10.08.2010

The Sultry Season of Summer Fruit and Sweet Figgy Redemption


"Shape is a good part of the fig's delight." Jane Grigson

The pendulous figs hanging from the gnarled tree in our backyard had finally ripened to the point of splitting. I'd watched them for months, (an eternity through my young eyes), from tiny green buds expanding into bulbous blackberry-hued balloons, waiting as patiently as I could to harvest their dark, exotic essence. This process was painstakingly symbolic of how, by the end of summer, I too felt like I could burst open or boil over. The scaldingly hot, sticky summers of southern Louisiana would have started to feel merciless. My skin was a deep golden-orange hue and my hair a shock of dry flaxen straw.

If I wasn’t hiding submerged up to my eyeballs like an alligator in the cool, turquoise chlorine bath of the local swimming pool, I was shuffling around looking for trouble or what I called fun. Summers days were spent outside, starting immediately after breakfast, and our job as kids was to entertain ourselves and remain outside at all cost. In June we felt like we'd never get enough time to play but by the end of the summer we were sated, crispy and bored and starting to terrorize the neighborhood like a band of wild banshees.

Along with Louisiana heat came sudden, violent, summer downpours. One moment we'd be dripping sweat, feeling like our brains might explode in our skull like Jiffy Pop and fabricating fake injuries, illnesses and excuses to retreat inside where the grown-ups mingled in the cool, conditioned air. Then lightning would flash across the sky and the heavens would break open dumping barrels of water upon us. A moment later, the downpour would cease, the sun would part the clouds, and start to soak up the water like a huge, hungry sponge.

With downpours come flash floods, cars careening into the ditches of our corner lot and many confused hermaphroditic megadriles, more commonly known as earthworms. I often observed them squiggling on the sidewalk after a rain, catching their wormy breath, just barely having avoided drowning. Then I would watch as the brilliant sun baked them onto the sidewalk in curlicues like fried onion rings on a gray porous skillet.

That same cruel heat that fried earthworms and burned our bare feet as we hopped across the street from house-to-house also brought with it sugary redemption in the form of luscious, fruity carnage. Fuzzy dripping full peaches whose juices would run down our (oft’ dirt-streaked) decolletages as we bit them, blackberries we tried to maneuver from their thorny vined cages that stained our grubby fingers deep purple and the fruity crescendo of summer... bursting, splitting ripe figs.

In August we became warriors in a strategic battle against the birds, trying to determine would get the most fruit and we weren’t above using tree nets, aluminum pans and slingshots armed with pebbles to keep our prizes. We'd lie-in-wait with our ammunition, just around the corner for our feathered enemies to near.

Figs were the crowning glory of our summer harvest. They were my father’s favorite fruit and each year when they ripened, we'd harvest them gingerly from the tired, laden, branch-bent tree, treating them like precious silken purses. We’d wait until they easily slipped off the tree with only the slightest pull and slowly savor them one at a time, stretching out the pleasure. We'd gorge on them until we were almost ill, and the rest was reserved for pies, cobblers, tarts, jams, jellies and preserves. Fig season was fleeting but our tree was extremely prolific and as seasons were so perfectly designed, we’d get our fill before they’d completely disappear for another entire year.



Figgy Fantasia

"You never forget a beautiful thing that you have made,' [Chef Bugnard] said. 'Even after you eat it, it stays with you - always." — Julia Child (My Life in France)

As an adult, I discovered many new ways to eat figs but one in particular, an adult ice cream made an impression. It was a hot scalding day spent drifting around my parent's pool with a group of friends. My folks were on vacation and my job was to hold down the forte, attend all my classes and beat the merciless heat that was upon us.

I got out of the pool to sun myself and read the food section of the local paper. Marcelle Bienvenu, a famous Cajun food writer and, (to this day), one of my personal (s)heros, had published a Fig Grand Marnier Ice Cream recipe. I read it out loud to my friends and one of them mentioned his tree at home was laden with ripe, untouched figs.

In a flash we'd raided my parent's liquor cabinet, found an old crank ice cream maker in the garage, hit the store for milk, ice and rock salt and denuded Daniel's tree, all whist still damp in our swimsuits.

We peeled (still years later trying to grasp this concept), and marinated the figs in the heady orange liqueur and cooked the concoction on the stove. Poured the mixture into the container, added layers of ice and salt and took turns cranking. We’d hop up on the side of the pool one-at-a-time and turn the squeaky crank handle while the water from our suit bottoms was sucked into the hot porous cement underneath.

After what seemed like hours, (I now know alcohol makes ice cream take much longer to freeze!), the cranking became difficult and we raised the lid to discover a huge frozen glob of ice cream, the consistency of soft-serve!

I excitedly tracked wet footsteps on the brick floors inside to grab a handful of spoons and we dangled in the cool pool, propped up on our elbows and took turns scooping out bites from the frosted metal cylinder.

It was pure boozy, figgy, deliciousness that intoxicated our taste buds. We got high savoring the frozen creamy fruit of our labor and laid on our rafts to float in the cool water all blissed-out in sugary liqueured comas.

Lead Belly Ice Cream

"Fat gives things flavor." — Julia Child(....well, perhaps not always Julia :)

A decade later, I met Sarah, my new food-writing editor, at a classical music luncheon at the planetarium. She'd sounded direct and determined, a huge presence on the phone, and when the bespectacled, petite redhead standing all of five feet approached me with her too-large floppy sun hat and quizzical smile, I was briefly taken aback. She was not only smart but almost magical and a person I longed to impress.

We began sharing stories and somehow my figgy tale unearthed and we became determined to make more of Marcel's fig ice cream. But her recipe wasn't available so I haphazardly grabbed another I found online and we set off.

We drove to our farm and precariously negotiated ladders to pick the fruit. This recipe didn’t require we soak the figs as Marcel’s recipe and it involved lots of heavy cream.

We cooked the figs for what seemed an eternity while Sarah’s freezer hummed along in the background. It was a dark new-moon night and we brewed stout black coffee kept us awake. The mesmerizing chop, chop, chop of her ceiling fan was tempting us to lower our eyelids but her husband Charlie and daughter Hannah kept us awake by popping their heads in looking for a treat.

When the motor finally slowed to a low growl; we unplugged it and peered in. The color was more yellow than I remembered and the ice cream was much denser than the soft-serve I remembered. I dug out the first spoon-bending bite, (the consistency of Play-Doh), and still blindly hopeful, put it in my mouth.

Instantly my tongue became wrapped in what felt like a fuzzy cocoon. Rather than slurpy, figgy, boozy bliss, the ball of dense sweet emulsion melted in my mouth and its sickly taste, that of pure hollow fat, clung to my tongue. “Well?” asked Sarah in a very optimistically tone. I slowly turned toward her and announced, “I’m not quite sure how but we just spent hours creating what I can only call Lead Belly Ice Cream.”

I discouraged her from trying it, my reputation as a foodie and the figgy legend sorely on the line, but she was so curious and impossible to dissuade. I watched her face as she took a bite. She tried to be kind but there was no nice way around this elephant -- it was a disaster. I remember adding a spoonful to my coffee, thinking it might serve as creamer but all it did was ruin a perfectly good cup of coffee.

Too frugal to throw it away, we put it in our freezers where it sat for months. In attempting to recreate a perfect memory and impress my editor, I'd ultimately churned one of my top culinary disasters. Luckily she kept giving me assignments and didn't assume my whole culinary career was a sham but to this day I cannot fully erase that cloying, laden taste from my pallet. Nor can I erase the lore that was spawned that night.

Legends that make and break us.

Kitchen disasters grow in the south in legendary fashion. There's Potatoes Au Rotten, Horribly Salty Banana Ice Cream, Sunken Souffle, the multi-colored layer cake that set off all the fire alarms at four a.m., and Burnt Beet Night to name a few. And as much as my friends love to eat, they love to laugh. The worst stories become the best jokes and Sarah has been recounting the legend of Lead Belly Ice Cream ever since.

Recently, like a Hydra, this story raised its head on facebook and I decided to own it once and for all. Meanwhile searched for Marcelle’s original recipe and miraculously, found it!

Figs are here in Ventura County for a brief window of time. While writing this, I procured some and asked online if anyone had an ice cream maker. Within minutes Charlie (from that fated evening) chimed in, "You're not making fig ice cream, I hope."

Well I am, but the real one again, not its lead-belly brethren and here it is Sarah & Charlie, Marcelle's original recipe should you dare to join me. If I thought you'd fly in, I'd put on a pot of coffee right now!

Marcelle Bienvenu’s Fig & Grand Marnier Ice Cream
Makes about 1 1/2 quarts

1 quart of ripe figs, peeled and mashed
1/2 cup of Grand Marnier
6 large eggs, lightly beaten
4 cups of milk
1 cup of sugar
1 tablespoon of pure vanilla extract

Combine the figs and Grand Marnier in a bowl and set aside.

In a large, heavy, non-reactive saucepan, combine the eggs, milk, sugar and vanilla over medium heat and whisk to dissolve sugar. Bring to a gentle boil, stirring constantly, reduce heat to medium-low. Continue stirring until the mixture thickens enough to coat a wooden spoon.

Remove from heat and let cool for about 10 minutes. Cover and refrigerate until well chilled.

Add the fig mixture and stir to mix. Pour the mixture into an ice cream freezer and freeze according to the manufacturer's directions.



10.06.2010

Living Life With A Scrambled Alphabet -- The Hidden Faces of Dyslexia



Should you only write or speak if you can do it properly? This is an issue I have struggled with throughout my life and for someone who is a writer, it's a very serious question.

Recently this question reared its head in the very public realm of facebook. A writer friend of mine starting making posts, light rants if you will, about people who confused their, there and they're, your and you're and its and it's, and used apostrophes and possessives improperly. I publicly typed "if it's me, I'm sorry" and she assured me it wasn't me she was speaking about. What she didn't realize is it that it easily could have been.

Later my same writer friend made more such statements again and others joined in. The general consensus of those commenting was that a public persona shouldn't post things to represent their business, even facebook posts, unless they were properly written. The idea was that it made that business seem unprofessional and their messages wouldn't be taken seriously. I jumped into the post and questioned that statement, particularly in the facebook forum which, by its very nature is less formal. I also asked, "Is a message only valid if properly spelled or written?" "Should someone who can't write properly not post publicly?"

I later held a private conversation with my writer friend about it and once she learned I was friends with the person who'd created the post in question, she assumed I was being protective of my friend. Well, yes and no. You see, I suffer from my own confusions with the English language. So much so that I stopped writing publicly for several years and in high school I used to hold on to my papers way beyond their due date because I wanted to go over and over my work. I remember a teacher noticed and told my mother I was a perfectionist. She turned a light on for me that day, but there would be other switches to throw too.

The unspoken secret

Just last night my friend who had made the grammatically improper statements in question was chatting with her dear friend and he teased her about her poor spelling. I love how our friends can tell us the good, the bad, and otherwise and they still love us and we them. But my friend made a telling statement about how this man was right, she wasn't a great speller but what really hurt was when others told her what she wrote made her appear stupid and how she almost didn't start her business because it involved being very public vocally and that for her brought back memories of being teased as a child -- all because she's dyslexic.

Dyslexic Brilliance

What if everyone with dyslexia was afraid to let their light shine? Well? First imagine the world without the inventions of Thomas Edison, Alexander Graham Bell and Albert Einstein. That's just a start really -- George Washington suffered from dyslexia too. And what if Hans Christian Anderson hadn't written his tales or Leonardo de Vinci had been too afraid to give his light to the word? The list goes on and on.


The Language Wounds in My Life

Just this past week I was speaking with one of my best friends who is struggling to teach her dyslexic daughter. She said her daughter, Isabella, outright explains to people "I have dyslexia," whereas my friend tried to hide that most of her life. And there was a quiet, deep moment on the phone where my friend said, "I feel so guilty for having passed this down to her." I told my friend I believe we have the ability to heal more with each generation of our families and it appeared the stigma was part of what she and Isabella were working on.

I grew up with a dyslexic brother who was sent to special schools and made to trace letters on sandpaper over and over to try to learn the proper way to write things. He has since become a successful man with a great command of the English language and is thankful he got to attend special classes and learned to overcome his dyslexia. Not everyone can.

I wasn't diagnosed with dyslexia but I have suffered my own brain-bending confusions with grammar. For years I would write things and my deeply talented mother would help me unscramble them. She was my editor from birth and oddly enough, shortly after her death is when I started writing professionally. Editors would love my writing but tell me I had the order of sentences confused. I would ask them to show me how to do it better and by the time they were finished I would be confused and defeated because I couldn't understand the why or how of anything they'd done and I barely recognized my own work. Then as I started to get a small handle on what they were trying to teach me, I had a bizarre occurrence.

I got a piece accepted to a new paper and as it was going to print overnight, I drove to sit with the editor and make fast changes. This piece had been edited by my professor several times. It had been worked over like Michael Jackson's face -- there was still the essence of what once was but it was so rearranged I hardly recognized it. But I was sure it was better than what I'd written because my professor had finally signed off on it. "At least it wasn't the embarrassment I'd started with, I thought to myself.

"The new editor turned to me puzzled and said, "I think this sentence should be the beginning of this article," and my eyebrows raised. She had chosen the sentence out of the middle that was my lead when I first wrote the article. When I told her that she said,"You have a natural ability and voice, Hone that, stop listening to others." We then rearranged the piece yet again and I left dazed, half elated yet further confused.

What happened to me that day caused me to stop writing for years. I'd had enough. I felt I would never get it right and I didn't want to be humiliated by having poorly written things going to print where they'd live forever, waiting to embarrass me further. When I healed enough from those events to write again, I decided to just write the best I could, inherently and, interestingly enough, my sister helped edit me. But she only tweaked an adjective or punctuation mark every now and again, she didn't rearrange the entire puzzle.

Since I allowed that process to unfold, I've found other stories and genres coming through me and its freed a more authentic voice. I've even won honorable mentions from large organizations and had the Head of the Food Writer's Conference call to tell me not to give up that we need my voice. I might never be the writer my mother was or my professor wanted me to be but I can be the writer I am in my soul as I listen to my voice.

Shining the light where there was darkness

So yes to my author friend, (who by the way is a person I not only admire but even adore), I did react in part to the facebook discussion because it was my friend (at that time), who was being discussed, but it was as much about my own wound. I don't want myself or others to stop saying things that are valuable to the world just because they don't always say them right.

Last night as I sat across from my friend at a party and heard what she said, never having known she was dyslexic, a light went off and I knew this story should be told. There are many faces to this letter-warping disability and many unique voices. I hope all who suffer with language barriers get the help they need but I equally desire those who do aren't silenced or shamed into not having voices because they don't always say things in a grammatically correct fashion. Let us shine a light on some of the dark confusions others live in.

Meanwhile, I shared what I'd discovered with my writer friend and she, told me a couple of stories about dyslexic writers she knows of and sent me this link that I adore by Sangay Glass, titled, "For Dyslexics and The Spell Check Dependent", as well as information on a book that is a visual spelling guide for homonyms.

Do you have your own story with dyslexia to share? struggles and triumphs and humors and horrors welcome! If you have tools others don't know about, or your own stories, please let us know but meanwhile, consider why others might be making mistakes before jumping to conclusions and give them a bit of grace and latitude. I personally would rather hear imperfect stories told in the rawest way that move me, than a perfectly crafted story that plays it safe. And, I think, there is ultimately room for both!