I’m not sure this ended up where I thought it would when I
discovered this quote in one of Wendell Berry ’s
books. It might come from the Unsettling of America, I'm not sure. But, for better or worse, here goes.
“But just stop for a minute and think about what it means to
live in a land where ninety five percent of the people can be freed from the
drudgery of preparing their own food.”
James E Bostic Jr. former deputy assistant secretary of
agriculture for rural development. I didn’t find much on the net about him. I believe he was in the agriculture dept. during the tenure of Earl "plant fence row to fence row" Butz. He
got a degree from Clemson in chemistry. Did the government stint and has held
various positions with outfits like Georgia Pacific. You know the “we never met
a tree we didn’t want to cut” guys, among others.
Ugh. I wonder where this person would have placed on the
psychopath/sociopath diagnostic scale. Apparently he lumps actually growing the
food along with preparing the food for your family.
There is nothing more basic to being human than the growing,
preparing, preserving and sharing of food within the family or with friends.
One of the basics of the school garden movement beginning the mid nineties
isn’t just the garden itself. The students learn to cook what they grow and
share it with their classmates. Preferably around a table with all the
trimmings.
Some of my craziest memories involve dinner time. When dad
was disabled mom worked at the U of O as a cook. Which meant that you know who
ended up doing a lot of cooking. Robbie did try to help. I came through the
door after classes one evening to be greeted with “how do you make a cream
sauce?” She’d almost pulled it off on
her own except for the fatal mistake. She turned her back on it for about
twenty seconds and it was lump city. Then there were my experiments with pasta
sauces. My youngest sister loves mushrooms. Now. Back then it was “are there
mushrooms in this?” No sis that bowl has no mushrooms. Then there was dad and
the chili. He’d slip in when he thought we weren’t looking and add a little
more Tabasco
to the mix. Didn’t take us long to just hold back on the final seasoning until
just before we were going to serve it.
Then there was the three layer cake baked with baking powder
that had lost its oomph. Good thing they liked frosting. And that chiffon cake.
Nicely mixed, just turned into the pans with I spotted the measuring cup with
the oil in it. That recipe was VERY forgiving. And the divinity that
steadfastly refused to set. Pass the spoon. I guess the weather wasn't cold enough or dry enough that day. We had a bowl of basically gooey marshmallows. It was still good. Sticky, but good.
Maybe it’s a guy thing, I don’t know. It was a challenge to
step up and make sure that dinner hit the table on the days mom worked late and
that it was something they’d eat. I have to admit dad and the girls were very
patient with me. And some things got eaten then that have never graced our
table again. Stuffed peppers spring to mind. Heven't eaten one since, at least not if I had a choice.
There’s a satisfaction to that and it’s a feeling he’ll
never share.
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