food is love

jodi sh doff : onlythejodi : food is love : pyrex

I talk all the time about how I don’t remember events, but I do remember meals. The good, the bad and the ugly, but most of the time the food I remember is associated with a person who has touched me. Food is Love. God is Love too, but food is a lot easier to whip up and give to someone than God.

My grandmother made the Worlds Best Pork Chops. My happiest childhood memories were in her kitchen. She had appetizers of celery and carrot sticks, shoved into a Welch’s Jelly glass half full of water to keep them “fresh”. There was always blackberry Jell-O in a blue pyrex refrigerator dish. I have that dish now. Unfortunately she took the World’s Best Pork Chop recipe to the grave, but I do know how to make her hamburgers. They were, unequivocally and without any room for argument,  the worst hamburgers I have ever had in my life.

And every once in a while, I make them exactly the way she did, in the exact same frying pan she used.  And it’s like she’s still here and all is right with the world.

When I was five, I postponed running away from home to stay for my mother’s stuffed cabbage. Everything was ready. Every toy, every stitch of clothing I’d collected in my five years was piled on the bed, ready to go wherever it was I was going. Right up until the smell of stuffed cabbage wafted into my room. Running away could wait till morning. She was no fool, my mother.

Christmas morning smelled like blintzes. I get the irony, but that’s the way we rolled, man. Blintz skins were made one at a time in a small pan, which I own today. They were laid out to cool on with clean dishtowels that covered the kitchen table, before being filled, rolled and subsequently fried for breakfast and served with sour cream. My father & I stole the warm dough as it cooled when she wasn’t looking. Like I said, she was no fool. She made just enough fuss to let us think we got away with something. She’d also made extra, knowing half the joy of blintzes was in stealing the still warm skins.

And today, every time I go home there is fresh chocolate pudding in the refrigerator. There always has been.  The first thing I do, when I get to her house is check the refrigerator, because food is love and even if I’ve forgotten, it’s always there. If I’m lucky, they’re still cooling on the counter, the pot has yet to be washed and I get pot lickings. Another epicurean delight I shared with my dad. The pudding pot and spoon.

A friend from Israeli stayed with me recently and made me an Israeli breakfast of eggs and a particular salad. It was amazing. She’s gone home, I miss her, and so, I make the eggs the same way and it’s like she never left.

In a Jewish home, and I’ve seen it in my Italian family’s homes too, you have to take something to eat. Something. Anything. Otherwise, we’ll lose our minds trying to figure out just what we can offer you that you will like. It is beyond comprehension that you don’t want something.

Food tugs on the heart strings, or it does on mine. I have collected all the pans, pots and bowls those loving meals were made with. I can turn back time simply by chopping, mixing, baking what it was you made for me with love that day, those days.

Food is love. If you refuse my food, you refuse my love.

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memento

jodi sh. doff : onlythejodi : memento : journal

Forgive me, Father, for I have sinned.

I yelled at my mother once. I stole Post-its from the office. I spit gum out on the sidewalk. And oh yeah, I’m a stalker.

I’ve tried to stop, but I’m all about the search and destroy. Not so much on the destroy, but very big on the search. You can run, but you can’t hide. That’s my middle name.

Partly, it’s because I have trouble letting go. Mostly, it’s because I don’t remember things, and so I need to hang on to everything and everyone, forever, so they can tell me what it is that I don’t remember, once I forget. And I don’t remember anything.

Well, that’s not entirely true. I remember some things, but there are great big gaps. Not just a night here and there, but months. Years.

I keep records. Journals. Phone bills. Medical reports. Photographs. Class pictures. Date books. I write down appointments, even after they’ve happened.

Don’t bother asking me what I did over the weekend. I’ll stand there with a blank look on my face, too embarrassed to get out my Filofax to find out. I may get it – the memory of two days ago – eventually, but it’s a struggle of reconstruction.

I have boxes of my diaries, date books, and phone books going back to fourth grade. Evidence of a life I don’t remember. I keep a three-ring binder with a page or more for each year, starting with the year I was born.

Each January, I pull out the binder and my date book, and I re-create the past year. I list whom I was sleeping with, whom I was dating (not always the same), and any event I think I should remember (the circus, a vacation, a car accident, an illness, or a death). If it’s not written down, it’s gone. Poof!

Sometimes, all I remember is the act of writing it down. There’s also an Excel spreadsheet with hyperlinks, photos and an added column for where I was drinking that year (this column is particularly full, and the fact that it needs to be included at all may have something to do with why I remember so little).

Other people remember my life. An old college classmate recently recounted the time I took her to Plato’s Retreat for her 19th birthday. I don’t doubt it, but I also don’t remember it. Not even a little bit. I shrugged and smiled, too embarrassed to ask – what happened? Did we have fun? What was I wearing? Did I run into anyone I knew there? Was I drunk? (Of course I was drunk. I was always drunk.)

Sometimes, I will ask. My current friends understand my Memento syndrome and know that it’s nothing personal. Just because I don’t remember doing something with you, being at your house or having you in mine – it’s no reflection on how much I care about you.

I love you, I really do, I just don’t remember you.

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magnetic personality

I’m a wacky old lady magnet, as in, I attract wacky old ladies.

This is Claire. I finally stopped to take her picture. I just love how EVERYTHING is red. Right down the shopping cart, the reusable shopping bags and get this, the red Chuck Taylor hi-tops. We met in front of the post office. She Xeroxes all the letters she sends so she’ll remember what she said when they write back. Claire was an actress, she created drama workshops & therapy for seniors trademarking the name Geriadrama.  We chatted, hugged it out and left with me promising to Google Geriadrama for her. She’s a little wary of computers.

I met Blanche while sitting outside an East Village coffee joint. She was me, in a Bizarro world, a lovely little Jewish woman who’d just moved to the East Village after spending a life in Jackson Heights, married to one man forever. I was a crazy Jewish broad who’d spent my life in the East Village with no husband to speak of who’d moved to Jackson Heights. She couldn’t understand how I could be single. I couldn’t understand how she could wake up to the same person day after day.

And. of course, there is my very favorite crazy old broad. My Big Edie. “Can I just comb the back of your hair?” she asks almost every time we see each other, even though I always say No. Big Edie, who leaned over and whispered in my ear “Some people shouldn’t wear skirts,” pointing her head in the direction of the chunky girl who’d just passed.

I can’t get dressed in the morning without hearing that voice, can’t walk down the street without silently evaluating every single woman’s outfit, hair, body.  But, this is the same woman who was introduced by her aunt as “My niece, who used to be beautiful.” Ouch! So I let it slide and have a some compassion because those voices in her head are turned up to level 11 and I’ve got mine down to 3 or 4 most days.  Because she has no idea that she has always been beautiful. Outside as well as inside. She is also wildly silly and kind. Big Edie calls to remind me I have access to her checking account “just in case.” She did that even when I was working. She’s the crazy old broad who offers to drive from Long Island to Queens and back for a week while I’m away so I won’t have to pay someone to feed & water my cats.  Even though she totally stresses around finding parking. And getting lost. Totally stresses. So I go to her house for our visits where my first question is almost always “What’s wrong with the computer?” followed closely by “Did you make chocolate pudding?” Invariably within the week or so since the last visit something has disappeared, moved to the left, shrunk, grown, frozen or ceased to function. Maybe Claire has good reason to be wary of computers. Big Edie on the other hand, staunchly refuses to be stopped merely because she is intimidated, by computers, parking, directions or instructions.

I’m a magnet for crazy old broads. Thank God.  I’m well on my way there myself…it’s nice to know I’ll have company.

Editor’s note: The following day on the phone, Claire & I accidentally discovered she’s the mother of a friend of mine. Moral of the story? Everyone is a clean slate when you don’t have any emotional history with them and Everyone is Someone to Someone else.

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