorite meal. It was, I suspected, a tradition she felt required to pay homage to, because her love for it had evolved as she had: it started as a meal she loved because The Food Man was a nice person, and developed into a meal Mom fixed after not having seen her for a while. It became a meal she fixed because she’d missed us over time.

“Well,” Meredith said, stirring cheese into her pot of noodles, “Do you have breadcrumbs in the pantry?”

Homemade Chicken Tenders

  • boneless, skinless chicken tenders
  • italian breadcrumbs
  • 1 egg
  • 2 tbs light melted butter
  • 1/2 cup light italian dressing
Completely defrost chicken tenders. Combine melted butter, italian dressing and egg into a mixture. Whisk, whisk, whisk! The mixture should form a sort of hurricane of liquid. Like this:
Now, set up your chicken tender station. Grease a baking pan, pour breadcrumbs into a bowl, right next to the mixture you just whisked.
Fully coat the chicken tenders in the egg mixture, roll them around in the breadcrumbs until you feel satisfied, and place on your baking pan.
Bake on 425 for 12 minutes. Afterward, they will essentially look the same as they did before the 12 minutes, only cooked, which is always nice.
If you're interested in making the barbeque sauce, too, it's: Carolina Treet Original Barbeque Sauce+Kraft Original Barbeque Sauce. And you should! It's the bomb.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Keep It Simple

This post is dedicated to my mother’s parents, who were gentle people with big, wide hearts.

Once, someone told me children didn’t start internalizing memories until after seven years old. I hardly believe that. If that were the case, I would have only vaguely remembered my grandparents. What I do know for sure is: when I reminisce about my childhood, close my eyes and try to recall details, it is them I remember, and sometimes, it is only them.

These days, when I’m in the kitchen experimenting and pairing spices together, I remember Granddaddy, crouched over the stove at 12 sharp. The television is on in the living room, and I’m seven or eight years old, freckle-faced and attentive. I know what he’s cooking us for lunch. I know what it is because I requested it. Smoke filters out of the kitchen in tiny waves and attaches to the sunlight billowing all around me, warming me up. He brings me a napkin and a glass of iced Mountain Dew and I thank him. He goes back into the kitchen for my lunch and his, and when he appears again, he has a bowl: noodles and broccoli. He sets it down in front of me. I’m sitting on a bathtowel in front of the television. “Be careful,” he says, voice pleasant and soft. He created this dish. As far as I’m concerned, no one in the entire world paired noodles and broccoli together before he did.

My grandparents were minimalists. For them, it was a way of staying healthy—eating meals that have long been familiar, occasionally spicing, but never straying too far from tradition. Granddaddy did most of the cooking for Nana, egg beaters and turkey bacon in the morning, chicken chow mein at night as they watched Murder She Wrote on TV trays. He cooked what she liked, simple food with few ingredients, but it was what they loved, what they never grew tired of, and so, it was what they ate for years.

I’ve decided to make sausage balls this week, partly in accordance with my classmates’ request, and partly because lately I’ve been thinking about how poignant it is to eat the same dishes year after year with a person you really love. Never experimenting, but never wanting to, the delight of your company a primary joy, the food, an added bonus.

Even now, years after their deaths, we eat sausage balls every Christmas, before dinner as an appetizer. I can’t remember a Christmas without them on the kitchen table, swaddled in paper towels inside a tin. They have three ingredients: hot sausage, cheddar cheese, Bisquick. There are ways to complicate them (onions, for example), but I never wanted to alter the recipe, afraid they may lose some of their luster, taint my years of memory somehow. When combined into a dough, these three ingredients result in a crispy biscuit, all of the flavors distinct and utilized, pleasing and delicious.

This time, I replaced regular hot sausage with lean sausage, used Heart Smart Bisquick, and reduced fat cheddar cheese. The sausage balls tasted the same as I remember, which, as you can probably assume, was a relief to me.

Sausage Balls
1 lb. lean hot sausage
3 cups Heart Smart Bisquick
12 oz. reduced fat sharp cheddar cheese

Brown sausage in a pan, drain completely and let cool. Next, in a large bowl, combine sausage, Bisquick, and cheese. In case you've either a) never seen these three ingredients in a bowl or b) forgotten what these three ingredients look like together in a bowl, here's this:
With your hands, knead the ingredients together until they form a dough. Unless you have ferocious upper-body strength, this will take a while. When you're done, all of the powder of the Bisquick and cheese should be moistened, but the mixture will still be quite crumbly.
After you've made your dough, started rolling out small spheres. This mixture should make about six dozen sausage balls, so keep that in mind. Then, bake them for approximately fifteen minutes and let cool. Feel free to half the recipe, or even quarter it. I made so many sausage balls, there was enough to feed a family of hungry bears. Or for this:

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

In the Kitchen

I saw Santa Clause once. He didn’t come down the chimney, he rang the doorbell and walked in, acknowledging every face as he passed, calling all the children by their names. Then, someone got him a chair, red velvet cushion and brown wood, and he sat, the fur stacking in folds behind his back. It was Christmas Eve and I was eight years old.

I met Santa that night in Dillon, South Carolina at Mima’s, my dad’s mother. I wondered how he found us there on George Washington Ave., how he knew what time we’d finish dinner and start opening presents and most of all, if he’d stay long enough to eat dessert.

Dillon, where my dad grew up and where his relatives mostly still reside, lodges itself in my memories and sets up camp. There is a warmness I feel when I think of it as a place in the world, compare it to everywhere else I’ve been and attached recollections to. Dillon is a town, but I think of it as Mima’s house, adoration dwelling inside the oak walls, tenderness seeping out in waves from the space heater.

Eventually, I got old enough to realize I was getting older and that Santa Clause had just been my uncle in red. My memories began to change shape. Instead of deriving comfort from Christmas surprises, I began to find beauty in the tradition of holiday food: familiar smells wafting about the kitchen, the assurance that whatever was beneath the lid of a corning ware dish was recognizable and exciting.

My dad’s mother, Mima, is the kind of Christmas cook that lines the countertops with food. She starts cooking the night before, and doesn’t stop cooking until we are all standing in the kitchen, holding hands, saying a dinner prayer. Christmas Eve at her house is a slow, twangy night, a country Christmas, like the kind of celebration Alabama sings about. Appetizers circle the kitchen table, fruit salad in small ceramic bowls, a cheese ball and crackers. We stand around the table in semi-circles and talk about the food we’re eating, we talk about what’s changed since last Christmas, we hug each other and eat almonds by the handful.

There is a dish we eat once a year at Christmas, Chicken Bog, that I try to recreate every now and then, but can’t seem to get just right. It is essentially: chicken, rice and Italian sausage, but there is a hidden quality to it that I’ve yet to master. The taste is just as smoky and wooden as the smell, all the flavors marrying each other, as they should in a mixture. But the remarkable element of “the bog” is how garishly the flavors represent themselves: the spice and the grain and the smoke.

At Mima’s house, we eat on paper plates and use solo cups and at 23, I still assume my place at the “kid’s table”. My dad’s side of the family is not a group of people who mind if the components of the meal touch, we let mushroom gravy from our stuffing run like rainwater into butter beans, and sift into the bottom of our biscuits. We loop “Blue Christmas” by Elvis on cassette and keep dessert in the laundry room on top of the washer and dryer until we’re hungry for it. And, after dessert, bellies full of all the food we may not see again until next Christmas Eve, we sit around the tree and exchange presents.

My mom’s parents lived in my hometown of Lumberton, NC. My Nana was a school teacher and my Grandaddy was a school principal. They have been dead thirteen years and ten years, respectively.

After ten years of Christmas without both of them, I surprise myself with the sadness I feel when I don’t see them side-by-side, baking crescent rolls. And though it is mostly unspoken, we are all trying to call them back to memory when we remove the “good china” from the curio cabinet, sit to bless the food.

The relationship my grandparents had with food has carried over to my mother, and to me. We eat the flavors we like, we don’t experiment as much as we could and we are simple. We are butter bean people and we are casserole people.

On Christmas Day, my Nana and Granddaddy found their joy in watching our eyes grow two sizes when unwrapping their gifts: one Christmas, a set of navy blue suitcases, another Christmas, a beanbag with our names across the side. But, lunch was never a surprise; the green bean casserole was always embellished with french-fried onions and the pecan pie was warm for dessert. Every Christmas Day, we had just the same meal. It was a constant we were pleased to profess.

We started having Christmas dinner at my house, and though the location changed, it was the only thing that did. My mother devils eggs, using Nana’s recipe, mashed yokes and Miracle Whip, and circles them up, a piece of lettuce placed as decoration in the middle. My Uncle Bill, her brother, sometimes brings deer hash, which may not be a delicacy anywhere besides our house. We serve it over rice, the vinegary, salty dark gravy of it coating everything on the plate in its color.

What I cherish though is not the casseroles, the homemade banana pudding, the honey ham. When I think of Christmas Day spent with my mother’s parents, it is the sausage balls I remember most. I see my Nana in the kitchen sitting at the table with a red Tupperware bowl filled with a doughy blend of sausage, cheddar cheese and Bisquick. She is forming small spheres with her hands and placing them equidistant from one another on a cookie sheet covered with Saran wrap. Every one of them is the same size. When she removes them from the oven, they are not burnt or undercooked, and the whole house smells crisp, like a bakery. She lets them cool, and when they do, she piles them, one onto another in a tin illustrated with snowmen and garland, and closes the lid. When we come over for lunch, they are still warm.

Every year since my grandparents died, we enjoy Christmas for the same reasons as the year before. We eat on their dishes, we use their recipes. We do this, not to try and resurrect them, but because, how else should we celebrate, if not by making ourselves happy?

Recently, North Country Public Radio, based out of Canton, New York, asked families to write in and share food traditions and recipes. Listeners responded, sharing stories of weekly spaghetti nights and birthday waffles. Lyn Burkett, of Potsdam, NY explains her tradition of a “cookie exchange”: a get-together that originated simply due to a love of sweets. She was in the 4th grade. She explains, “My mother helped me make a guest list (I think I invited 8 girls), and each guest was instructed to bring a shoebox with enough of her favorite cookies to share with each guest, as well as 9 copies of the recipe for her cookies.” Thirty years later, she states, the tradition continues.

“We all sample the cookies and enjoy a few other snacks, and everyone introduces themselves and their cookies ... some cookies are old family favorites, some come from particular ethnic traditions, and some are from newer recipes,” Burkett writes.

And now, after her mother’s death in 2006, the cookie exchange, she says, “has become a fond reminder of all the time the two of us spent in the kitchen baking during past Christmas seasons.”

We carry on food traditions for the same reasons we carry on any other tradition year after year: because it feels reverent and possible, and perhaps a little necessary. We do it because we miss people who aren’t there to stand beside us in front of the stove, but we can remember when they were. We do it because there is something so soothing about growing old beside a family member, letting the years pass by, but never forgetting how long to bake the squash casserole.