Sunday, November 22, 2009
Thoughts of Thanksgiving, …and a great recipe.
By G. E. Shuman
Thanksgiving, in a word, and as a word, is a mouthful. The long, feasting-table-length wish of “Happy Thanksgiving!” fills the air with syllables and the mind with fond memories of food and family. The very thought of Thanksgiving Day, to many of us, brings an anticipation of aromas emanating from warm, turkey-scented kitchens. Gravy-drenched garlic potatoes, steamy stuffing, pickles and pies all come to mind when we ponder this casual and cozy, butter-basted, late November holiday. It’s the day of pilgrims, Indians, and cornucopias that we learned of as young children; the one with the name which even begins with the ‘turkey’ letter. Yum, yum!
This Thursday will be the thirty-seventh Thanksgiving Day Lorna and I have celebrated together as husband and wife. Some recent Thanksgivings have been spent at the home of one or another of our adult children, and those times are wonderful. Still, over the years, most of these family celebrations have taken place right here in our old Barre, Vermont home.
To Lorna and to me there has always been something special about such times in this solid, well-aged place. Home is a house where your memories reside, and that is likely what makes this one so special to us. The sturdy, tall, thick-walled, elderly rooms of this house nearly echo with sounds of holidays past; of hours spent here, sheltered from the cold world by those big walls, and by love. Here we have cooked twenty-five or so family-size Thanksgiving turkeys together, and have stuffed them all with stuffing of only slightly varying stuff. We have also stuffed celery and pumpkins here, have opened dozens of cans of cranberry sauce and peeled hundreds of potatoes, all for fleeting, passing Thanksgiving Day dinners. I enjoy the notion that even earlier families who occupied this old home had holidays filled with scampering children and sumptuous kitchen scents. Their Thanksgivings were certainly graced with laughter and love, smiles and silliness, and grandkids and gratitude as are ours. At least, I hope they were.
Over these years our own Thanksgiving menus and recipes have changed little, but, with the passing of time, the company around the table has necessarily changed greatly. Years ago grandparents came to help us celebrate our first years together. Years later, our parents and cousins occasionally shared our feast, with us and our then-small children. In more recent Novembers, people who look somewhat like those small children we used to have come and bring children of their own to sit around that table. How wonderful, and yet how strange that we have now become the grandparents; the elders at the feast. Such positions hold great joy, but also at least a bit of trepidation for me. I know in my heart that as our family grows ever-greater in number, such future family times must be growing ever-fewer for the two of us. Maybe that is okay. Lorna and I are here together, this year. We do our best to live by faith, and will anxiously await and always enjoy as many family Thanksgivings as God allows us to share.
Years ago we, somehow, found a recipe that I wish you would try this year. It has filled us to overflowing, time and again, and has made many nearly perfect Thanksgivings for us. To follow the recipe, you simply turn the word around a bit, and remember to make Thanks-giving Day a day of consciously, gratefully giving thanks.
Thanksgiving, in a word, and as a word, is a mouthful. The long, feasting-table-length wish of “Happy Thanksgiving!” fills the air with syllables and the mind with fond memories of food and family. The very thought of Thanksgiving Day, to many of us, brings an anticipation of aromas emanating from warm, turkey-scented kitchens. Gravy-drenched garlic potatoes, steamy stuffing, pickles and pies all come to mind when we ponder this casual and cozy, butter-basted, late November holiday. It’s the day of pilgrims, Indians, and cornucopias that we learned of as young children; the one with the name which even begins with the ‘turkey’ letter. Yum, yum!
This Thursday will be the thirty-seventh Thanksgiving Day Lorna and I have celebrated together as husband and wife. Some recent Thanksgivings have been spent at the home of one or another of our adult children, and those times are wonderful. Still, over the years, most of these family celebrations have taken place right here in our old Barre, Vermont home.
To Lorna and to me there has always been something special about such times in this solid, well-aged place. Home is a house where your memories reside, and that is likely what makes this one so special to us. The sturdy, tall, thick-walled, elderly rooms of this house nearly echo with sounds of holidays past; of hours spent here, sheltered from the cold world by those big walls, and by love. Here we have cooked twenty-five or so family-size Thanksgiving turkeys together, and have stuffed them all with stuffing of only slightly varying stuff. We have also stuffed celery and pumpkins here, have opened dozens of cans of cranberry sauce and peeled hundreds of potatoes, all for fleeting, passing Thanksgiving Day dinners. I enjoy the notion that even earlier families who occupied this old home had holidays filled with scampering children and sumptuous kitchen scents. Their Thanksgivings were certainly graced with laughter and love, smiles and silliness, and grandkids and gratitude as are ours. At least, I hope they were.
Over these years our own Thanksgiving menus and recipes have changed little, but, with the passing of time, the company around the table has necessarily changed greatly. Years ago grandparents came to help us celebrate our first years together. Years later, our parents and cousins occasionally shared our feast, with us and our then-small children. In more recent Novembers, people who look somewhat like those small children we used to have come and bring children of their own to sit around that table. How wonderful, and yet how strange that we have now become the grandparents; the elders at the feast. Such positions hold great joy, but also at least a bit of trepidation for me. I know in my heart that as our family grows ever-greater in number, such future family times must be growing ever-fewer for the two of us. Maybe that is okay. Lorna and I are here together, this year. We do our best to live by faith, and will anxiously await and always enjoy as many family Thanksgivings as God allows us to share.
Years ago we, somehow, found a recipe that I wish you would try this year. It has filled us to overflowing, time and again, and has made many nearly perfect Thanksgivings for us. To follow the recipe, you simply turn the word around a bit, and remember to make Thanks-giving Day a day of consciously, gratefully giving thanks.
Thursday, November 5, 2009
Why We’re Here
By G. E. Shuman
Poetry, romance, music, dance,
Feeling, seeing, tasting chance,
Hurt and help, ill health and fear,
Love and life are why we’re here.
Others, seekers, soulful eyes,
Frightened, fearful, pleading sighs,
Weeping mourning ones to cheer,
Love and life are why we’re here.
Hungry bodies, hungry hearts,
Empty days, lonely starts,
Saddened spirits, rushing tears,
Love and life are why we’re here.
Shipwrecked lives that beg a chance
For poetry, romance, music, dance.
Lift them, ease them, calm their fear,
Love and life are why we’re here.
Mirror Him, who loves the lost,
Help a neighbor, forget cost,
Days so short, end so near,
Love and life are why we’re here.
Poetry, romance, music, dance,
Feeling, seeing, tasting chance,
Hurt and help, ill health and fear,
Love and life are why we’re here.
Others, seekers, soulful eyes,
Frightened, fearful, pleading sighs,
Weeping mourning ones to cheer,
Love and life are why we’re here.
Hungry bodies, hungry hearts,
Empty days, lonely starts,
Saddened spirits, rushing tears,
Love and life are why we’re here.
Shipwrecked lives that beg a chance
For poetry, romance, music, dance.
Lift them, ease them, calm their fear,
Love and life are why we’re here.
Mirror Him, who loves the lost,
Help a neighbor, forget cost,
Days so short, end so near,
Love and life are why we’re here.
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