• About
  • Recipe Index
  • Daddy Oh

an everyday life

an everyday life

Tag Archives: Parents

German Potato Salad

12 Friday Mar 2010

Posted by Janell in In the Kitchen, Life at Home, Writing

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Childhood Memories, Everyday Life, In the Kitchen, Parents, Writing

I like to try new recipes, though at best, most of my trials are one-hit wonders.

But occasionally, one runs across a recipe like this dish that has been in our family for almost forty years.  It became part of our lives, and part of Mom’s permanent supper rotation, when she brought the recipe home as a souvenir from one of the many trips my parents made to Houston to visit my Uncle Melvin and Aunt Wanda.

Mom and Wanda were the female response to The Odd Couple, who like Walter Matthau and Tony Randall, enjoyed a proverbial love-hate relationship; they enjoyed each other when they were on good terms and they thrived on dissension when they weren’t.  The quality of my mother and aunt’s relationship actually seemed to improve with physical distance — when separated by 500 miles, they were the best of friends — when separated by a fence, these next door neighbors often carried on a cold war — the fence might as well have been the Berlin Wall.

When a relationship like Mom’s and Wanda’s is encountered in fiction, it makes for hilarious reading.   The fictional situations that ensue inspire tears to roll down my face and the sides of my chest to hurt from overdosing on laughter.  But I can assure you it’s no laughing matter when these colorful and highly combustible relationships invade real life.  Life grows surreal, taking on the quality of a daytime drama.

When ‘things’ between Mom and Wanda were good, life was sugary sweet, to the point of making most everyone else sick from too much artificial sweetener.  When things grew ugly, tempers flared, they drew a line in the sand and both rallied support for their cause of ‘being right.’  Each would call the other the worse names they could think of — and the words whispered behind one another’s  backs would come home to roost, by the time the gossip mill churned it around and around.

One thing I learned from watching Mom and Wanda’s revolving door relationship over fifty years is this:  No matter how good a writer becomes, there’s no way any author can ever dream up the sort of outrageous situations that naturally transpire in real life, especially between two women that love and hate one another so well.  And when you throw into the mix that both women professed themselves to be God-fearing Christians — well, the irony of it all is just so delicious, it becomes hard to resist  —  just like this potato salad — sort of sweet… sort of tart.

Try it and see how easy sweet and sour can come together so nicely.

German Potato Salad

Serves 4    Preparation Time – 15 minutes   Cooking Time — 2 hours

Ingredients:

2 strips of bacon
1/2 cup chopped onion
1 Tbsp olive oil
2 cans sliced new potatoes, drained

Dressing:

1/3 cup sugar (original recipe call for 1/2 cup)
1/3 cup white vinegar
2 cups water
2 tsp. garlic powder
2 tsp. dried parsley
1/2 to 3/4 tsp. salt
1/4 tsp. black pepper
 

In a cast iron skillet over medium heat, fry bacon crisp.  Drain on a paper towel.  Drain oil from pan and add olive oil.  (Original recipe does not call for the substitution).  Over low heat, saute onion until soft and translucent.  Add potatoes and cook for a few minutes, crumbling bacon on top.  Mix all skillet ingredients and add dressing until just covered.  There will be enough dressing for two applications.  Let the potatoes cook down, uncovered, over low heat, stirring occasionally.  Then add second round of dressing.  Once liquid has cooked into potatoes and thickened, remove potato salad from heat.  Cover with foil.  The salad can be reheated prior to serving.

Changing of the Guard

09 Tuesday Mar 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Aging, Childhood Memories, Everyday Life, Parents

My memories before kindergarten are few — just snips and snaps.

But memories during and after kindergarten are fleshy, full of tastes and sounds and sights and smells.  It was then that Daddy and I became two peas in a pod, since Mom worked nights and Dad worked days.

The weekday drill began with Mom picking me up from a private kindergarten, always with some after-school snack I would eat standing up in the front passenger seat while she drove the Chevy to the plant where she and Dad worked.  It was a quick ten minute drive.

She turned the car off Kickapoo Street by St. Benedict’s Catholic Church, and drove a few blocks west to the parking lot where the road dead-ended into the local Sylvania plant.  Mom turned off the car to wait for Daddy to come out.  I think she read while she waited.  It was my job to sound the alarm of Daddy’s coming, so I kept my eyes peeled for Daddy.

It wasn’t long before Dad walked up.  He walked fast with a spring in his step.  With little conversation, Mom and Dad seamlessly traded places.  Mom walked off in the sunset toward the plant leaving me with Daddy and Daddy with me.

Dad started the car, shifted the car out of park and off we’d go.  We never made it out of the parking lot without me hitting Dad up for a fried cherry pie from the Brown Derby Drive-in.  Daddy never told me no.  Dad’s inability to say ‘no’ was one of his parental weaknesses, a slack taken up by my mother with ease.

Before we finished our pies, I begged Daddy to take me to Richland Park, a small amusement park on the outskirts of town, designed for children under age 10.  Sometimes we’d go, but more often than not, Dad and I’d just go home to watch our favorite television show together — American Bandstand — which at the time, was on five afternoons a week.  This was our drill until the plant relocated to Iowa, some time around my sister’s birth.

These days the drill has changed.  It’s me parking the car in a parking lot with Daddy waiting for me.  Then it’s me starting the car and turning the car toward home, just my brother and I, as we leave Daddy behind at the nursing home after a short weekly visit.

It’s no longer a true visit; it hasn’t been for months.  Today was the saddest visit ever.  Daddy was awake but uninterested.   Dad didn’t seem to notice Jon and I were there.  As Jon slowly rubbed Daddy’s head, I asked Daddy if he wanted to listen to his sister, my Aunt Carol.  I received no response.  I then asked Daddy if he wanted to listen to Christi.  Again, no response.   Daddy was far away, perhaps lost in a daydream.

I found comfort, yesterday, while reading for my Monday evening class.  In the book, Dreams — Discovering Your Inner Teacher, the author, Clyde Reid, writes:

“As we grow old, we often find that the things we have enjoyed over a lifetime are taken away from us — our homes, our cars, our health, our mobility, perhaps even the use of our eyes and ears.  But one thing no one can ever take away from us is our dreams.”

I’m glad Daddy still has his dreams.  My father has always been a dreamer.  If Daddy was daydreaming today, I hope Daddy was once again able to walk to his car in a New York minute like he did during the changing of the guard all those years ago.  And I hope in Daddy’s dreams, Daddy was able to eat something wonderful — something as wonderful as a homemade fried cherry pie —  and that maybe Dad was at a grand old movie palace watching his favorite film.  I mean really watching, really soaking it all in, rather than the hit and the miss that goes on these days.

Today, as we prepared to leave, I squatted down real low, right next to Dad’s recliner, to once again look up into Daddy’s eyes.  As if Daddy were a newborn infant that focuses only when a face gets close enough to his orbit, Daddy’s eyes locked onto mine.  Tenderly, Dad reached down to cradle my face in his two hands.   And looking up into Daddy’s eyes,  I told my father  — “Daddy, you are the Daddy of Fried Cherry Pies from Brown Derby; ” “Daddy, you are the Daddy of Richland Park”; “Daddy, you are the best Daddy in the whole wide world;”  “Daddy, I love you forever.”

With a few trips of his dried tongue, Daddy looked me in the eye, saying, “I…….love…. ____;”   Daddy left his sentence dangling between us.  But being the big girl that I am, I filled in Daddy’s blank just fine.  If only I could fill his shoes.

A Harlequin Romance Afternoon

08 Monday Mar 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Books, Childhood Memories, Everyday Life, Parents

The cool rainy day offers mint conditions for an afternoon nap.

My comfy bed awaits.  A soft bedside lamp glows yellow.   The warm covers are turned down.  A stack of reading material lies nearby on my nightstand.

With my homework finished for tonight’s class, I may just indulge — after I empty my mind of thoughts that have deprived me from sleep for the last three nights.

I wasn’t surprised by my hard night’s sleep on Friday or Saturday.  I sort of expected it, as I’m always keyed up before and after a big project.   Before hand, I’m full of nervous hope that all will go well and that no one will get hurt.  Once the work is finished, I’m too keyed up to relax — the day’s activities cling to me and no amount of tossing and turning shakes them off.

But last night, after a relaxing day of gardening and time spent in a good book, I expected a good night’s sleep.  And maybe I would have but for the late telephone call with my sister, where we made plans to begin a new project this weekend, that involves painting my parent’s house.   Too much stimulation before bedtime — whether it’s caffeine or talking about a big project —  keeps me unsettled.

My mother use to love to go to bed on a day like today, especially if she had her new month’s allotment of Harlequin Romances.  It didn’t matter what project she was working on and what projects were coming up.  She easily escaped her everyday world to enter a new one, one full of  love, conflict and a happy ending.

I can remember my mother buying Harlequin Romances since the late fifties or early sixties.  As far as I know, Mom never threw any away, though some she lent to others may have become unintended gifts.  Except for her favorites that she kept by her bed, every Harlequin Romance that my mother ever purchased was put in a box and shoved up in the attic.  It’s the one place we still have left to clear.

Of late, I’ve been wondering whether there is a secondary market for vintage Harlequin Romance novels.  I learned from looking online that Harlequin is reprinting some of their ‘vintage’ novels.  Wouldn’t it be crazy if these books were the most valuable asset of Mom’s scary estate?  Sounds like the stuff romance novels are made of, though to keep it real, none of Mom’s collection would ever rise to the ranks of  ‘mint’ condition.

← 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

Create a free website or 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...