I’ve said it before. I’ll say it again: Mom was a terrific
cook.
But that is only incidental to this story . . .
Sunday dinner in the Stringam household usually consisted of
some form of baked or roasted, uber tender beef and/or turkey and/or chicken
and/or ham.
Creamy mashed potatoes.
Salad (green and/or jellied), cooked vegetables.
And thick, delicious gravy.
Okay, yes, there were variables on the theme.
But most of the time, this is what we looked forward to.
There were numerous ways of eating said delicious-ness.
Some of us had little, individual countries of food. Separated
by the no-man’s land of bare plate. (I know that is how Husby insisted his food
be served when he was very young. Till his father pointed out that all the food
ends up in the same place anyway. Hmmm . . .)
Some didn’t care how the food was put on the plate.
As long as it was there.
And in large quantities.
I had my method, which rather morphed as time went by.
First of all, it was mashed potatoes in a mountain, hollowed
out at the top to receive a lake of gravy.
And yes, it was so I could get—and maintain—more of the
rich, brown yummy-ness.
Other things, veggies, meat, were crowded closely and if
they got gravy on them, well and good.
Emphasis on good.
Except for the salad (green or otherwise), which was kept
away from the others and eaten quickly (and first) to avoid any chance of gravy
splash-age.
Say what you will. The food was amazing.
And gone.
As years passed, I discovered a new and better way of
gormandizing.
Layers.
Potatoes topped by veggies topped by chunks of meat topped
by a fountain of gravy.
Eaten all together.
Mmmm . . .
Married, with small kids, I went back to things flotched on
the plate and eaten quickly (and usually cold) as I tried to get food into my
littles.
I have found that this method has remained even though my
littles are far from little.
Husby always has and still does calmly arrange his food. Season and butter to taste. Enjoy every mouthful. And finish long after me.
Now, my point in telling you this is:
During our last family supper, we had salads, roast beef, vegetables
and gravy.
Most of my kids simply took.
And ate.
#3 son put down a foundation of mashed potatoes. Covered it well
with vegetables and chunks of meat.
And smothered the whole mountain in gravy.
Yep. He’s mine.
You had me at creamy mashed potatoes. And yes, yours.
ReplyDeleteRight! mmmm . . .
DeleteThis post of yours sure made me hungry! That food sounds delicious!
ReplyDeleteI'd like to invite you to follow my blog if you'd like.
Followed, Lon! Happy to meet you!
DeletePotatoes are only there to hold the gravy.
ReplyDeleteI entirely agree!
DeleteNow I'm hungry! Your food posts really need to come with a warning! And your label was right on the money . . . I was NOT expecting the post from the title :)
ReplyDeleteHeehee! Hungry and surprised. My work here is done!
DeleteWhen I was young, I went through a phase of needing the exact amount of everything on my plate. If there were so many peas, there had to be the same amount of carrots. And, there was a ritual surrounding gravy. I'm sure I wouldn't have lasted long at your house.
ReplyDeleteYou and my Husby. Calm and deliberate in the midst of the feeding frenzy!
DeleteAh, mashed potatoes! My favorite thing. This made me hungry... and tempted to give up on limiting my carbs. Miss the potatoes so. :-D
ReplyDeleteSo do I! After getting them for at least one meal a day, I definitely miss them!
DeleteDefinitely yours. As if there was any doubt.
ReplyDeleteI don't like gravy on my mash though. I savour the mash for itself.
Oooh! When it's really creamy . And buttery. Now I'm hungry . . .!
DeleteI've been known to make an island with my mashed potatoes, stick in a couple of broccoli trees and surround the whole thing with a beef casserole ocean. Other times I do like you and son #3, but not always. Sometimes I like my foods in separate piles.
ReplyDeleteA little variety is a very good thing!
Delete