Friday, December 1, 2017

Six Sentence Stories - Mate

With another holiday season approaching, and most of all the reason for the season, I've decided to use Zoe's blog hop to step right up with a story that I'm linking to Six Sentence Stories - Mate. Many stories are repeated year after year as families come together around the table to feast. Stories unite us to one another and that is a beautiful gift.





With the holidays approaching, she began making a list of certain items that she needed to buy to make their normal plain food taste extraordinaire, perhaps following in the footsteps of her own creative mother.

Green beans that were typically served alone with just a dab of butter and a little salt would be served at the Christmas meal after it had been baked with cream of mushroom soup. Many years later it was considered quite an odd pairing by some of the children who survived that taste only because it had some crunchy canned fried onions as a topping to disguise the taste of the mushrooms. The aroma of boiled and then baked carrots which had been drizzled with butter and ample brown sugar sprinkled on top until they were the color of cinnamon toast, just short of being burnt, was much more palatable to the youngsters.

At Christmas it was a tradition for the family to crack walnuts to be stirred into fudge and into the creamy divinity, which was the consistency of a soft-boiled candy, just the way her mate preferred it. Some of the walnuts were always saved to stuff inside some large dates which were then rolled in powdered sugar and served on a platter full of candies, but in her immediate family there was no Risalamande, a rich Danish rice pudding with an almond hidden in it waiting to be found, but who knows, perhaps a grandchild would someday have that experience.


6 comments:

  1. All of it sounds scrumptious!
    Had to laugh about the "green bean casserole" as it was called in my house. When I was a kid, it took me awhile to appreciate green beans like that but believe it or not it became one of my favorite dishes:)
    I love your descriptions, especially about the carrots. Very rich.

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    1. Thanks. I too actually grew to like beans fixed that way, although I preferred that way of cooking carrots more as a kid. I also loved the burnt roasted marshmallows as a kid, but not so much as an adult.

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  2. The elements in this six are totally bringing back memories. I have never liked walnuts. But, come Thanksgivings, out they'd come and along with them silver nutcracker and those curved pick things. I'd be all, 'hey you want me to get that walnut of you?'
    funny how despite how different the whole might be, the elements are a common bond.

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    1. Give a guy a few tools, and they are raring to go. :-) I remember walnuts having somewhat of a bitter taste, but I think it was because they might not have been sufficiently dried. I don't notice that bitterness in the walnuts I buy in the stores.

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  3. You have made my mouth water Pat. I feel like going and cooking up some beans you gave such a good description.

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    1. I hope you enjoyed your pot of beans. Did you make them with the mushroom soup and the canned fried onions?

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