• About
  • Recipe Index
  • Daddy Oh

an everyday life

an everyday life

Author Archives: Janell

Mother’s Fruit Salad

17 Monday Jan 2011

Posted by Janell in In the Kitchen, Life at Home

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Everyday Life, Fruit Salad, In the Kitchen

 

Until last week, I hadn’t made Mother’s fruit salad in years.

But in planning a meal for our family’s newborn mother, when needing something sweet to complement a Ham-Broccoli quiche I was serving, I remembered Mother’s simple salad.

Very much like that Southern table staple Ambrosia — minus the cherries and coconut — the salad makes up quick from ingredients I normally have on hand.  And it’s a perfect complement to ham.  In fact, the combination tasted so good last week I decided to make it again today.

Perhaps adding the recipe here may help keep this childhood favorite at the top of my aging memory bank — where it properly belongs.

Mother’s Fruit Salad

Serves 2

1/2 of an orange — peeled, sectioned and sliced with membranes removed.
1/2 cup of crushed pineapple
1 banana sliced
1 to 2 tsp. sugar

Mix and serve immediately

Love Sweet Love

15 Saturday Jan 2011

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Prayer, Writing

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Everyday Life, Grandchildren, Love, Prayer, Writing

It’s a pity I had no time to unpack the week’s “unforgettable” moments.

Instead, my off-line journal holds four disjointed pages of thoughts, when in a normal week there would be twenty-one  packed full of  “don’t-wish-to-forget” or “wish-I-could-but-can’t forget” moments.   But all that deeper reflection must come later —  because I want to get down everything I can about this miraculous, love-sloshed week.

Like last night’s expressions of love that came by way of a fancy steakhouse downtown, in celebration of my future daughter-in-law Amy’s twenty-fourth birthday.  If only I’d had the presence of mind to snap Amy’s photo.  But perhaps with these words, I’ll remember how especially pretty she looked in her evening finery — how she bubbled with joy.

And like every single minute since last Saturday, thirteen minutes after Noon — as I’ve expressed and been privileged to witness other’s countless expressions of love to our family’s newborn parents and child — daughter Kara, son-in-law Joe and granddaughter, Reese Caroline.

Sometimes the love expressed  — like those that came out of dark, sleep-deprived moments in the middle of the night as I jarred myself awake to help a very tired and sore new mother and child — seemed more like expressing oil from olives.  Though I’m told there is no “second press” of olives — that all olive oil comes from the first pressing — at times, this week, I felt as though my expressing of love came by a second and third pressing —  until I thought I had nothing else to give.  But most the time, my love rose boundless to the surface like bubbles in a just opened bottle of champagne.   Whether bubbly or hard-pressed, neither vintage of love was better as both came from the same source.  Yet it amazes me that when it comes to love, when we think we have nothing else to give, we’re wrong.

But whether my own or others it makes no difference — deep expressions of love leave me weepy.  So forgive me while I slosh as I wonder in words —  on a night, mind you, when I should be sleeping, since I’ve come home to grant space  to others who wish to express love to my newborns –why we are so stingy with our love?  Why do we do things for any reason other than love?  Why is it that we too often do things merely out of a sense of obligation?  What weight does fulfilling an obligation carry — especially in eternity?

Living this week, as I have in a celebratory bubble of love, I see that only what we do out of love really and truly matters.  And as I write this, I see that everything we do traces back to love of someone or something.  And though I confess to not thinking so clearly in my sleep-deprived state, it seems we go astray those times when our love of things gets in the way of our love of people — whether the things are money or pride or whatever.  The ‘right thing” is always to love someone rather than something.  And even when the something is grandiose, like a desire for world peace, even then there should be people and their well-being standing behind it.

This old-song of Jackie DeShannon’s makes a good everyday prayer in my sleep-deprived mind tonight.  And with it, I’m tucking myself back in to bed.

Newborn Parents

08 Saturday Jan 2011

Posted by Janell in Life at Home

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Everyday Life, Grandchildren, Raising Children

As I look through today’s 100 plus images  — and in particular this one below — it makes me wish that every babe born into the world could be welcomed with the same awe and joy as my new grandchild, Reese Caroline, born shortly after noon today.  Because babes deserve no less than this — and so much more love than we can ever bestow upon them.  But I pray God blesses our widow mites of love as we do our best everyday.  And that God bless these newborns in particular — both parents and child. 

← Older posts
Newer posts →

“Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it? — every, every minute?”

-- Thornton Wilder, "Our Town"

Enter your email address to receive notifications of new posts.


prev|rnd|list|next
© Janell A West and An Everyday Life, January 2009 to Current Date. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given.

Recent Posts

  • Queen of Salads
  • Sweater Weather
  • Summer Lull Salads
  • That Roman Feast
  • Remodel Redux
  • Déjà vu, Déjà Voodoo
  • One Good Egg

Artful Living

  • Fred Gonsowski Garden Home
  • Kylie M Interiors
  • Laurel Bern Interiors
  • Lee Abbamonte
  • Mid-Century Modern Remodel
  • Ripple Effects
  • The Creativity Exchange
  • The Task at Hand
  • Tongue in Cheek
  • Zen & the Art of Tightrope Walking

Family ~ Now & Then

  • Chronicling America
  • Family
  • Kyle West
  • Pieces of Reese's Life
  • Vermont Digital Newspaper Project

Food for Life!

  • Elizabeth Minchilli in Rome
  • Manger
  • Once Upon a Chef
  • The Everyday French Chef

Literary Spaces

  • A Striped Armchair
  • Dolce Bellezza
  • Lit Salad
  • Living with Literature
  • Marks in the Margin
  • So Many Books
  • The Millions

the Garden, the Garden

  • An Obsessive Neurotic Gardener
  • Potager
  • Red Dirt Ramblings

Archives

Categories

  • Far Away Places
  • Good Reads
  • Home Restoration
  • In the Garden
  • In the Kitchen
  • Life at Home
  • Mesta Park
  • Prayer
  • Soul Care
  • The Great Outdoors
  • Writing

Meta

  • Create account
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.com

Blog at WordPress.com.

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • an everyday life
    • Join 89 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • an everyday life
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...