Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Matriarch's Kitchen

I devoured nothing with such loving voracity as I did my grandmother's danish. My favorite were the palm-sized wreaths with a dollop of perfectly tart lemon filling in the middle, though the pecan swirls and apple turnovers tantalized in their own rights. Each danish had just the right chewiness, a mouthful of fruit filling, and a light sugar glaze. They took two days to prepare and just seconds to eat.

The deep freezer hummed persistently in the garage. Here, Gram's danish waited beneath sheets of wax paper, nestled in the pans used to bake them. The moment the freezer cracked open, a puff of cold escaped into the humid Miami air. It took patience to savor the danish inside after a few moments in the microwave. More often than not, I devoured them standing in the cool of the open freezer. If my hankering was big, it didn't matter that they were frozen.

In her fridge, Grams always had a small pot roast cooked in gravy, a bag of prunes, sharp cheddar cheese, hard salami, peppermint patties, oranges, and several one-serving bottles of Sutter Home Chardonnay. She made her own raisin bread for breakfast and plain whole wheat for everything else. Each morning, she squeezed an orange into fresh juice.

Feisty and independent, she lived alone for the last seventeen years of her life. She kept active through her daily work, taking pleasure in routine. Always concerned with her health and her figure, she was petite and firm. She hated being called cute, though she was the smallest of our family. Hugging her felt like I would break her; the lightness of her frame had nothing to do with her real strength.

In the center of her home on the baby grand, she played songs from Les Miserables from memory. She checked her stocks every day, played Bridge on Wednesdays. She kept an orchid house and a rose garden with one rosebush named after each of her grandchildren. Every morning she got up early enough to say her prayers, go for a walk, shower, dress, and be at St. Mary's Cathedral by 7 am. I rarely saw her eat breakfast, as she had already done half a day of work by the time we stumbled into the kitchen.

* * * *

While I sleep, my cat will lick any dirty plates I am too lazy to remove from the bedroom. She is young. She thinks she is sneaky but is not, because she is loud when she is greedy. And in matters of danish-eating, I surely wasn't as sneaky as I believed myself to be. None of us were. I lingered in the kitchen casually and once no one was around, I opened the door an inch at a time. I gently lifted the wax paper to get to the best looking danishes I could find. The point was for no one to see where I had eaten, though this left big gaps in what were supposed to be untouched layers. My mom and my cousin Christine ate them this way too. My dad, oblivious and hungry, usually left crumpled wax paper as evidence. And from the study where I slept, I could hear the door peeling open as my family tiptoed to a midnight snack. At that hour, Grams was always well asleep.

When we visited Grams, she always met us at sitting on her doorstep in crisp white pants, her short hair carefully brushed into sweeps of grey. I slept on a nubby beige sleeper couch beneath a large mirror. One door faced the hallway; two sliding glass doors faced the living room. When the storm shutters were open, her orchid house and Biscayne Bay were both visible. Before I had a cellphone, I spent hours every night as MargNic, Grams' AOL account. I tapped for hours at the keyboard, needing constant contact with my boyfriend and friends back home in Indiana. While I chatted, I always had a snack next to me - a couple of danish or some peppermint patties from the kitchen freezer. I approached them the same way as I approached the danish.

* * * *

When my mom was sixteen, the family moved from Toronto to Miami. They bought property, and Grandma worked with the architect to design everything but the kitchen. She designed the kitchen by herself. She knew what she needed and also what she wanted.

What she needed was to keep her family close. What she wanted was a space that worked for her. The kitchen was designed to promote family interaction. The table was big enough so that everyone could sit and low enough for her to put her weight into kneading dough. The counters and cabinets were white so she could know everything was clean. And of course, there was a double oven for all her baking.

Eating together kept her family close. Her parents left Lucca, Italy as teenagers and settled in Kenosha, Wisconsin. There, they had nine children, ate lots of polenta, and worked hard to bridge the distance between Italy and America. My grandmother Marguerite was the oldest of the nine. She refused to speak Italian at home, and she fought to go to high school. She worked to support her family; when her brother needed glasses, her paychecks bought them. Taking care of family was always her role. And she was, without a doubt, our matriarch. We looked to her for reason, if we were ready for the truth.

* * * *

Food glues this family together. All the kids set the table, and all the women helped to prepare dinner. Dinners are loud and filling; glasses are sometimes knocked over in gesticulation. We sit at the table to talk long after we finished eating. It is our best gathering space.

When living alone and with family half the country away, the notion of family stretches. Immediate family is replaced by neighbors; community became her extended family. She thanked people with plate of danish, or when they were in season, a mango from a tree in her front yard. The tree bears nearly six hundred mangos each summer, and she made at least that many danishes in a year to sell at the monthly bazaars at St. Mary's Cathedral. Around Christmas time, she easily made three hundred. There were always enough in the freezer to feed anyone who stopped by to visit. Food was a gift to family, neighbors, and friends, anyone who did something nice for her.

* * * *

I was sixteen when Grandma corralled the four of her grandchildren to make the danish we ate so easily. The year after, she gave us her recipe. The original came from a Toronto newspaper in the 50s. With pictures, it took up only one page. We each received a copy of it and her eight page extended version: "Marguerite's Danish." Hers was a version perfected after fifty years of trial and error, and she told us everything we needed to keep on hand as well as the brands that worked best.

The amount of margarine in each batch of Danish shocked me. One batch called for one pound of Fleishmann's Corn Margarine. No wonder Danish dough is smooth and elastic. We folded the dough, added a third of the margarine, folded it again, and then let it stand in the fridge. We folded three times to laminate the dough.

"Be firm and steady," she said in her directions. "You are in charge."

Then the dough had to rest, and so did we. In teaching me to recognize when it was ready, she grabbed me by the arm with her soft, gnarled hands and had me touch the dough.

"See, it's alive," she said. "You know it's ready when it pushes back."

The recipe was the last gift she gave all of us. She died that next spring just four days short of her ninety-first birthday. After she died, the Sutter Home we kept on special reserve for Grandma sat next to her jars of strawberry preserves, collecting dust on the top shelf of the pantry. I spotted the chardonnay one day, and sentimental as I am, I thought I should drink one in her memory. She liked to buy the little bottles because they were a set amount to limit her; I too was glad they were small. At 19, I could only pucker my face at the bitterness, though now I find myself enjoying the taste.

* * * *

On a recent trip to my parents' home, I went up to my bedroom to search for the recipe. I found it sitting on the bedside bookshelf. The recipe is in a purple portfolio that folds up to protect even the bottom of the pages. On the first page she put two pictures; one of me rolling out dough, and one of her with the four of her grandchildren in the kitchen making danish. The shortest of us all, she beams, her eyebrows raised high above the frames of her glasses. As I read through the recipe again and delighted in her comments, I realized I could not have possibly read it this way the first time. It is comforting to believe that as she typed the recipe for us with her zigzagging arthritic fingers, looking out past her orchid house to the bay, she knew exactly what she was doing. Even when she was gone, she was still tying our family together.

Blue Days

I squirmed in my seat waiting for Mrs. Kauffman to call my name. As she ticked down the list, she stopped to look up at me.

"Diana Meeeeans." The new art teacher raised her eyebrows to look down her long nose. "Emily Means's sister?"

I sighed. "Yes."

Emily Means was my non-artistic, athletic sister in the grade above me. This woman might know Emily, but she obviously doesn't know me, I grumbled to myself. Mrs. Kauffman spoke in third person, and Mrs. Kauffman didn't know that Diana Means was an artist.

When I cracked open my yearbooks, I always turned to my page first in the hopes that my horrible school pictures looked better small. In seventh grade, it didn’t matter how my picture looked. Next to my seventh grade face, my sister's name. Oh, the horror I felt when I saw the association in ink! I flipped forward to the eighth grade class and looked for her picture. Sure enough, Emily Means. In the index, the list out from her name is two lines long. My name was nowhere. This is an outrage! I thought. Like I didn't even exist this year! I was horrified that such a thing could happen and that everyone in the school had a record of it. Not Diana, but "Emily's sister."

We are close in age, but far enough apart that we have separate friends. Far enough apart that no one should mistake us. From looks to hobbies to personalities to blood, we could not be more different. She is a baby-fine blonde with a bubbly personality; her hair tosses with an enviable ease. I, on the other hand, have always wrestled with thick chestnut curls, emotional outbursts. Emily makes friends everywhere she goes, whereas I am of the shy and awkward variety. My few close friendships run deep. She's now 23; it doesn't look like she'll ever pass 5 feet. Her friends at camp called her "Fun-Size." And I have, for a long time, been able to rest my chin on top of Emily's head. I reached 5'4" early and stayed there.

I blame our differences on "the adoption grab-bag." It is easiest to describe my sister in comparison to me. Our differences made me curious about my origins. Looking out the windows of the minivan, I gazed at every "Adopt a Highway" sign. I convinced myself that the same group brought me to my parents. It seemed that Emily and I were adopted from different worlds.

My father, the sports-lover, hoped to adopt boys who would become star athletes. Emily lived for sports while I lied to get out of practices. She mastered the game; I made my first masterpieces.

My first experience with abstract art happened in Lion's Park while my parents cheered for my sister's softball team. I sat on the bleachers with my back to the diamond and my butt where feet go, using the seat as a drawing table. I scribbled loosely, enjoying the connection of head to hand to paper. I colored inside the loops, varying the shades of graphite.

I felt drawn to making sand designs with my cleats, not manning my "position" as backup behind first base. Once in basketball, much to my surprise, I found myself with the ball in my possession. I dribbled towards the away team's basket. Each time I dribbled the ball, I dribbled it all the way to the ground. My truly defining moment came in a game of tee-ball. As I ran from third to home, I stopped to pick up something that caught my eye. It turned out to be a cow tooth. I wrapped it up in toilet paper and put it in my shadowbox, unwrapping it every few days for examination until I moved on to the next distraction.

The performance aspect of sports is perfect venue for proving oneself, and after the yearbook mix-up, I felt that need burning with the fire of hormones. I have to find the short road out of anonymity! With an angry, foolish head, I reasoned that the best way out was joining the football team.

It was spring, and I felt feisty with the new energy of the season. Spite kept me stone faced as boys snickered during the call-out meeting. Everyone will know how tough I am inside, then they'll know my name. That summer I ran on the treadmill in the basement twice with the TV tuned to the Colts pre-season games. I struggled through twenty minutes each time, but dammit, I needed to buff up on football.

While I ran, my attention drifted away from the game to my inner chatter. Pre-season means August, and this meant that August was the first time I made a move since the call-out meeting. I imagined all the middle school boys who would love the fair chance to pummeled a bull-headed hundred pound girl. My motives came into question, and, and I never went to the tryouts.

I determined that the best way to avoid the problem was to go directly to the source. I joined the yearbook staff, and in the first few pages, I sneaked in a few pictures of me with my friends. Someone nominated me for "Most Likely to become an Author" and I received it. Success! My name, my picture, not Emily's, sits in the middle of the "Most Likely" page.

In September of my freshman year, I told my best friend I was going to cut my hair short like Keri Russell in Felicity. She gasped in horror, so I told her I was joking. But I wasn't. I searched the internet for photos of women with short hair, and I longed for an easy, funky pixie cut. I was ready to define my own look and to make my mornings easier. I called around different salons in town looking for an appointment, finally settling with Sherry, my mom's stylist. The two weeks were just in case I change my mind, but I didn't waver a bit.

I went in clutching a photo of a woman with short, straight style. It was a total mismatch for my hair type. Sherry cut all but two inches off of my thick, curly mop and assured me it was what all her college clients were sporting. It's just hair, I told myself.

I rode my bike home and let the wind ripple through to my scalp. It felt so free, weightless, effortless. By the time I got to my neighborhood, my hair was totally puffed out from my head like a big brown cotton ball. I stopped by my boyfriend's house to show off my new style. Alex, then my boyfriend of two years, lived less than a block down the street. His little sister was outside when I arrived. He came outside and didn't recognize me underneath the freshly cut halo. And when I went home to show my father, he said, "I always wanted a boy." His comment stung me, and I shrank into myself.

The next day at school seemed like the longest ever. I had no idea how to control the rug of curls I had just created. Everyone stared at me, though few commented. That's how I knew I had a bad haircut.

I looked to the CVS beauty aisle for a solution. First, I tried a stiff gel. This wasn't quite funky enough, and I had a habit of crushing the spikes while I leaned my head against my hand in class. This ruined the tough look I was going for. I soon found myself in Hot Topic picking out a rich shade of blue. The bottle sat in my bathroom cabinet for a few days. I promised my mom I would wait until after our annual church directory pictures. Within minutes of returning home, I was bleaching my hair in preparation for the dye.

Blue Velvet, it turned out, stained everything. After a shower, the dye dripped out of my hair and onto my neck and forehead, staining them for a week. Splatters from my wet hair stained the yellow countertop, yellow towels, and cream bathtub permanently. A little splotch got on the wall above the bathroom light switch. I tried matching it with paint, but the walls were so light and the dye so dark that my cover-up job was obvious.

My hair turned out a dark blue that was glorious in the sunlight. The stain soaked into the dry skin around healing pimples on my forehead and matched my braces, but I was happy to be the only person in our conservative high school to sport blue hair. Proud, even, to defy stereotypes by keeping up my grades.

"Love the color, Means," Principle Eggers said in the lunch room one day. It's Diana, I thought to myself. But he had made note of me, and that was step one in making a name for myself.

Making a name for myself, yes. But I was, as I discovered, also confusing people. "What a nice young man," an Alzheimer's patient said as I helped her in the retirement home the next summer.

My ten minute Great Clips haircut fooled more than those with memory loss and dwindling eyesight. "What can I get for you, sir?" a Starbucks cashier asked. I responded in a high pitched voice; his face fell.

"I'm going to let this young man have the window seat," a woman said on an airplane. Her daughter whispered loudly that I was a girl.

At first these instances offended me. Can't these people see my D-cups pointing right at them?! I eventually found comfort in the realization that they weren't focused on my chest. Some students thought my short hair meant I was a lesbian, which was an association I hadn't considered. I dismissed it as ridiculous, though I experimented with combining boys' jeans with baby tees. Before too long, Alex broke up with me. Sources close to him told me, "He didn't like your hair." The breakup empowered me. I found a boy with the same haircut as mine and I asked him out. He said yes. We dated for the rest of high school. I figured anyone who still thought I was a lesbian was crazy.

I scoffed at the misinterpretations of a simple haircut, but I secretly took joy in shocking my classmates, most of who I had been in school with since kindergarten. I spoke out more, tried new things, unleashed a woman with balls. The Harbinger, our school newsmagazine, wanted to print my thoughts. My boldness grew with each article I wrote. I became passionate about myself, my beliefs. With one friend, I protested George Bush's second inauguration. The intersection was busy and we found ourselves clenching our jaws in response to arbitrary insults from adults in our town. Oh, the nerve they had to stop traffic! I felt so strong when I came home from the protest. I sat down to write about it.

Though people sometimes confuse our ages, no one mistakes me for Emily now. I can't imagine that anyone would ever purposely put the wrong name next to my picture. The mistake was a finger pointing right at me, poking at a fear of being eclipsed. It was a match on a pile of insecurities. Unwittingly, it moved me to liberate myself from anonymity, and to a degree, my shyness. There is no hiding when you have bright blue hair, pale skin, and large breasts. If I can't hide, I said, then I won't ...