Monday, December 12, 2011

Life's A Feast, And Sometimes You Have To Eat Big!

I don't know why it is that setting your teeth into a well-browned hunk of hog makes you feel good, but it works for me. For Christmas Day I want meat, and I don't mean a measly, puny, stunted portion of veal, either. I want big, maddeningly fragrant mounds of steer, hog or bird, or maybe all three, drenched with gravy.

Holiday meats should be baked until all you have to do is gently nudge some critical joint, and the whole thing smoothly falls apart into neat little sheaves. This meat is not burned, it is charmed, and you can eat right through the coral bones.

I wonder what spiritual eunuch first banned "cooking odors" from the home? I want to smell that heavy hunters-and-gatherers food baking. Morning of the banquet day you put the standing rib roast or the big boss bird into the oven. If it's a turkey, consider dipping a length of cheesecloth into a pound of melted butter and snugly wrapping up that tom. Now he's your big gilded turkey baby. In the next hours, ragingly delicious smells expand in golden waves from the kitchen.

Then the best time of all comes. You sit down to eat the food you love the best, with those you love the best. A glass or two of crystal white wine, or potent red goes well with this--wines that are the soul of grape, that seem to kiss you back when you smack them. At the end, there are berry pies nestled in buttery crusts. In our family, there's also a hundred-year tradition of serving candied nuts in the same gorgeous, gold-and-green china bowl. I'm sure you know that there are saints' bones that are handled with less reverance than we lavish on that bowl.

Then everyone alternates sipping his or her dark, fine coffee and nibbling the brown-sugar-crusted nuts of the field. We look around the table at three generations of these faces that we love, and every one of us (including the agnostics) thinks, "Thank you, God!"

15 comments:

  1. Thanks Margie - Love this - Joy

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  2. Eloquent homage to the culinary comforts of the season! Beautiful....

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  3. Joy Walker--I remember your and your mom's Christmas baking traditions so fondly. I never saw so many beautiful cookies in my life!

    Ariel--Thank you. I think my favorite word in the language might be "feast"!

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  4. I am sitting here drooling right now! It doesn't help that I'm one of the strictest medical diets known to man right now either. I'm so hungry now! I want gravy and I want it on everything!

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  5. Patrick, it's good that you're taking care of your health. I hope it improves to the point where you can enjoy the occasional gravy, roast pork and pie dinner again!

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  6. I wouldn't thank God, but the rest of this is wonderful, both the writing and the meal described.

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  7. Is it wrong that I like your meat description? haha

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  8. Good Lord, that's quite a mouth watering description of food! (even for somebody that only eats because it's necessary) Can't help wondering if you have type O blood, since you mentioned hunters and gatherers. LOL!

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  9. Anonymous--not everybody would thank God, but I think almost everybody subconsciously thanks the four-legged beasts and gardens which supply the feast. Thank you world!

    Copyboy--please feel free to like the meat description as much as you want! :^)

    Ms. A--Hey, yes, I do have Type O blood! Is that the primitive caveperson kind? Because I sure do love meats and seeds and berries. Yum!

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  10. The original hunters and gatherers and the blood type best suited for meat!

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  11. Your family feasts sound simply sumptious, heaven on plates! I always love those with a huge appetite, I find it usually carries through into most other aspect of their life - a lust for laughter, greedy inquisitivness, and a general recklessness that makes them such a joy (and worry) for most of us common mortals to be around.

    I imagine it must be a pure delight sharing a table with you! As for this ceremonial nut-bowl, what a wonderful tradition - such a simple yet satisfyingly unique, seasonal rite to pass on down through the generations, little wonder it is revered.

    This post speaks to my heart, you see I host the family meal for my sister, her family and mine - she and hers being comitted vegans, and me and mine, enthusiastic carnivores..! Yes, we have not only two separate menus, but tables as well! I do insist serving it on Christmas Eve, though. Much less fuss all round (so I can enjoy my birthday in peace)!

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  12. . . .and most poor suckers are starvin'

    or something like that.

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  13. Shrinky--your Comments are always luscious and sumptuous, and I'll bet your holiday meals are as well! Family banquets are great fun, aren't they? I like how your sister's vegan lot and your carnivore lot sit down happily and together (well, I'll bet your tables are close) and have a Peaceable Kingdom Christmas Eve dinner. Lovely.

    Professor Chaos--the quote is from "Auntie Mame," right? She was a wise old broad all right!

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  14. Very good article. Congratulations.

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