Mom and Dad with her parents, Gramma and Grampa Berg and a few of her brothers.
Daddy's wearing the tie. And on his plate? Deliciousness...
Our youngest daughter and her family were staying with us for a while.
It almost made up for the long days and weeks when they were living in another part of the world.
Almost.
One night, during dinner, Tiny Girl (hereinafter known as TG) was having her first taste of life as a grown-up. She had spurned her high chair and was sitting like a big girl on a booster seat.
The best of times.
She also discovered, during this exciting experience, how much better everything tastes when it is eaten from someone else’s plate.
Happily, TG let her own (exactly the same) food cool while she gobbled whatever her mother was eating.
And it reminded me of something . . .
My Mom made wonderful breakfasts.
Most of the time, they included eggs. In some incarnation.
One of my Dad’s favourites was eggs fried.
Mom would place two perfect little white-jacketed yellow orbs on his plate and he would happily proceed to take fork and knife and slice through them, cutting them neatly into uniform bits.
Then he would scrape them carefully back together, sprinkle the resulting mixture with salt and pepper, and voila!
Breakfast.
I had watched this same process since I could remember.
His food always looked soooo good.
“Dad? Can I have a bite?”
He looked at me. “May I have a bite?” Dad was always correcting my grammar.
“May I have a bite?”
Mmmm. It was soooo good.
“Can I have another?”
“May I . . .?”
“May I have another?”
Mmmm. Even better.
Then Mom would set my plate in front of me.
Carefully, I would copy Dad’s technique to the best of my ability.
Slice. Slice. Slice. Slice.
Gather.
Sprinkle.
Eat.
Yum.
Hmmm.
Wait. I’m sure it tasted better off his plate.
“Dad? Can I have another bite?”
He looked at me. “May I have another bite?”
“May I have another bite?”
He gave it to me.
Mmmm. I was right.
It did taste better.
I had made a momentous discovery.
Everything was better off Dad’s plate.
Later, I discovered that this was also true with Mom’s plate.
Or my Husby’s.
I did draw the line there.
Total strangers do regard you oddly when you ask.
How adorable! I bet your mom made great eggs. And your father knew how to season well. Can't say I blame you!
ReplyDeleteI am told (and see no reason to doubt it) that as a young child I used to sit in my father's lap while he ate - and help myself to what I considered the best bits.
ReplyDeleteOh, the grass is always greener and the eggs are always better...
ReplyDeleteI remember my batching days. I was pretty good at eggs, bacon, chili, and Redneck Stir Fry but Mom reigned supreme...
ReplyDeleteThat's so cute! It's fun to taste stuff from other people's plates although we can't really do that anymore for now.
ReplyDelete