The radio alarm pulled me out of dreamland at 5 AM. I drew closer to JB, rested my head on his chest and listened to the thump thump of his heart as he stroked his hand down my back. Even on the nights we sleep entangled into each other, the twilight between dreaming and waking together are sacred.
But there was no time to linger this morning. JB is managing a class this week which calls for being out the door before six. I was ahead of the curve this morning and was halfway through my first cup of coffee when he exited the bathroom, leaving behind a cloud of steam and the scent of shaving cream and Old Spice.
It’s a busy week for both of us, actually. In addition to my coffee, what I am needing is food.
What I am seeking is comfort.
We spent the Thanksgiving holidays with his family in Chicago. His family is big and boisterous and funny and overwhelming. Yet, I am growing used to the fact that dinner with the immediate family means twenty-five or so people. There is a huge difference between being one of two – who seem to have no commonalities as adults – to being one of five – most of which talk to each other daily.
His family seeks reasons to celebrate and be together. My family saw holidays in a haze of “musts” and “shoulds“.
It was our fifth Thanksgiving together and with each passing holiday, I am less homesick for soft slurring voices than I was the year before. I’ve become accustomed to the nasal twang of the Midwest accents, a preference for pumpkin pie over pecan, and appetizers of crackers and cheese over a traditional cheese-ball studded with pecans.
What I miss, though, is my mother’s cornbread dressing and giblet gravy.
Once my grandmother stopped cooking, my mother was responsible for bringing the dressing and the gravy to Thanksgiving. She never allowed us to help with the cooking, so I remember watching from afar as she crumbled cornbread into a pan and mixed in a host of onions and celery cooked in a stick of Parkay and heavy handed dashes of sage. I remember that the consistency of the dressing was like that of a cake, which means there had to be lots of chicken broth in there, too.
I don’t have the recipe. My mother was notorious for hiding her signature recipes – or else leaving out an ingredient (or two) if you were able to pry it from her. Neither my sister or I have traces of the recipe anywhere. My mother’s oldest sister is still living, but she is approaching ninety and is forgetful. I’ve tried to replicate the recipe and the closest I’ve found is a recipe from Southern Living, but the flavor profile is missing something. And the gravy? Yep, haven’t figured that one out, either, though I know it had not just turkey giblets, but a boiled egg in it.
I don’t miss the drama the holidays inevitably brought around in Texas, but at the end of the long weekend with people I love, yet still haven’t quite accepted me as part of their family, has me craving comfort.
So, after JB left for work, I quickly dressed and by 6:05 AM was seated at Cracker Barrel. Though I am thinking about my granny’s okra fried in cornmeal and my mother’s sage dressing drenched in gravy, I know that any facsimile will just make the longing deeper, so I settled for a Southern Breakfast: fried eggs with sausage patties and biscuits with cream gravy.
I was seeking the comforts of childhood. I needed a taste of being a child, before I understood that my mother was just a little crazy. Oh, I guess I always knew that my mother was a little delicate (the Southern way of saying she was unbalanced), but there was always comfort to be found in the form of food. Despite the normalcy, it was my normal.
Biscuits and gravy was what I needed this morning. A touchstone to my childhood and the comforts that food can bring us. I needed the comfort of the past as I move into my day of writing and errands and household chores. Because when the harder memories weigh on my mind, I remember the warmth of JB next to me in our morning hours and know that even though there’s no cornbread dressing, I am wholly loved for who I am.
I understand the frustration of not having favorite family recipes. My mother just threw away her cookbook because she wasn’t going to cook any more. She is still with us (at age 95) but has dementia and can’t remember how to cook anything. I wish she had asked me if I wanted that cookbook!
(Here from Holidaliles)
I’m so sorry, Bev. The best recipes are the ones that are written down, have stains on them, corrected, etc. Much love to you and your mom <3
Hi from Holidailies! It’s funny how people guard their secret recipes! There are a few things that my Mom shared with me, but some dishes I just can’t duplicate. She used to make this amazing banana cake but I can’t find anything even close to it. My grandmother was a great cook too, but she never used a recipe in her life. It was all done by memory or by adding a little of this and that!
I honestly cook by memory, too, Melanie, so I understand your Grandmother’s approach. And I’m glad to hear that my mom wasn’t the only one with secret recipes!!
Happy Holidailies, my friend. I understand being loyal to family favorites – mine is stuffing (which, yes, we put IN the bird). To this day, I hate going elsewhere for Thanksgiving because the stuffing will always be ‘wrong.’
I’m learning to make new favorites, though, that are unique to me and Fuzzy. It helps, some.
EXACTLY what JB and I have done overall – creating our own favorites!