Summer Begins

Oh, summer. How I have missed you.

Summer vacation for us is usually a whirlwind of travel and activity, but this year we're taking it easy: a fun little jaunt last week to say goodbye to some friends who are moving far away, and a French-language course in Montreal just before we return to school. Between that, six solid weeks of NO PLANS. 

This week I cooked up a storm -- cherry recipes at the forefront, as I had picked 15+ pounds of them last weekend, but I also made dinner every night. Vegan dinner from scratch. Uh-huh.

I took advantage of two cool mornings and spent many contented hours weeding, though there are plenty more where those came from.

When two friends called on different days, needing rides from the train, I was able to drop everything, share a meal and catch up with them.

Finally, as a summer gift to myself, I spent 99 cents on a New York Times subscription so I could enjoy reading at my leisure. And on the first day of enjoying it, I ran into what might be the best news story of all time:

It’s hard to talk about Yo. The app is so simple (it lets users send the word “Yo” to each other) that even to mock it feels like taking it too seriously — come on guys, it’s just Yo! Luckily, hackers have made things easier on all of us by making Yo do some new tricks.

Pre-hack, critics had to evaluate Yo on its merits, which was somewhat difficult, since it has so few of them (and so few demerits, for that matter). Nonetheless, some rose to the challenge. At Yahoo, Alyssa Bereznak said the app’s one message “might be succinct, but then so is throwing a brick through the window.” 

An app that exists solely so you can "Yo" your friends. Man, if only we could expand it to include other words as well . . . and pictograms . . . and photos . . . and maybe even a feature that would let one user talk to another user! That would really be something.

What a gift: time to enjoy life's exquisite ironies. I wish you the same!

 

Becoming Lebanese

Last summer a group of friends at the SMI was staying up way, way too late drinking wine and unloading after a long day of teaching and learning.  They invited me to join, but no sooner had I settled in than one friend decided it was time for bed. He began saying goodbyes, and I began laying on the guilt: 

"You're leaving? I just got here!" (It was after midnight.)

"We never have any time to talk!" (Patently false.)

 "Why do you hate me?" (If your Middle Eastern do not habitually play this histrionic trump card, you must not really be friends. It's a staple of the culture, as common as "keep a stiff upper lip" to the British.)

This last line prompted an outburst of laughter from all the Arabs present, which was just about everyone but me; one of them dubbed me an honorary Lebanese on the spot.  Defeated, my tired friend stayed another half an hour and then asked for my permission to retire.

Of course my real attraction to the Lebanese culture is not the guilt but the food. Last Pascha Rob surprised* me with the gift of this incredible book, which contains over 500 (!) traditional recipes and modern updates. It's a work of art, full of gorgeous photographs, and I enjoyed leafing through it for several weeks until the summer began. Then we hit a whirlwind of travel: we were gone 6 weeks out of 8, with mere days at home between trips. We finally arrived home on the cusp of the Dormition Fast, ready to stay put for awhile, and I was itching to start cooking for myself again after gracing the interior of far too many good and bad restaurants.

Here's the thing about fasting: it should be simple. Eat less, give more -- to God, to the church, to others. That's it. Instead, it becomes a chore. Reading labels. Planning exit strategies for social events. Trying to think of an allowed meal that sounds appetizing and contains something healthful. I hit Fasting Fatigue early and often during Lent and Advent, and this usually leads to breaking the fast or resenting the fast, or both.

So on July 31, I picked out a few traditional Lebanese recipes I wanted to try. All were fast-friendly (vegan) and fairly easy to make, if a little time-consuming: the fresh ingredients meant that a lot of chopping and pureeing was involved, though each dish was elemental in its simplicity. 

I was overjoyed, as I finished each one, to find it tasted exactly as it did at the best Middle Eastern restaurants (of which none exists in this area, and believe me, I have tried them all.)  At the end of two days I had a fridge full of healthy meals that were easy to prepare and so delicious I wouldn't even think of straying. We ate dips made from eggplant, chickpeas and walnuts; salad with lemony garlic dressing and pita croutons; and olives and pickled turnips, twice a day for a week. Then it was gone and we had to make more, only this time we added falafel, fried cauliflower, tahini sauce, tabbouli, preserved-lemon dressing and semolina almond cake, and doubled everything in honor of my mother's birthday. Over a dozen people crowded my house, each one effusive in praise of the amazing food, and the recipes were so straightforward I couldn't even try to take credit.

I didn't miss meat, not once. As much as I wanted to try the grape leaves with cinnamon-laced beef, raw lamb with spices and thick, creamy yogurt dip, I was perfectly happy with what I had made, the other 80% of the Lebanese canon. And it got me thinking about fasting and community. Saydeh touched on this in her comments about Holy Week (buried midway through this piece -- good luck!) When everyone is eating the same things, there are no pins and needles about cooking for guests or choosing what to eat at a host's table. And when the food is naturally, wonderfully simple, fasting becomes the norm; days when meat or dairy is allowed seem like a luxury.

We noticed this about our friend who is a priest in Southeast Asia and also a fabulous cook; most of his favorite recipes are based on vegetables and tofu, seasoned with a wide variety of aromatics and spicy sauces. When he's eating meat, he might throw in some chicken or beef, but tofu alone is delicious because it's allowed to be tofu -- it's not trying to be a hamburger. American food is just stubbornly unadaptable: all our traditional favorites (hot dogs, sandwiches, ice cream, pizza) are not only generally unhealthy, but also unpalatable without cheese and meat. Ever tried a veggie sub? Bread and sliced raw vegetables. As asetic and pitiful as it sounds.

Last year I fell into the habit of grabbing something small to eat during the school day -- yogurt, fruit, a boiled egg -- and eating my main meal of the day in the afternoon when I returned home and had access to my whole kitchen and pantry. So on Friday I had some nuts and fruit at school and came home to fattoush, hummus and mahamra. Then Rob mixed up ground beef, rice and spices and we rolled over a hundred grape leaves. We brought a few to the house of some close friends to enjoy, nightfall bringing the start of a non-fasting day, and in our conversation they pointed out the crux of what I'm getting at here. Not that the whole world should convert to a Middle Eastern diet (I wish!) but that being part of a traditional community makes fasting not only doable but enjoyable. 

Next on my journey to becoming Lebanese: discovering what magic they can work with chicken. And a very pleasant Advent fast.

*I may have ordered and paid for it myself, but I promised to give him credit. That counts, right?

 

Glory to God for All Things

What do you do when you lose your family, possessions and livelihood in one terrible day? If you're Job, you resist the impulse to write country music and instead give glory to God, who blesses you with even more than you lost.

Roughly two thousand years later, another dedicated servant of the Lord was dying in exile from the empire he had struggled to evangelize all his life. St. John Chrysostom, with his final breath, praised his creator: "Glory to God for All Things!"

Another millenium and a half after that, a Russian priest composed a beautiful Akathist, a sort of prayer poem, based upon those words:

When the lightning flash has lit up the camp dining hall, how feeble seems the light from the lamp. Thus dost Thou, like the lightning, unexpectedly light up my heart with flashes of intense joy. After Thy blinding light, how drab, how colourless, how illusory all else seems. My souls clings to Thee.

He knew whereof he spoke: the "camp dining hall" was at a Communist prison camp where Fr. Gregory Petrov, after numerous tortures, died in 1940. From hearing the hymn, you would never guess at the circumstances under which it was written. We sing it every year on the eve of Thanksgiving, and every year I find some new nugget of wisdom to treasure in my heart:

Glory to Thee for Thy goodness even in the time of darkness, when all the world is hidden from our eyes.
Glory to Thee, sending us failure and misfortune that we may understand the sorrows of others.
Glory to Thee for what Thou hast revealed to us in Thy mercy; Glory to Thee for what Thou hast hidden from us in Thy wisdom.
Glory to Thee, building Thy Church, a haven of peace in a tortured world.

Glory to Thee for the humbleness of the animals that serve me. (This one always makes me smile. Clearly, Fr. Gregory Petrov never owned a cat.)

This morning I am mindful of the "endless variety of colors, tastes and scents" as I assemble a salad, stuff a squash, cook down a whole bag of onions into a tiny caramelized pile (for transcendence, just add bacon, bourbon and brown sugar -- oh, Bittman!) and try not to eat ALL of the cookies I baked yesterday. It may seem small compared to what else is going [wrong] in the world, but our God gives beauty in abundance, even to the tiniest moments.

Most of all, I am mindful of the "love of parents, the faithfulness of friends." What friends you all are, especially for calling and writing and grabbing my arm to ask where I've been and why I haven't written. There is no reason besides the busy-ness of life. I thank God for this blog, one of the few relationships I have that doesn't inspire guilt when I let it go temporarily. When I pick it up again it feels just like an old friend. Just like you.

Happy Thanksgiving.

Night, Rediscovered

There's something to be said for the hours of late afternoon and early evening. Most of the world spends these hours either rushing from place to place or cursing the traffic that prevents said rushing.​ They are rushed, squashed and downtrodden.

But suddenly, they are all mine.​

With grad school behind me, and having said farewell to my weekly piano students, I am discovering all sorts of things to do in the evenings:

  • Walk. These days I have the freedom to go just about anywhere -- no one is going to mess with a dingo -- and, thanks to a prong training collar, can even enjoy it without a battle of wills. Especially loving the Indian Summer weather that enables me to stay out for an hour without getting gross and sweaty.
  • Cook. I especially enjoy the challenge of using up CSA veggies: tonight I made a velvety, warm broccoli soup with local cream and smoked salt. And some baba gannoush, topped with tomatoes and mint from my own backyard. Currently working my way through my parents' thoughtful birthday gift
  • Read. After a love-hate journey through the Game of Thrones series, I picked up the books and got pretty thoroughly engrossed in the impossibly complex plotline, complete with gratuitous sex and violence (though not nearly as much as in the TV show!) I know it's half garbage, but the other half is great character development. Hey, I'm still reading Homer, Hemingway and Wilde for school!
  • Listen. My brother got me the most ingenious little invention: it does a great job of magnifying sound from my phone, so I can listen to podcasts while I garden or drive or clean.​
  • Pray. Most dear to my heart is the opportunity to attend weekday Vespers at my parish. The last time I went regularly was over a decade ago, before I had even met my husband. ​

Most happily, very little of this time is spent staring at a screen (I have it on all day at school) and I have enough hours to myself that I can stop happily in plenty of time to clean up and go to bed. Sleep is a gift in a class by itself!​

Crabby Father's Day

How is it that it took thirty years of living in Maryland for me to bring live crabs into my kitchen?  Not just the best crabs I’ve ever had (freshly caught and steamed in Baltimore’s cheapest) but also well worth the price of admission in entertainment value.

Also on the menu: fried oysters, hush puppies, corn on the cob, and not-quite-pickled cucumber salad.  Dessert was this cake; it really should have been Smith Island, to go with the Maryland theme, but chocolate and raspberries are Dad’s favorite combination.

*Crabs were harmed in the making of this film. They were also delicious.

Preparing for the Feast

Ah, Holy Week. 10 days. 18 services. Many groans of the feet.  Many moments of joy.

As with anything that's been properly planned for and anticipated, I find that the preparing, the waiting, is itself a joy.  At many points throughout the week I thought, "This is enough.  We don't even have to have Pascha."  The insistent, eager repetition of the raising of Lazarus in Rejoice, O Bethany; the achingly beautiful Alleluia of Bridegroom Matins; the voices of the children leading us in the Lamentations of Holy Friday as we mourn the death of Christ: I would willingly breathe my last in the middle of any of them, even without the feast.

But oh, the feast: I stayed home from one service to spend a long morning preparing two of my Paschal favorites with some friends (and then wrote about it.)  The smell of spiced yeast dough as we punched it down, and the defeated whoosh of the escaping air; the methodical dipping and shaking to candy violets and decorate the tops of the cheeses: again, moments of anticipation, and not so hard to rinse our fingers instead of licking them, thinking with gladness of the moment when we will share them together.

Yesterday we sat down to dinner with our family.  Marinated leg of lamb; honey-glazed ham; smoky brisket; grilled asparagus with proscuitto and hollandaise; creamy deviled eggs; salad with bacon and bleu cheese; and the crowning glory, a huge platter of truffled macaroni and cheese.  It was insane and delightful;  Silence fell as we sipped Mai Wine and enjoyed the fruits of our Lenten labors.

Tomorrow, back to the world.  Today, I am happy to remain in this hazy heaven of sausage and delight.

The Blessings of Brigid



It may sound a little weird that to join my church you need to choose a new name.  People who do this always seem to be hiding something: the most famous examples -- Malcolm X, Marilyn Monroe, Prince -- are dubious at best on that count.  And to legally change your name in the great state of Maryland, you're required, among other things, to take out advertising space in your county of residence.  Just in case your old self might owe someone money.

The practice of re-naming might make more sense when you consider that adult conversion to Orthodoxy is not the norm; most children are born into their parents' faith.  Traditionally, families have named their children, and not with mere modern anomalies -- fruit, acronyms, and absurd spellings -- but names that mean something.  Often, children are called after their ancestors, especially if said ancestors had qualities parents want to see reflected in the next generation.  My cousin, in a touching example of this, named her youngest after our musical, sarcastic and loving grandfather, who departed this world five years ago today.

So if you think of the Church as a family, including even those ancestors who lived many centuries ago in foreign lands, the whole practice makes a lot more sense.  In many cultures, children are named after a saint who entered Heaven on the day they were born; others are named for a saint whose life has been inspiring to the parents or godparents.

But woe to the adult convert, who must choose a name for herself.  I hardly qualified as an adult when I entered Orthodoxy at sixteen, and in fact tried to weasel out of the decision by asking if there wasn't a Saint Emily somewhere.  My priest said no.  Turns out he was wrong, but I'm sure that was part of the plan.

So I chose St. Brigid of Kildare.  For no particular reason besides a current obsession with All Things Celtic (including, but not limited to, Braveheart, U2 and painting knotwork on my bedroom walls.)

It goes without saying that St. Brigid's life and circumstances were very different from mine.  The daughter of a clan chief and one of his slaves, she dedicated her life to Christ by founding monasteries all over Ireland, exercised strict spiritual discipline over herself and her disciples, and in an interesting twist, supported increased independence for women.  At one point, she also ran a dairy (and thus is patroness of this local gem.)  I haven't had much success and / or interest in any of these areas, unless you count my love for milk in all forms.

As people, though, we share several striking similarities.  A devotion to and love for the natural world; one of the sweetest stories about St. Brigid concerns a red fox that "adopted" her in infancy and remained her pet, sitting quietly at the back of the church during services. A disposition that was eminently practical, and a gift for efficiency.  Also, a troublesome lack of attachment to worldly possessions: she gave away her father's goods with abandon to the poor and diseased, while I am constantly scolded by the head of my household for a lack of care in lending, gifting and misplacing things I just don't regard as important.

For some time I have wondered how to best celebrate her feast day, which just passed; the trouble is that the Feast of the Presentation of Christ is the very next day, so we serve Liturgy the evening before.  Thus, a party on St. Brigid's day can never be.  A few years ago I started making Irish Soda Bread and bringing it to share after the service, usually accompanied by Guinness or Killian's (legend has it she once turned bathwater into beer; this is probably apocryphal, but I like it anyway; plus, there's the irony of toasting my dear grandfather, who would NOT have approved.)

This year I used a recipe that Rob acquired last spring after the feast day of another, slightly more famous, Irish saint.  He had raved about it so much that I was eager to see what he thought of my effort.  Since I didn't have enough for everyone, I kept it out of the food line, but interested friends sidled up to my table with alarming speed, and before I knew it I was sharing the last piece with my sister, leaving nothing for my poor husband at home.

Somehow, I think that's how St. Brigid would have wanted it, but it didn't stop me from making another pan this morning.  We'll call it Groundhog Bread.  And if I told you that even that humble holiday has origins in the Christian faith, you'd probably think that was even weirder than my changing my name.

Official Endorsement

Thanks to my mom for her comments and to tmatt for a slightly dubious suggestion . . . but my editor liked Neighborhood Nourishment the best, despite the fact that two of the four other column titles are alliterative.

So come, check it out: my first post lists some year-round farmers markets in the area, and my second is a half-instructional, half-reflective musing about pumpkin.

I probably won't warn you every time I post at Patch, so you might want to bookmark it -- I hope to post once or twice a week there, leaving plenty of brain cells for this site, of course!