Un-Polished

You might recall that I recently had my spit, er, saliva analyzed by ancestry.com, from which I learned that I am 13 percent Swiss, 4 percent Swedish, 2 percent Baltic States, and a full 71 percent Polish. My Polish ancestry comes from my mother, whose parents were both Polish. Well, perhaps somewhere way back in my ancestry, one of my great-great-great grandfathers messed around with a Swedish milkmaid or a Latvian princess to account for that 6 percent in my DNA makeup.

Ever since I got my results, I have been craving Polish food. This isn’t particularly surprising. I’m very susceptible to outside influences. It’s one of the reasons I chose the DNA testing for my ethnic background only. You can choose the fancy-dancy one that will also tell you your health background based on your ancestry, and to what diseases or health issues you are susceptible. When Bill had his DNA test done, for example, he learned that he had wet ear wax. Now, there is some critical knowledge necessary for one to face old age. Being somewhat of a hypochondriac, I knew that if I found out that my ancestors had tendencies towards prostate cancer, I would start feeling pain in my nether region despite the fact that I am WOMAN and have no prostate. Also, hear me roar. (Only Baby Boomers get that reference.)

Despite my mother’s Polish ancestry, she didn’t really cook Polish food. I never ate, for example, lazanki z kapusta i grzybami, which is a typical Polish dish made out of cabbage, pork, carrots, onions, and homemade noodles. Nor did she prepare sledz w oleju z cebula, which is herring with onion. Both actually sound quite good, but neither appeared on our dinner table. I think my mother didn’t prepare Polish food because her mother never taught her to cook; instead, she learned from her Swiss mother-in-law. In fact, I would venture to guess that Mom didn’t eat Polish food growing up. My Polish ancestors emigrated to the United States quite a few generations ago and were more likely to eat fried chicken than herring.

We did on occasion (happy occasion in my eyes) have golabki, though she called them cabbage rolls. Parboil cabbage until you can gently pull off the leaves, and then fill them with a mixture of ground beef and spices, and cook them in a tomato sauce. I have her recipe (in her own handwriting), but rarely make it because, frankly, it’s kind of a pain in the bee-hind.

The only Polish tradition I remember growing up was that she always prepared fresh Polish sausage and soft boiled eggs for Easter breakfast. We often had sausage, but it was generally the kielbasa that you buy at the grocery store. For Easter breakfast, she would buy fresh Polish sausage from someplace (my suspicion is from Nied’s Meats, “Nieds” short for Niedbalski, and a well-respected Columbus butcher shop. Anyway, it was delicious.

And for the thirty-some years during which I have been responsible for Easter breakfasts, I have followed suit. Unfortunately, most of the time I have purchased Hillshire Farm smoked kielbasa. But last year, I discovered a Polish restaurant and market some 30 minutes from our AZ house. Bill and I made the trip west, and purchased fresh Polish sausage.

Yesterday, we made the same trip. First we ate a pierogi lunch…..

Pierogis, by the way, are also something my mother never made. I, however, am determined to take a stab at them. They are wonderful dumplings filled with mashed potatoes and scrumptious things like bacon or mushrooms or onions.

And then I stopped at the market to pick up my Polish sausage for Easter Sunday. Like last year, I will cook them in water flavored with onions and garlic and bay leaves and peppercorns and other good spices, and then finish them in my cast iron pan…..

We enjoyed our Polish adventure, and it reminded me of my mom.

Right On Target

When I’m on my morning walk, I listen to podcasts. I like all sorts of podcasts, from spiritual to discussions of murders. The podcast I happened to be listening to yesterday is called the Big Boo Podcast, and features two regular ol’ women in their mid-40s, both with children, who happen to be current with All Things Cool. They also happen to be very Southern and very funny.

In the podcast I listened to yesterday, one of the women was very excited to tell the other about something she had discovered that is brought to you by most people’s favorite store, Target. Her excitement was generated by something called Target Restock.

Target Restock is a feature whereby you go online and fill up a virtual box with essentials you purchase from Target. As you order, you are told how full your box is, though apparently you aren’t required to fill up your box. Once you have met your shopping needs, you pay online, including a $2.99 service charge (unless you have a Target Redcard, in which case there is no service charge). The box is then delivered to your doorstep THE NEXT DAY.

The two of them were positively twitterpated by the fact that they wouldn’t have to haul heavy laundry detergents from Target to their car and then from their car to their house. Target Restock would eliminate the need to visit the store, something important to busy working parents.

I was immediately struck by this whole notion of shopping online from the comfort of my LazyBoy. But it reminded me that Americans (and probably people from other first world countries) are THIS CLOSE to eliminating the need to talk to other human beings.

And as I pondered this notion, I began to think about all of the ways that our lives have been simplified by the internet. I order food to be delivered all of the time without ever talking to a live person. In fact, I order nearly everything online (mostly from Amazon) from my easy chair. What a time-saver, particularly for people with kids and jobs and lots of responsibilities.

But where is all that extra time?

I was a single parent of one child for many years. I worked all day, figured out how to get him to and from soccer or basketball practice, fixed dinner at night, helped him with homework, got him into bed, shopped for groceries on the weekend with all of the other working parents, and so forth. I was lucky because his father did his part as well. Still, when my son was with me, my days were full. If I suddenly could have ordered groceries and other items from Target or King Soopers or Walmart, saving myself from real-live trips where I faced real-live crowds, I believe I would have had time on my hands.

So why do all of these people seem to be so stretched? How are we filling up our days? I’m really asking the question. All of these time saving features don’t seem to be saving us much time.

So I probably won’t be using Target Restock because I’m retired and part of the fun of going to Target is seeing what it is you buy that you didn’t even know you needed. That, and the fact that I have really nothing but time. Aren’t I lucky?

 

Palm Bearing

Palm Sunday just about does me in every year. It’s not the length of the gospel, although the Passion, especially Luke’s version, is long. But that’s okay, because Luke’s version is my favorite as it includes the story of the good thief and the bad thief. Remember? The two thieves are, in St. Luke’s gospel, hanged one on each side of Jesus. The bad thief mocks Jesus, saying if he is God, he should free them all from the cross. The good thief says hey there Buckaroo, at least we deserve our fate, but he’s done nothing wrong. Jesus promises the good thief that he will be in heaven that very day.

It’s always troubled me that the version we read tells us that Jesus told the good thief, “Amen, I say to you, today you will be with me in Paradise,” because we know he was put in the tomb and didn’t rise until the third day. I read something recently however that I found interesting. There is a translation that puts the comma in a different place. Instead, it says “Amen, I say to you today, you will be with me in Paradise. “I like that version, so that’s how I’m going to see that sentence from now on.

Anyhoo, the reason Palm Sunday gets to me has more to do with all of the pomp and circumstance around the holy day. The Palm Sunday ceremony recreates Jesus’ ride into Jerusalem a mere few days before he is arrested and subsequently put to death. At the church we attend in Mesa, after the palms are blessed outside, the procession into the church begins. Twenty or so men and women carry huge palm leaves into the church. After entering the church, they line up along the aisle, and await the arrival of the priest, who recreates the arrival of Jesus into Jerusalem (sans the donkey), while the choir sings some version of Hosanna to the son of David. This year, Bill was one of the palm-bearers. So a ceremony that always makes me tear up this year made me cry like a newborn baby. Because BILL.

Seeing Bill in the role of one of those people who went from cheering Jesus’ arrival to calling for his crucifixion as quickly as a Ferarri goes from 0 to 60 mph reminded me that they were people just like us. Plain, ordinary people who can be easily persuaded to turn their/our backs on God.

No matter which Gospel-writers’ Passion is read on Palm Sunday, the congregation participates in its reading. We are the ones who holler for the release of Barrabas and beg for Christ’s crucifixion. We are the ones who mock him and spit on him. Playing that role always makes me uncomfortable. But I guess it’s good to remind ourselves that we are sinners who are saved by Jesus’ resurrection which we will celebrate in a few days.

And no matter whose version of the passion of Jesus we are reading, when we kneel following the words Father, into your hands I commend my spirit and when he had said this he breathed his last, I cry.

I didn’t always cry at these words. When I was younger I’m sorry to say that I was just glad that the long reading was nearly over. But perhaps as I’ve aged, and become more aware of my own death (and hope for the resurrection of my own body), I know that what Jesus did for us is nearly overwhelming.

Saturday Smile: Little Angels

A friend of mine posted this photo on Facebook this week, and it made me smile…..

This photo was taken on May 7, 1961?, the day I, along with my fellow second graders, received our First Holy Communion. I must have studied this photo for an hour, trying to figure out who was who, where my second grade boyfriend was, how we could all have looked so freshly scrubbed and holy. My cousin David is the furthest on the left, as cute as a bug in a rug. Our teacher, Sister Colista, is barely poking her head above us in the upper left, second row from the top. She was mean as a snake. As for this holy little nana, I am in the top row, furthest to the right.

Have a great weekend.

Thursday Thoughts

Cubism
In the manner of Pablo Picasso,…..

…..Kaiya’s latest artwork (which I’m able to see because of a program provided by the school district that enables parents and other permitted people to see and comment on their darlings’ works of art) uses the artistic concept of cubism. It’s a self-portrait. As always, I’m impressed…..

I’ve always thought she would be a writer. Now I wonder whether art is calling her name.

Another Bomb
While I’m complaining about the heat (and, by the way, yesterday was much a milder day, with temps reaching only the mid-70s), my friends and family in Denver are experiencing another so-called bomb cyclone. I am 65 years old and had never heard that phrase until a few weeks ago. I think the weather people are getting bored. At any rate, Denver and its environs are experiencing another blizzard. Yuck yuck and yuck.

Check the Tank
The other day after Lilly and I finished geocaching, we were driving down the street towards Sonic Drive-In. Lilly — seated in her booster seat in the back seat — said, “Aunt Kris, how much gas do you have in this car?” The question caught me off guard. “Lilly, I have almost a full tank of gas. Why do you ask?” “Welllll,” she said with a voice full of doubt, “sometimes people run out of gas and I wanted to make sure we weren’t going to run out of gas.” I was once again reminded of just how little faith our children have in us. 

Happy Belated Siblings Day
Yesterday was apparently Siblings Day. I only know these things because people started posting photos of themselves with their siblings. Well. I can do that too….
Ciao.

Blistering Booty

Yesterday was the hottest day of 2019 thus far in the Valley of the Sun. At its peak, it was a sizzling 97 degrees. (Year-round residents who put up with temperatures nearing 120 degrees in the summer listen to my complaining about yesterday’s temperature and snidely comment under their breath, “When it’s 97 degrees in July, we put on a light cardigan.”)

So I’m not sure why I thought it was a great idea to introduce my 5-year-old great niece Lilly to the game of geocaching on a day when you could toast a tortilla on the sidewalk. “What’s geocaching?” she asked. “It’s a game where you hunt for hidden treasure,” I told her. She grinned, and got a shovel with which to dig for treasure and a ziplock bag to hold all of the money we would find. I didn’t have the heart to break the news to her that the most we would find is a tube containing a little piece of paper to sign that would require no digging.

We went to the area at which I thought the geocache was located. Given my terrible sense of direction and my inability to accurately judge distances, it was not surprising to find that the geocache was further away than I thought. Nearly a half-mile walk, in fact. A half mile is doable, but not with a 5-year-old carrying a shovel and a plastic bag in temperatures creeping dangerously close to 100 degrees. Lilly’s face was getting more and more flushed and she was caring less and less about pirates’ booty.

Suddenly I had an idea. While Jen was visiting, she and I found a geocache very close to Lilly’s very own house. We could find that one pretty quickly even with my directional challenges. I wouldn’t necessarily have the satisfaction of finding a new cache, but Lilly would.

“There’s a geocache right by your house,” I told Lilly. “Do you want to go find that one instead?”

“Does a bear s**t in the woods?” answered Lilly. Not really. But she made it clear she thought that was a dandy idea. And so we did, and in mere minutes she found the treasure…..

When I geocache with my grands, our tradition is a to finish off our adventure with a trip to the nearest Sonic for a limeade. Well, the truth is I have a diet limeade and my grands have a milkshake. (Hey, I’m the nana, and they’ve just found a few hidden treasures and deserve a reward.) I suggested to Lilly that we go to Sonic for a limeade.

“Some candy!” she countered.

We met in the middle. She had a blue raspberry slushie with Nerds. I had a diet limeade.

And she took a few selfies, which actually don’t look that much worse than most of my other photos…..

And made plans to go geocaching another time when it’s a bit cooler.

Drink to Good Health

We hear a lot of bad news these days, don’t we? Great Britain can’t figure out how to handle Brexit. Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps has been declared a terrorist organization. Floods have damaged much of United States’ bread basket. I can’t keep up with all of the earthquakes, tsunamis, and hurricanes around the world.

But amidst all of the bad news, I finally heard a piece of good news the other day. It came from Town & Country Magazine. What was the news?

VODKA IS GOOD FOR YOU. Move over, kale and acai berries. Step back, red wine. Bring me a glass of Stoli’s or Grey Goose. Because HEALTH FOOD.

Actually, the truth is I would prefer an ice cold martini made with Tanqueray gin rather than Grey Goose vodka. I know bartenders make more vodka martinis than gin martinis, even though the definition of a martini is a drink made with gin, stirred, not shaken (sorry James Bond), garnished with an olive or a lemon peel. I can deal with a Grey Goose martini. But People, when you pour lemon flavored vodka and sugar into a martini glass that has previously been dipped in sugar, you might have a really good drink, but you don’t have a MARTINI. No to the Lemon Drop martini. It takes more than the shape of the glass in which your adult beverage is served.

Wow. That felt good to get that off my chest. Excuse me while I drink a shot of a certain stress-reliever.

Now, back to vodka as health food. According to the article, there are seven ways in which vodka is good for you. One of the ways, of course, is that 1)it acts as a stress reliever as I implied above. But the others seem a stretch surprising: 2) it’s a natural disinfectant and antiseptic; 3 ) it prevents blood clots, heart attacks, and strokes, and lowers cholesterol; 4) it’s a natural astringent and deep-cleans your pores; 5) it controls bad breath; 6) it relieves symptoms of arthritis; 7) it reduces blood sugar levels and helps prevent diabetes.

See what I mean? You could really live on nothing but vodka. And if your boss accuses you of alcohol on your breath, just say, “Well, of course I have alcohol on my breath. I wouldn’t leave the house without using a breath freshener.”

Someone with whom I worked once informed me (as I was sipping an ice cold gin martini) that gin kills brain cells. Nonsense, I thought as I took another sip and bit into the bleu cheese olive. He’s thinking about the gin that they made in bathtubs in the 1920s. Bathtub gin probably not only damaged your brain, but also grew hair on the bottom of your feet. Not MY gin.

The article, by the way, adds that vodka was originally invented as a form of medicine. I’m only happy that I can drink it as part of a Bloody Mary and not just have it poured onto an open wound with a stick between my teeth.

The writer of the article doesn’t credit any particular research study. I wonder if a study was funded by the Smirnoff Bartending School of the United States.

Processed with Rookie Cam

Cheers…..

Grammatic Grace

This past weekend’s Mass readings gave me a lot of food for thought. Unfortunately, the thoughts I had weren’t particularly spiritual in nature. But it’s hard to stop thoughts.

Bill started it all. He, unlike me, always reads the day’s Liturgy of the Word prior to Mass. I wait for the lectors and the deacons or priests to do their thing. I like to be surprised.

He’s doing so when he leans over to me prior to Mass and asks, “Isn’t this sentence redundant?”

The sentence to which he referred was from St. John’s gospel about the adulteress who the scribes and Pharisees were about to stone. It comes after Jesus had suggested that anyone among the group who was without sin should throw the first stone, after which they all slunk away like boys who broke a window with a baseball. Jesus tells the woman he wouldn’t condemn her either. Then he says:

Go, and from now on do not sin any more.

It took me a few readings before I saw the redundancy: from now on do not sin any more. See it?

So, I lean over to Bill and whispered, “I guess you need to take that up with St. John. He wrote the gospel.” To which Bill responded, “Well, he was quoting Jesus.”

TO WHICH I GAVE BILL A WIDE BERTH GIVEN THAT I EXPECTED THE BOLT OF LIGHTNING AT ANY SECOND.

The bolt of lightning didn’t come, so I suspect that Jesus didn’t condemn Bill for his concern about a potential grammatical error. Jesus likely just blamed it on the translators. It’s probably not the only grammatical error in the gospels. The writers were fishermen and tax collectors, not writers. And they didn’t have spellcheck.

But since grammar was already on my mind by that time, when I came across this sentence in St. Paul’s letter to the Philippians, I cringed:

…..For his sake I have accepted the loss of all things and I consider them so much rubbish, that I may gain Christ and be found in him, not having any righteousness of my own based on the law but that which comes through faith in Christ, the righteousness from God, depending on faith to know him and the power of his resurrection and the sharing of his sufferings by being conformed to his death, if somehow I may attain the resurrection from the dead. (Philippeans 3:8-14)

Say what? Oh Paul, for the love of all that is good and holy, there must be some way to divide that sentence into several that make sense. Here was my best effort:

For his sake I have accepted the loss of all things. I consider them so much rubbish that I may gain Christ and be found in him. My righteousness is not based on the law but instead on faith in Christ, and his death and resurrection. If I share in his sufferings, I too may attain new life.

No wonder Paul got on everyone’s nerves. And it’s bad enough that I have to be the world’s editor, but do I have to look heavenbound?

(Oops. And now I, too, have to watch for the lightning bolt.)

Saturday Smile: Georgia O’Keeffe in Our Midst

The other day I got a text message from Kaiya, who informed me that she had been home sick from school for the last couple of days. A cold and sore throat, which needs to be taken seriously since she has asthma.

Oh I forgot to tell you, she wrote.

What? I replied.

So there was this publisher. He wanted some pictures that kids drew for his book. He came to our school and asked our art teacher to have 3rd, 4th, and 5th graders draw pieces of Colorado. He then picked out 20 out of the almost 300 kids that drew a picture to be in the book.

And then there was the most important part….I was picked for my art piece to be in the book.

Wow! I asked what she drew.

An eagle flying over the Rocky Mountains.

Needless to say, this nana is more than proud. I promised her I would buy a million copies of the book. I hope I can keep my promise. I can’t wait to see the picture she drew. This special girl always makes me smile…..

Have a good weekend.

Friday Book Whimsy: The Baker’s Daughter

Reba Adams is a journalist working for an El Paso magazine. She has been asked to write a feel-good Christmas piece featuring German immigrant Elsie Schmidt who runs a German bakery using the recipes she learned from her German parents. Thinking it will be a slam-dunk, Reba is surprised to find that she is entranced by the story of this immigrant who lived in Germany during World War II. She is so entranced, in fact, that she comes back again and again to the bakery where she is fed bodily and spiritually by the story of this strong woman.

Elsie’s story includes being engaged to a Nazi officer, while at the same time, rescuing a young Jewish boy who nearly brings disaster to Elsie and her family.

The Baker’s Daughter, by Sarah McCoy, is a wonderful account of what it was like to be a typical German family and business owner during the time of the Nazis. Being a baker’s daughter myself, I loved the stories of how the family offered the baked goods for the German people who often didn’t have enough to feed their families.

The main problem with the story, at least in this reader’s opinion, was the sideline story of Reba’s boyfriend who is a border agent in El Paso. I liked his character and his story at the beginning, as it seemed to show both sides of the issue. But it troubled me that the author tried to compare the immigrant issue to the Holocaust, and I found that distracting and offputting.

Still, the story was enjoyable and any book that ends with recipes captures my attention.

Here is a link to the book.