Mount Nittany Sunrise.

Sunday, January 20, 2013

Fleur-de-Babe

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Sometimes we just blunder into good ideas.

While family members were working on “Remembering Christmas”, holiday cards addressed to my mother were stuffing the 842 post office cubby. She had a box of cards to send in reply, but the greeting card message with the signature Marie W. Fedon seemed empty. So, I took a photo of my mom with her new Golden Retriever Sandy III in front of the Christmas tree. Then I composed an update on kids and grandkids. Still, something was missing. So, I just flat out told everyone she has dementia. Now this was no feat of courage; all the relatives know. But I was leery about being so frank with friends of hers from out of town. The cards were mailed. Life went on.

Then, January arrived, and so did the letters. The first came from Lyn, who explained that she was my mother’s freshman roommate at Slippery Rock when they were students at Penn State. (This is back in the late 1940s when apparently there wasn’t enough housing for freshmen at main campus.) After graduation, Lyn married and moved to Upstate New York. Their friendship survived the distance, with Lyn and her husband visiting my parents and their llamas in State College. Lyn asked my mom and me if she could stop by this June during Penn State’s reunion weekend…yes!

Another letter came from Carole in Boulder, CO. My mother was her art teacher at State College High.

“We called her ‘The Babe’ when she couldn’t hear us–an attractive woman not too much older than we were,” Carole wrote. Partly because of my mother’s encouragement, Carole said she studied art education at Penn State, and has taught watercolor workshops across the country for the past 30 years. Then came the true confession that had my mom and me laughing so hard tears filled our eyes. Carole, probably in 9th grade or so, lived along North Atherton Street not far from my dad’s house. Carole and her friends often spied on “The Babe” walking down to my dad’s “bachelor pad.”

Cousin Ruthie wrote about my mother’s French Silk pie. This was a light and luscious chocolate pie that was as smooth as its name—unless I was making it.  In my kitchen, French Silk pie became French Sandpaper pie—yuck! Forget the pie, it was Ruthie’s words that pulled at my heartstrings.

“There’s an Alzheimer’s wisdom that floats in and out of the mind. It helps us weather the sadness of much lost. I went to a couple of lectures on dementia. Alzheimer’s was defined as losing your life’s story. So I think it is a beautiful thing that you can give your mom’s story back to her.”

And beautiful too, that my mother’s friends have given stories back to “The Babe”, and to her children. Laurie Lynch


Still ‘The Babe’ at 84: My mom went to the bank and was helped by a clean-cut, bespectacled teller. After making the transaction, the young man laced his fingers and said, “Is there anything else I can do for you?”

“How about a kiss?” my mom replied.

Well, he was mortified. Instead of blushing, he turned pale, and mumbled that it was against the rules.

My mom smiled, turned around, and said to me, “I want to change the world. It’s too serious.”

Always Fashion-Conscious: We had a snowfall the other day and the housekeeper couldn’t make it in to keep my mom company while I was at work. So, my co-worker Sharon and I called to tell her we’d take her to lunch. Later, we were in a meeting that was interrupted with a call from my mom. She wanted to know if she should wear her fur and her new black shoes. I said, “Sure.”

She was waiting for us in the garage, hopped in the back seat, and off we went to a nearby restaurant. When we all got out of the car to go into the restaurant, I looked down at my mom’s feet. She wasn’t wearing her new black shoes…she was wearing my black cross-country ski boots!  Après-ski is quite the winter fashion statement.

Craving Crunch:  Maybe it was the rich holiday food glut or the kids-away-at-school/mid-winter blahs, but I’ve been craving raw broccoli salad. I bought a pint in the supermarket deli the other day, and then another. I just couldn’t get enough. It was chockfull of sweet dried cranberries, crunchy carrots, broccoli and nuts, with a creamy Waldorf Salad-type dressing. These ready-made salad splurges weren’t economically sustainable, so I bought two heads of broccoli, carrots, celery, red onions, and a jar of sunflower kernels. Later that night, I awoke at midnight and decided a needed some therapeutic chopping, dicing and julienning. An hour or so later, I had a raw salad that was a riot of color and feast for the craving!

No-Shrink-Needed Broccoli Salad

1 red onion, diced
2 heads fresh broccoli, sliced and chopped
3 stalks of celery, julienned
4 large carrots, julienned
½ - ¾ cup dry roasted sunflower kernels (or almonds, walnuts, hazelnuts)
¾ - 1 cup dried cranberries

Toss everything in a large bowl.

In separate bowl, blend the following:

1 cup each of mayonnaise and plain Greek yogurt
2 T lemon curd (gift from my London lady) or you could substitute the juice of one lemon and 2 T sugar. Salt and pepper to taste.

Add dressing to the salad and mix well, coating the vegetables with a thin layer of creaminess. Chill, serve and enjoy.



 





Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Fleur-de-RememberingChristmas

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About a week before Christmas my mother asked how she met my father.

I told her the well-worn tale of friends who wanted to set him up on a blind date. They gave him a choice: blonde or brunette? He picked blonde…and the rest, well, is my history.  She was teaching high school art and he was launching the State College office of a Lehigh Valley construction company. It was a whirlwind romance that resulted in a marriage of 56 wonderful years.

When I finished the story, my mother said, “I’m so glad you remember, even if you weren’t there.”

It got me thinking. She’s lost her place in the world. So many memories, names, and faces have vanished. She fills the airwaves by reading roadside signs and asking repetitive questions like a drowning person struggling to keep her head above water. Her sense of time is a jumble. Did we have Christmas yet? Happy Easter! When will it be January? Is today someone’s birthday? What day is today?

Maybe, we could remember Christmas for her.

So, I sent an email to my four sisters and spouses, and to Nonna’s 12 grandchildren, asking everyone to send holiday memories. Marina was here to help so we scoured some old albums of really embarrassing photos— the flannel-phase, the disco-phase, the perm-phase—we got holiday stickers, a few current photos fresh off Facebook, and a hardbound sketchbook to create “Remembering Christmas.”

The collection of stories, letters (the farthest came from Shanghai), and snapshots in time was wrapped and placed in Nonna’s stocking. It was a gift from all of us and for all of us. Best of all, she  loves it. Laurie Lynch

Christmas Recipe 2012: Although our family holidays are steeped in tradition, I often like to mix things up a bit, try a new recipe or add a new dish. It’s not a “Fedon” Christmas Eve unless there’s a bowl of hand-made tortellini in warm broth at each place. For years, I’ve made the family tradition my own by tossing a handful of bright green peas and chopped red pepper into the soup pot for holiday cheer.

This year, while sorting through recipe cards, I found one from Pat Snyder of Kutztown for Castagnioli (almond macaroons) that I had tasted and loved, but never baked. This was the year:

1 kilo (4½ cups) crushed almonds or almond meal (available at health food stores, Echo Hill, etc.)
4 eggs (5 if small)
2½ cups sugar
2 grated lemons (Pat uses limes)

Mix finely ground almonds, sugar, and citrus rind. Make a well in the mixture and put in eggs, stirring in from the sides. Mix well and roll into 1-inch balls. Bake at 350° for 20 to 25 minutes on parchment paper-covered baking sheets.

One batch of these cookies got a little too brown, so instead of packing them away in a tin, I placed them in a bowl for snackers and left them on the kitchen table…

Meanwhile, I had a pot of tomato sauce bubbling on the stove for dinner. I was setting the table in the dining room when Richard walked into the kitchen.

“Should I put these meatballs in the sauce?” he called out.

I freaked out, started screaming, and ran to the kitchen.

Just a joke, Mom.

My nickname for this treat will forever be “Meatball Cookies”.

Gonna Miss Him: Richard has transferred from Penn State to Vesalius College and will move to Brussels this month.

Christmas Lesson 2012: Another Christmas Eve tradition that I made my own is accompanying tortellini soup with a mixed greens salad topped with pistachios and pomegranate seeds (green-and-red theme repeated) with Sweet Fruit Dressing. Shelling the pistachios is the easy part; separating each pomegranate ruby from its casing is messy and time-consuming.

Enter Marina, fresh from grad school in London where her flat seems to be a center of culinary exchange.  (One friend, Catie, is studying the Anthropology of Food, no less!) To easily remove the seeds from a pomegranate:

1.     Slice off the “crown” end of the fruit.
2.     Cut into the skin making four quarters and gently break apart.
3.     Place the seed side in the palm of your hand and use a wooden spoon to whack the back skin side. This releases the seeds from the membrane and into your hand, and you can easily drop them into a container.

Voila! Happy 2013.