On my favorite holiday list, Thanksgiving has long run
neck-and-neck with Christmas for top honors. True, it doesn’t involve gifts or
a lighted Christmas tree, but Thanksgiving features the three ingredients most
important to me—family, fun, and feasting.
Some of my fondest childhood memories revolve around our
November gatherings. Thanksgiving was the one time of year every aunt, uncle,
and first, second, and third cousin living in a 30-mile radius descended upon
my cousin’s farm in Hamilton, Illinois. For Mom, my sister, and me that meant venturing
“over the river” (the Mississippi)—though we didn’t need to travel “through the
woods.”
We always entered the farmhouse through the back porch and
kitchen, where the smell of roasting turkey made me go weak in the knees. Of
course, my sister and I were shooed outside after we helped carry in our
contributions to the feast—Mom’s scalloped oysters and that year’s version of a
fancy cake. I should note here that no substitutions were allowed. Every
relative was expected to contribute the same fixings year after year. I’m not
sure what year this menu was fixed but it never deviated.
That meant the morning of Thanksgiving we always helped Mom roll
saltine crackers between sheets of wax paper to make crumbs and we fingered slimy
oysters in search of hidden shell fragments before she assembled her oyster casserole.
Mom did vary what cake she provided in the battered 9 x 13-inch aluminum pan
with sliding lid that was part of our travel arsenal. Mom searched newspapers
and magazines for festive cake recipes, which never involved icing but were nonetheless
rich and gooey. Assignments for other relatives included cranberry salad, creamed
corn, lima beans, green beans, made-from-scratch dinner rolls, boatloads of
gravy, pumpkin pies, and my Cousin Alma’s famous pecan pies. Ah, yes, Alma’s
pies (drool here) topped with real whipped cream.
Funny, but I never remember rain (or snow) on Thanksgiving.
In my mind, it was always sunny though often chilly. That made the big red barn
a certain stop for the under-age relatives who spent most non-eating hours outdoors.
Of course, the feast’s many courses did require a lot of dinner table time. One
table for children, another for adults.
I know this is a shocker for younger generations, but the
entire day—and early evening (we couldn’t leave without turkey sandwiches)—was
spent without watching TV, playing video games, texting, Facebooking or
tweeting.
What did we do? Rode ponies (and pigs, but that’s another
story). Chased chickens. Cuddled kittens—there always seemed to be a new litter
hiding in the hay in the barn. We also walked through the fields, and searched
for (and always found) geodes in the stream bed. Later we smashed the geodes on
the sidewalk to see the pretty glitter inside.
I know memory is a funny thing. But I never recall any of my
relatives quarreling. I only remember the laughter and the
intoxicating smells. I live hundreds of miles away from that farm today. But
I’m thankful that most Thanksgiving, we’ll have up to a dozen people at
our dinner table. We’ll go outside for walks, and, weather depending, maybe
take a boat ride. I’m also thankful I have Alma’s recipe for pecan pie—a dish
I’m required to provide year after year.
4 comments:
Fun post, Linda! You brought back lovely memories of Thanksgivings when I was growing up.
Thanksgiving is my favorite holiday.
Sarah, sorry I didn't respond to your post before. We had a houseful of company for Thanksgiving! The pecan pie was great. The family and friends even better.
Hi Linda,
I was spending Thanksgiving and the weekend thereafter with my VBF of 40 years at the Oregon Coast. We had egg salad sandwiches and cheese and crackers along with mimosases for our Thanksgiving dinner! Which just shows that for us, the best part of holidays is spending time with special people.
I'm of an age where we had large family Thanksgiving gatherings Before there was television, FB, Twitter, texting, cell phones, etc. We would play music on the record player even before the lps came out so you had to change the record for each song.
Thanks for the memories, Linda - great post.
Is Aunt Alma's pecan pie recipe a family secret? (I know it is a family treasure) or do you ever share it?
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