Sunday, May 16, 2010

Sunday Scribblings: Recipe and Poem

Growing up in a Catholic family meant no meat on Fridays. It seems that about eighty percent of our meals on that night consisted of a sauce my mom would make with some kind of fish. It was sort of like Tuna Wiggle but my mom didn't put peas in and she used a variety of canned seafood. It was pretty simple and we just called it Sauce.


Sauce

2 cups milk
2 tblsp. butter
salt and pepper
2 tblsp. corn starch
2 cans of tuna, and/or shrimp, and/or crabmeat, and/or salmon

1. Pour milk into a sauce pan.
2. Add the butter and salt and pepper
3. Bring to almost a boil.
4. In the mean time, mix the corn starch with ¼ cup of water
5. When the milk is almost boiling, stir in the corn starch mixture
6. Cook and stir until thick and bubbly
7. Add seafood
8. Serve over toast or mashed potatoes with a veggie on the side.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Sauce

Family love
pours over us
filling in
our nooks
and crannies

sometimes whether
we want it to or not.
Our only telephone
perched on the wall
barely two feet
from my dad’s
place at the table.

When it rang
that Friday night
during supper,
I jumped up to answer.
“Hey, listen” said
my date for that night.
“I’m up at Flint’s
blowing my mind.
You want to meet
me at the dance?”

“If I’m there, I’m there.
If I’m not, I’m not.”
I responded and hung up.

All eyes stared,
all ears perked up.
I hadn’t even been out
with this guy, yet,
and, already, I’d have
to lie to my parents?

They sat there
expecting an explanation.
The phone rang again,
a slight reprieve.
“Hey, listen, you
want to go to the movies
instead? I’ll pick
you up.”

Acceptable.
I relayed that
and heads nodded,
eating resumed,
normal banter
flew back and forth
again.

He met my parents
as they were on their way
out to go bowling,
played a game of cribbage
with my brother,
then we walked
to the theater,
watched The Taming
of the Shrew,and returned home
to have hot
chocolate with my folks
and sister.

Conversation and smiles
drifted around
like the steam
wisping from our cups.

It was just another
Friday night,
another connection
of family,
another meal
of sauce
spreading it’s comfort.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - -

And in case you're wondering, the guy liked it so much at our house that we ended up getting married and we'll be celebrating our 39th anniversary in June.

13 comments:

Understanding Alice said...

the sauce looks fabulous, the poem was beautiful and.... congratualtions :D

Anonymous said...

Awhh that was a sweet story :) Congratulations!

brenda w said...

This is a wonderful testament to the love of family. Beautiful.
Congratulations, and no wonder...family is rooted deeply in you. Good writing!

George S Batty said...

Any sauce that keep a man that long should get an "A" in the school of cooking. I liked the way you wove the sauce into the poem. Excellent writing.

Jae Rose said...

Wonderfully warm..It made me smile with the phone close to your dad's place at the table. The power of who is in charge of the phone has really changed now! Thanks for your visit..Jae

anthonynorth said...

Beautiful words - and the sauce sounds good, too.

Denise Moncrief said...

what a wonderful post. such good memories. sounds a little like Friday night at our house so many years ago. glad you married the guy. any guy that can relate to your family is due consideration as a potential keeper.

Tammy Brierly said...

I really enjoy your pieces.

Tumblewords: said...

Oh, congratulations to you two! A delightful sauce thingy. Sometimes I almost wish I cooked, but... :)

Old Egg said...

What a warm and loving insight to your past. Wonderful read.

Gemma Wiseman said...

Love how there was a "slider" from the sauce of food to the sauce of living! Clever pairing and parallel of ideas!

Dee Martin said...

oh the days of meatless Fridays and one phone on the wall in the kitchen..thanks for sharing the recipe, the poem, and the love :)

Anonymous said...

Felt like I was at that table, could almost taste the sauce and hear the ring of the phone.

You have such a fluttery way of lining my screen with your sweet little stories.

That the tale was punctuated with the fact of your marriage...absolutely perfect!

Thanks for a terrific read, Linda.

- Dina

Linda's Poems