It only LOOKS delicious . . . |
I love raisins.
Especially in trail mix.
Or coated in chocolate.
I should probably point out, here, that coating in chocolate is not really an accurate test of raisin love.
If you coated a hubcap in chocolate, I'd eat it.
Moving on . . .
I did not always love raisins. (Even now, I prefer my cinnamon buns and other baked treats to be raisin-less.)
It wasn't until after I was married that I learned to appreciate them.
There is a reason for that . . .
My brother, George, is two years older than I. Throughout our growing-up years, his prime responsibility was the teasing of his younger sister.
He practised his craft at every opportunity.
Mercilessly.
And became very good at it.
One day, our mom made cookies. Something she did a lot.
On this particular occasion, she had produced mounds of raisin cookies.
They were spread out temptingly across the table.
The aroma drew my brother and I from the depths of the house.
“Mmmm. Raisin cookies,” George said. He turned to me. “I knew that Mom was going to make raisin cookies today.”
“You did?” I asked innocently.
“Yep. I did,” he said.
“Did Mom tell you?”
“Nope.”
“You can tell by the smell?”
“Partially. But that's not the real reason.”
“Well, I give up. How did you know?”
He leaned towards me, a big grin on his face. “I knew Mom was going to bake raisin cookies because I saw her picking the raisins off the fly-paper at the back door.”
And from that moment on, in fact for the next twenty years, George had all of the raisin goodies that emerged from Mom's kitchen to himself.
Smart cookie.
P.S. He also tried to convince me that my rice was moving.
But that is another story . . .
He only LOOKS cute |
Well, raisins. Should I tell you about...no. I won't. I'll just say it's something that happened one summer. And I wouldn't touch raisin bran for years after.
ReplyDeleteBrothers....
ReplyDeleteI am sure that he was very pleased to get raisin included treats all to himself. Which reinforced the teasing gene - though my brothers didn't need ANY enhancements of that trait.
Not being a huge fan of raisins, i think i'd be willing to leave the raisin treats alone after that, also. If he tried telling me that about anything with chocolate chips in it, i think i'd be willing to ignore him.
ReplyDeleteTwenty years of no raisin cookies? That's deprivation for sure.
ReplyDeleteBad, big brother ;) Twenty years, serious scaring off that one.
ReplyDeleteLike Alan I considered telling my yuck-raisin tale and decided against it ... like him, it happened one summer in a summerhouse with only candles for light. But I never stopped eating raisins after that incident. The only thing I ever stopped eating, was Viennese nougat.
Brothers and teasing! The tales my brothers spun me too and got away with it for years, like yours did!
ReplyDelete