Check out my childhood memories of a treasured Southern tradition–pouring peanuts into Coke, or Co-Cola as we call it down South, in today’s Leite’s Culinaria.
Check out my childhood memories of a treasured Southern tradition–pouring peanuts into Coke, or Co-Cola as we call it down South, in today’s Leite’s Culinaria.
Today marks 100 years since the birth of Julia Child, and the internet is awash with tributes, videos and all manner of Julia-centric remembrances. But there are those who don’t understand the fuss being made over a television cook, especially one who would never make it in today’s 24/7 shows that demand flash, glamor and more style than substance.
I appreciate Julia for convincing us that it’s okay to regard food as more than mere fuel for the body. I appreciate her for teaching us to be fearless in the kitchen, so that we might create so much more–and better!–than we thought we could. And I appreciate that she enrolled in culinary school and embarked on her journey when she was solidly middle aged. I did the same thing myself, and it has opened up a whole new world for me, a world not only of food and cooking but of travel, teaching, learning, sharing and socializing. I’ve made friends with the most amazing people, and I continue to do so.
I view sharing food as a peace-promoting and bridge-building activity. When we sit down together over a meal, we can at least momentarily suspend our differences and focus on nourishment and a thing enjoyed together. Food is a safer topic of conversation than religion or politics and more interesting than the weather. I’m endlessly fascinated by what I learn about other people, countries and cultures through their food. The mere remembrance of a favorite dish has the power to transform. Once I asked a chef in Ireland–who was in the middle of his shift but stepped out to greet me–what his favorite dish was from his childhood. A broad smile spread across his face, and he took a little vacation from the heat and madness of the kitchen by describing to me how much he loved the homemade sausages his mum used to prepare.
A meal shared is more than the sum of its parts. And more than the sum of its parts is a soufflé, which I decided to make for dinner in honor of the centennial of Julia’s birth. [You can watch Julia make one herself on You Tube: Part One & Part Two]
I’m sorry never to have known Julia. Many of my friends and colleagues knew her and worked and socialized with her. I’ve never heard an unkind word about her from any of them. Her easygoing nature and lack of pretension are legend.
Julia chucked a rock into the pond, and the rings in the water rippled out and touched countless people, who in turn touch countless people. This makes me a second generation friend of Julia. I learn from those who learned from her, not just how to cook, but how to enjoy food and friendship.
Happy Centennial, Julia, Patron Saint of Cooking and Conviviality. We love you, we thank you, and we salute you.
I had a singular honor bestowed on me recently. A honey bee, a queen, was named for me.
Queen Carol. I like the sound of it. It was totally unexpected, and it tickled me more than I could have imagined such a thing would.
Truthfully, I’ve never been fond of bees. Growing up on the farm, I spent most of my childhood outdoors playing barefoot in our clover-blanketed yard, and I stepped on a lot of bees over the years and got stung a lot. So nowadays my attitude is, “Thanks for the honey. Don’t let the door slap you on the stinger on your way out.” When Himself once mentioned installing a hive in the backyard I quickly shot down that suggestion. Why not backyard chickens?, I countered. They’re never in danger of becoming africanized and flying around attacking people. I can think of plenty of better–or at least more meaningful–ways to die than by being stung to death by a swarm of bees gone bonkers.
But last week as I carted some vegetable trimmings out to the compost bin under the avocado tree in our backyard, I noticed a mass of honey bees on the limb right above me. And I thought two things: 1. I can’t let them stay here. 2. Bee colony collapse is a very real problem, and these little guys are at risk. So leave your can of bug spray in your holster, sister. (Given that there was a mass of tiny, venom-deliverance systems hovering just over my head, a third thing crossed my mind, a line from Monty Python and the Holy Grail: “Run away! Run away!”)
I got in touch with a bee rescue outfit that sent over an apiarist, who could quickly tell from the bees’ behavior how long they’d been on that branch, what their mental state was and what they’d likely do next. I was impressed. While she suited up, I ducked back into the house, just in case things went wrong. Oh-so-carefully she moved the mass of bees–with their queen–into the bee retrieving box she’d brought and set it on a ladder under their chosen spot, so that the rest of the colony could find their peeps when they returned at the end of the day. That night, she came back for the box o’ bees. As she set the box in the car and prepared to leave, she told me that her organization names the queen of each colony for the household where they collect it, so this colony’s queen would be called Carol. Awesome. I had seen her seal up the box before moving it, but still, as she drove away I thought about the time my aunt undressed while driving a car when she realized there was a bee in her blouse and she just didn’t have time to pull over. I hoped that my new apiarist friend wouldn’t have that problem while navigating the LA Freeway system.
It was instructive having them here, but I like bees better when they’re just passing through. They’re welcome to take all the nectar from my plants that they want, as long as they don’t hang out, looking for a place to live.
In honor of Queen Carol and her colony, I’m going to share with you one of the fastest, easiest and tastiest desserts ever:
Just select your favorite cheese–or cheeses–and your favorite honey and enjoy them together. Either dip a bite of cheese into the honey or drizzle the honey onto the cheese. Serve some toasted walnuts, pecans or almonds alongside if you wish. It’s a piece of cake, only better.