I was on the phone with my sister-in-law yesterday talking about Thanksgiving and what keeps families together over the years. I think witchcraft might be involved.
We were lured in like Italian Hansels and Gretels by wonderful ravioli and slow-cooked sauce on Sundays. My mom acted innocent,while enticing us to sit together with delicious meals every night, where the chuck roast or turkey was so tender it fell from the bone and melted in our mouths.
We came home from school to hot, delicious pizzas and fresh breads just waiting for us. And then there were the pies; warm apple with a crumble top, fresh cherry, blueberry with peanut butter crust – these are the pies that bind. (Oh God, I can’t believe I went for that awful pun.)
It’s ridiculously simple. Nothing makes you happier than eating great food when you’re really hungry. It’s almost embarrassing that we humans are so easily manipulated. And sitting at the table, we ended up talking and laughing. More food came so we sat and talked longer and pretty soon, BAM!, we were a unit and we actually liked each other.
And even after each of us moved away, we always came back, as if some invisible glue held us together. (It may have started with guilt – “When are yunza commin a home?”) But we discovered we all love cooking, eating, planning great dinners, and each other. She used her culinary witchcraft on us, we fell under its spell, and now we use it on our families!
We don’t get to be together every day or even every Sunday anymore, but the bond is still there. And that bond was forged with the three P’s: pasta, pizza and pie.
So, this Thanksgiving, wear that apron proudly and revel in your influence. If you don’t have an apron, order one of my, The Hand That Stirs the Pot Wields the Power Aprons. It’s in my Zazzle store, Gettasommadis. If your family willingly, happily gets together, food probably played a part. Whoever thinks the hand that stirs the pot doesn’t wield the power, couldn’t be more wrong.
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donraymedia
November 20, 2014 at 10:43 amThis one hit really close to home, Fran. You have a magical way of reaching deep into our souls and pulling out the best of the memories. Bless you!
Fran Tunno
November 20, 2014 at 11:02 amAwww Don, thank you. Glad this one resonated!
donraymedia
November 20, 2014 at 11:13 amThey all resonate with me, Fran, except the ones about chicks.
Matilda Novak
November 23, 2014 at 10:08 pmi love your words, Franzie….
Fran Tunno
November 24, 2014 at 1:03 amThank you so much for always reading Matilda!xoxo
Fran Tunno
December 11, 2014 at 7:46 pmOh Linda, I hope they trigger sweet memories in everyone’s past. I think it’s therapeutic to visit those memories for comfort as often as possible.
lafriday
December 10, 2014 at 8:31 pmWhen my mom passed, I gave away all of my mom’s furniture but took her cast iron skillets, Farberware soup pot, cookbooks and recipe book with handwritten recipes and clipped newspaper recipes. I cried the first time I cooked with the cast iron pannthinking of all the meals that had been lovingly and deliciously made in that skillet. You have your own witchcraft, Fran: your evocative memories stir at the embers of your loyal reader’s memories. Thank you for that.
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November 21, 2018 at 3:03 am[…] closeness and laughter, the byproducts. Here is a link to one of my older blog posts called, The Hand That Stirs the Pot. It explains exactly how she managed […]
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March 24, 2019 at 5:27 pm[…] closeness and laughter, the byproducts. Here is a link to one of my older blog posts called, The Hand That Stirs the Pot. It explains exactly how she managed […]