Got a great Ohio recipe? Something Grandma used to whip up at family get-togethers in the good old days? Great home made dishes of uniquely Ohioan origin, that only can be had only in our great state. Can you believe there are people out there that have never heard of pan fried parsnips?
Honestly, if you are a Buckeye you must have at least tried 1/2" thick fried bologna sandwiches! How about a crisp, cold, sliced Vidalia onion sandwich served on a bed of mayonnaise? Every good Ohioan has at least one tried and true recipe for Buckeyes and know it is candy.
My Mom had a great many recipes of what she called 'depression food'. As a kid I thought she was talking about meals that made her sad. Mom was trying to describe the meals taught to her by her mother that were quick, with few costly ingredients, and could fill a farm hand's plate.
My Mother would sometimes switchback to her economical favorites from her early years even though we had plenty to eat. Probably her most favorite 'depression food' was coffee soup.
Coffee soup was simply scalding hot black coffee served up in a shallow soup bowl garnished with generous pile of crushed saltine crackers on top.
As a child I took to praying before dinnertime, but not for my eternal soul.
Jeff
Saturday, November 30, 2019
Sunday, November 10, 2019
Grim Ma Millhoan---Excerpt from 'Ohio Story'.
Grim-Ma Millhoan
Grim-ma Millhoan
was a different story. I never tried to imitate her as I would Gramps. She was
never Grandma or Grandmother; she had a tenacious and grim bearing to her and
was always just Grim-ma.
Grim-ma Millhoan loved to grow flowers. A flower
garden in those days was an unnecessary luxury. To most sensible folks at the
time, a flower garden seemed impractical to plant and tend when the land could
be used to grow vegetables. Flowers were decorative, pleasant on the eye, but
in the end, useless. Every year Grim-ma would plant and a small plot next to
the garage, near the front of the house, mostly Snapdragons and Tiger Lillys,
and it became no small source of pride to her. Perhaps, she fancied her flowers
were her one selfish extravagance.
One spring morning Grim-ma started her daily
routine with her flowers carefully pruning the starts, and weeding with a hoe, when
a sudden movement caught her eye.
Gripping the hoe tightly she took another step and caught sight of the
intruder in her garden. It was a huge garter snake with yellow and dark green
stripes just beginning to uncoil fast and was on the move.
In that moment,
another person would have recognized the garter snake as a harmless indigenous
creature common in Ohio, and let it slither off. Another person might have just
screamed and backed away allowing it to pass. But this was Grim-ma. And this
was HER garden.
With a low growl
Grim-ma tore after the monster, hoe in hand, and a heated battle began. She
swung her hoe with mighty sweeps as if it was a Highland Claymore and
mercilessly slashed her way down the rows of the flower garden, but the snake somehow
made it to the street and was soon gone. Grim-ma stopped to catch her breath,
and she slowly turned around and saw the wreckage of her beautiful garden. In
that moment, she realized she had both won and lost the battle. I had watched
the skirmish from beginning to end, saw her slowly bow her head for a long
moment, and then walk back to the farmhouse. Grim-ma was not one to take any setback
lightly. The next year she had an even larger garden and honed a razor sharp
edge on the blade of her hoe.
Saturday, April 6, 2019
'The Great Babysitter'
“Children. Ah, kids! They are just smaller versions of us,
younno, but I ain’t so crazy about me!”
Poopdeck Pappy - (Popeye the Sailor’s father.)
Patti and I were
‘baby boomers’, and being born and raised in the 50s and early 60’; never
understood the entire concept and consequences of parenting. During those years
children were seen as an unavoidable burden and consequence of the institution
of marriage. Our parents in those days
thought it was enough to keep children, (and pets), clean, well fed, and quiet
in another room. Children were to be
‘seen and not heard’. The responsibility of parenting and main caregiver fell
to the wife and mother who ideally in those years, spent her days making
cookies, cleaning the house, and doing the laundry. Husbands, on the other
hand, (according to socially acceptable norms at the time), managed their
careers, arrived home on time, and expected a hot wholesome dinner ready when
they got there.
At least, that was
the plan. Nearly every family discovered this universally accepted ‘societal
norm’ was both impractical and unrealistic in the real world. Children still
needed attention; parents still needed time together, and there just weren’t
enough hours in a busy day. That is, until the arrival of the ‘Great
Babysitter’.
In the late 50’s
there arose the miracle of the modern world. A revolutionary state-of-the-art
electronic fusion of sound, moving pictures with free entertainment for every
American home- the Television! With the flick of a switch, it was instantly
possible to get news from around the world, sporting events, variety shows
featuring hit music, game shows, and weekly installments of comedy, action, and
drama. More importantly to parents, ‘The Great Babysitter’ afforded a few hours
of quiet in a busy household.
Watching television
soon became a major activity of children of our generation and much of our
childhood was spent awash in the constant blue-white glow of the ‘Great
Babysitter’. In time, the TV grew from a pleasant diversion to a nationwide
addiction. Research at the time suggested that the average American child spent
3-4 hours daily in front of the TV. By the time of high school graduation, our
kids have viewed 8,000 murders, 200,000 violent acts, and have spent more time
watching television than in the classroom.
Patti and I didn’t
follow all the surveys and psychiatric research, but noticed that people around
us seemed to care less for the folks living next door, but were deeply
concerned about who shot ‘J.R.’, or the next episode of ‘Charlie’s Angels’.
When Patti and I
married we decided if we were going to be good parents there was to be no TV.
We were young and therefore idiotic and believed we could change the
world. In those early years we kept our
promise even though when friends or family would visit and notice we had no TV,
felt sorry for us and offer to give us one of theirs. We would politely refuse,
but came to understand we needed something to fill the vacuum. Thankfully,
Patti came up with a terrific idea.
Reading. It sounded
simple enough. The idea was that we would actually read all the classic
literature we were supposed to have read in school but weaseled out of. I have
to admit that in school, I never actually finished reading a book, but had
become pretty handy at faking it, and bluffing my way through tests.
Soon, just quietly
reading wasn’t enough. We started to read aloud to one another so we could both
follow the story at the same time. And the nightly readings became a habit.
After dinner and bath time, we would put the kids to bed, and start on a good
book. Back then, there were no audio books, except a very limited selection for
the handicapped at the library. Patti and I knew that most of our friends
wouldn’t understand our odd and selfish ritual, so we kept it to ourselves. Until
one night we were interrupted with company.
A couple of friends
stopped by for a friendly visit and had halted our progress on Heinlien’s
‘Stranger in a Strange Land’. I was
anxious to get back to the book and follow the story as it was just getting
exciting, but couldn’t bring myself to ask them to leave. Patti and I never made friends easily in
school and knew that friends would forgive you in time for an occasional
rudeness, but acting strange was freaking social suicide. I was more than a
little awkward in that moment, and could feel the outlines of the paperback I
had hastily sat on at their arrival to hide our ‘dirty little secret’ but
asked:
“Do you like science
fiction?” Before they could answer, my hand found the book and I brought it up
and burned through the rest of the chapter, aloud. I passed the book over to
them and waited. I watched them exchange some uncomfortable glances at first,
but to their credit, they gave it a try.
Before the night was over everyone had read aloud, and carried by the
story line read with enthusiasm and zeal.
The long term
effects on our kids began to become apparent when people began to notice our
children never used baby talk, always spoke clearly and distinctly, and had
vocabularies well beyond their years. At a time when most kids were just
learning the language, they would hold their own in any conversations with
adults.
Worse still, their verbal skills were only surpassed only by
a child’s natural logic and youthful sense of right and wrong. I have to admit
I never once won an argument with them. Many times I was reduced to:
”But I am bigger than
you! I am the Dad!”
My advice on
parenting? Never have kids smarter than your own self.
Jeff Wilson
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