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an everyday life

an everyday life

Tag Archives: Cooking

Pie & Shrimp Tales

23 Thursday Feb 2012

Posted by Janell in Far Away Places, In the Kitchen, Life at Home

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Birthdays, Cooking, Florida Keys, In the Kitchen, Key West Pink Shrimp, Lemon Cream Pie, Sister Rivalry, Southern Living, Travel

“… I also remember Grandma baking lots of sugar cookies, lemon pie and candied sweet potatoes, but I’ve no recipes for these.  Grandma just threw these things together from memory.”

— Cousin Nellie Yadon’s recollection of Great-Grandma Taylor’s cooking, published in the Centennial Cookbook of Rock Creek Baptist Church, 1997.

Five days gone from the Florida Keys and I’m not ready to write of my visit in any serious fashion.  Instead, I’ve been catching up on the life I missed and catching up on birthdays I missed, while key memories wash in and away from the shores of my mind.

Celebrating birthdays once had me making home-cooked meals for each of my children and their families — I’d prepare whatever the honoree selected from my standard “menu” of meals.  That stopped in the year of Daddy.   And carried on through the Summer of Sis.  And the very long difficult year of moving uptown twenty blocks and the grief that followed in the wake of dying relationships.  Was that just last year?

The straight-up story is that the part of me that used to relish making birthday dinners for everyone just quietly died.  And that these days, I celebrate family birthdays more quietly.  Smaller gatherings.  Smaller meals.  Sometimes a special restaurant.  Or maybe I’ll make some sweet dessert.  And when desired, I’ll help my children pull together birthday dinners for their families.  But usually, I limit home-cooked birthday meals for the two I share home with — unless away from the home-front, like last week.

My youngest, who still calls my home his, turned 24 on the 12th, when we were  walking up and down the party street of Duval in Key West. So last Friday I arrived home with need of cooking Kyle a birthday meal.  By then, already two birthday meals in the black, he was still happy to redeem my guilt, once I offered up two of three favorites — home-made calzones followed by twenty-four chocolate chip cookies — fresh from the oven.

Only later did I wonder whether Kyle might have preferred his favorite fried shrimp. For some fishy reason, I never thought “shrimp.”  Maybe it had to do with all that seafood my husband and I enjoyed last week? — but the idea never floated across my mind.  Until later.  Until I stumbled across frozen bags of Wild Key West Pink Shrimp while shopping at Whole Foods.

We’d hope to stumble across these ‘not-to-be-missed’, “sweet pink shrimp harvested from the crystal clear waters of the Florida Keys” while IN the Florida Keys last week.  But no.  Instead, all up and down the Keys, not once did we find these sweet pinks offered on the menu.  But being good sports and all, we kept ourselves busy trying conch and stone crab, then dining on shrimp and Yellow-tail Snapper and Mahi-mahi and Grouper, every seafood meal long hoping to catch sight of the words — Key West Pink Shrimp — printed on the menu.

It took dining at Southern Living magazine’s “pick” for Key West Pink Shrimp for me to raise the white flag.   Not finding them again, I asked our server, half expecting they might be an ‘off-menu’ item.  Instead, she gave us a shocking pink shrimp tale —  how they’d been taken off menus due to unsteady supplies.

At the time, the story seemed plausible.  Even though it didn’t mesh with Southern Living magazine’s recent write-up on the Keys, reporting “these succulent crustaceans are available year-round.”  But now I’m not so sure.  Seeing all those frozen tails while fishing the aisles of my local grocers, I’m thinking pink shrimp could be a sister to that other Key delicacy made with limes and a graham cracker pie shell; because both appear to lack straight-up stories.

Who invented Key Lime Pie? Nobody knows.

Who makes the best Key Lime Pie?   “We do.”

Where can I find Key West Pink Shrimp in the Keys?  Here’s a home-made shrimp tale I’ve spliced together:  Nobody knows like we do — at Whole Foods.

~~~~~~~

When it comes to being best in pie-making, the stories coming out of the Keys have nothing on my family’s.  A somewhat friendly sister rivalry had Aunt Jo tops in the categories of Pumpkin and Pecan and Mom with Coconut Cream Pie.  And though both made their best version of lemon pie, no one, but no one, made lemon pie like Great-Grandma Taylor’s.  Why more than fifty years after her death, we’re still talking about that pie, though most of us never tasted it.

But Mother had.  And so had Jo. And I suppose both sisters loved that lemon pie enough to emulate.  Perhaps this explains why Mother especially favored a particular tale about a lemon pie even more, since it raised questions about the fineness of her sister Jo’s pie-making abilities.  Mother told the story often — whenever Sister Jo wasn’t around — and last Monday, while four of us shared a lemon cream pie I made for Jane’s birthday, we relished the tale again.

Jane remembers the story taking place at a long-ago Mother-Daughter banquet held at Rock Creek Baptist Church.  Her mother — the woman we grandkids called Granny — sat with her three daughters — Jo, Mother and herself — with Great-Grandma sitting next to Jo.  It was likely not a catered affair since Aunt Jo contributed a lemon pie for dessert.  And because she knew Great-Grandma’s particular fondness for lemon pie, Jo offered to get her grandmother’s dessert; and, without mentioning she had been the pie-maker, Jo presented Great-Grandma a slice of lemon pie.

To this day, nobody knows why Jo kept her lemon pie-making a secret from Great-Grandma Taylor.   Perhaps she’d hoped Great-Grandma would rave over it, or maybe she wanted her pie to stand the test of an impartial judge.  But never hearing Jo’s side of the story, I can only report that a few bites into Jo’s lemon pie, Great-Grandma leaned into Jo and whispered in her ear, “I don’t know WHO made this lemon pie, but they sure were stingy with the sugar.”

Being on the end of a straight-up answer — Jo might say —  is perhaps not all it’s cracked up to be.  Especially when it’s stingy with the sugar and just a bit tart.  Like Great-Grandma’s famed lemon pie.  Or like Great-Grandma herself.  And maybe like my version of that famous family pie without an official recipe — that for the record, one might call, an ‘off-menu’ item of mine.

Lemon Cream Pie

Meringue

3 egg whites
1/4 tsp cream of tartar
6 Tbsp sugar

Separate egg white from yolk — set aside yolk for pie filling.  In a medium-sized mixing bowl, beat egg whites and cream of tartar with an electric mixer on high until foamy — add sugar gradually, beating until stiff and glossy.  Set aside.

One 9″ Baked Pie Shell

Pie Filling

3 egg yolks
pinch of salt
1/2 tsp water
~~~
1/3 cup cornstarch
1 cup sugar
1 1/2 cups milk, heated in microwave (do not boil)
~~~
2 tsp grated lemon rind
6 Tbsp freshly squeezed lemon juice
1 Tbsp butter
1/4 tsp vanilla
 

In a small bowl, beat egg yolks with salt and water and set aside.

In a large saucepan, mix cornstarch and 1 cup of sugar.   Add hot milk and mix with whisk — cook over medium-low heat until thickened.  Add enough cooked filling to bowl of egg yolks — when well-mixed, return egg mixture to the remaining pie filling and simmer until egg sets, stirring constantly.  Add butter, lemon juice, rind and vanilla and stir until mixture begins to bubble.  Remove about a half cup of meringue and stir into pie filling.  Blend until lumps disappear — over beating will cause the mixture to lose its fluffiness.  Pour filling into baked pie shell and top with remaining meringue.  Bake in a 425 oven for 5-7 minutes, watching closely, until lightly browned.

Camping In

15 Wednesday Jun 2011

Posted by Janell in In the Kitchen, Life at Home

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Chicken Salad, Cooking, Everyday Life, Home Decorating

Box piles are thinning and all but two puzzling pieces of furniture have found a home. What a difference a few days makes.

Last night, my husband and I danced a do-si-do with these two furniture orphans between us.  After a full turn around the living room — first with one, then the other — we failed to find a suitable spot for either.  Maybe it was the lateness of the hour or perhaps simple exhaustion; I only know I went to bed with hope that Sis could solve what I could not.

My sister Christi is gifted at home decorating, perhaps a carryover from displaying merchandise for sell in the gift shop she ran for years.  If she wished, Sis could moonlight as an interior redesigner   — those special home decorators who simply move around what homeowners already possess to make it look better than before.  Christi redesigned my Mesta Park living room before it went on the market and the results were amazing — her design plan offered a lovely first impression to everyone who came through the front door.

Though the boxes and furniture placement are minor inconveniences when compared to our loss of an operable kitchen.  Since our home sold faster than anticipated, my kitchen remodel is still in process.  Unless one counts a shiny new refrigerator, we moved into a home where the kitchen space is bare:  No cabinets; no stove or oven.  Not even a kitchen sink.  Just bare walls, filled with gaping holes, electrical wires protruding from the wall.

The appliances scheduled for delivery today didn’t make it.  I’m told the cabinets will arrive around the Fourth of July.  The rest is really up in the air as counter-top builders and tile contractors don’t like to put themselves in a corner.  They simply tell me they’ll do their best to give us a 2-to-3 week turnaround.  I’ve translated this as, best case, an operable kitchen by end of July.

Meanwhile, we’re either dining out or “camping in,’ keeping meals and dining utensils simple.  We each have one coffee cup for use.  We share a few plastic glasses and a few pieces of silverware that we clean in a small bathroom sink. with a nearby bottle of dishwashing soap.   We eat off of paper plates. I’m surprised at how little we actually need to get by on.  We prepare meals on the grill or eat sandwiches or salads we can assemble without cooking — like my favorite chicken salad I made Monday, which began with a chicken roasted by a local grocer.

As I think about it, maybe redesigning a living room is a lot like making a nice sandwich spread — as long as I can leave the cooking to others.

Chicken Salad

3 cups cooked chicken, chopped or shredded
1/2 cup mayonnaise
4 Tbsp dill relish
1/2 cup crushed pineapple
Salt & pepper to taste

Cooking with Sheeps & Goats

27 Tuesday Oct 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

Cooking, Edna Lewis, Everyday Life

On days of falling leaves and temperatures, I’m drawn to my kitchen to cook.

 Blog_09_1027_1

I’ve no shortage of cookbooks to choose from.  And though none are bound by the skin of sheep or goat, I admit to having too many. My habit is to bring home a new regional cookbook whenever I venture off to some new locale;  just last month, a lovely Louisville cookbook came home with me, inscribed by the hand of my four gal pals.  Their signatures make the book a keeper, whether or not it’s ever used for cooking.

I’m embarrassed to admit that I’ve never cooked from most of my cookbooks.  Sometimes I just flip their pages until inspiration hits.  Inevitably, what comes up is that lost ghost of a recipe past, some old tried and true family favorite that the book in my lap has helped me remember.

It’s easy for recipes to become lost, a small leaf in the forest of trees that my books once were.  Sometimes I wonder which book holds what recipe; where is that recipe that I really liked that I used only once long ago?  Sometimes, in my more ambitious moments, I think of creating an exhaustive index of my recipes, a safety net to keep my recipes accessible for those times they no longer reside in memory.  This pie-in-the sky desire doesn’t breathe long enough to ever become words on a  page. 

Blog_09_1027_2

My favorite cookbooks are housed on the baker’s rack in my kitchen.  Of all the books there, I use these four the most:

 The Gift of Southern Cooking, my first introduction to Edna Lewis

 Victorian Sampler Tea Room Cookbook, my ‘go to’ source for quiche and soups

 Joy of Cooking, my best basic everyday cookbook, and

 Rock Creek Baptist Church’s Centennial Cookbook

The latter holds many recipes from my mother’s family as well as a few recipes of my Greek grandfather that Dad began cooking after Papa’s death.  Earlier this year, I was thumbing through this book for inspiration when I ran across a recipe for Grandma Taylor’s Sweet Pickles.

Grandma Taylor was my mother’s paternal grandmother.  Like most of my cookbooks, I didn’t know her at all, though I recall once seeing an old photograph of her holding an infant me in her arms.  What I treasure most about this recipe contributed by my cousin Nellie Ruth was her note of after thought:

“Grandma always picked her cucumbers very small.  These were served at her table daily.  I sent this recipe with the memory of helping my grandmother can many jar of these pickles.  I also remember Grandma baking lots of sugar cookies, lemon pies and she loved candied sweet potatoes; but I have no recipes for these.  Grandma just threw things together from memory.”

Grandma Taylor might consider my collection of cookbooks a sheer waste, especially the ones gathering dust in my living room armoire.Blog_09_1027_3  Maybe in this small way, Grandma’s life was simpler than mine; and maybe her memory was better too; her mind certainly wasn’t cluttered by trying to keep too many recipe sources straight in her mind.

Perhaps it’s time to turn over a new leaf in my life, to stop buying cookbooks, to sort through what I already own, and give away what I don’t use.   It will be easy to separate the sheep from the goats.  The pages of my sheep are splattered with ingredients. 

After a long hot summer, my husband must be glad that the arrival of fall has brought my cooking drought to an end.   A new season of cooking lays before me, full of spice and seasoning.  I reach out to turn over a new leaf.

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