Remembering Thanksgiving

Remembering Thanksgiving

Aging & Attitude

 Granny “B”, really Great Granny “B”, became Granny “B” after my children were born.  My son and daughter were fortunate to have many grandparents, two grandmothers, Grandma and Nana and two great grandmothers, Grandma and Nani.  Are you confused? So were they and started calling my grandmother, Granny “B”.  But, Gertrude Pennell Boylhart will always be Grandma to me.

I struggle to remember the details of her Thanksgiving dinners but not the feelings accompanying “Over the River and Through the Woods” a tune our family sang driving from Long Island to the Bronx, Thanksgiving Day. 

We would pull up in front of her apartment building on Bainbridge Ave and run up the steps while our parents hunted for a parking space.  Turkey smells engulfed us as soon as we were near the door. 

My grandmother shared a one-bedroom apartment with our Uncle, giving him the bedroom.  For twenty-five years, she slept on a Castro Convertible couch in the living room. When I asked why, she said, “Petty I want to be able to afford the apartment when he moves out.” He never did. 

Inside the apartment, a dining table, formally set for twenty, a cornucopia of oranges, pears, apples grapes, and nuts in the center, occupied the middle of a twelve by twelve living room. Folding chairs, some borrowed some rented were stacked in the bedroom.  

I struggle to recall the guest list, because cousins visited after dinner. The head count, for sure, included; Pop-pop, Aunt Carol, Uncle Tom and Aunt Abbie, Helen and Harry and their kids, seven of us, it added up. There was a children’s table.  My sister and I peeked at the place cards praying we might sit with the grown-ups. 

When we had guest on Long Island, an ironing board was suspended between two chairs for extra seating. That would not be the case at Grandma’s. The ironing board served as a sideboard for pies: apple, pumpkin, and mincemeat (one-half of the top covered with hard sauce) in the kitchen.  God, I loved mincemeat pie.

The kitchen was five feet by eight feet, a miniscule space to prepare a feast.  There was a four-burner stove and a Hoosier in the corner. I know Grandma cooked two turkeys, one the day before.  How everything was kept warm is a mystery, although Grandma was a master of the double boiler and yeast biscuits, some with raisins some without, double wrapped in foil, set on the stovetop.  Extra space to keep food cold was the fire escape, of course. 

Creamed onions were for Uncle Harry, turnips for my mother and oyster dressing for Uncle Tom. The stream of side dishes was endless. 

After dinner, the women washed the dishes while the men folded up the table and scattered chairs around the room making space to dance.  Grandma sat talking and listened to forty-fives.

In the bedroom several toddlers slept among numerous coats on a bed, the floor provided a playground for jacks and coloring. We darkened the outline first then crayoned lightly inside the lines.  

Eventually the children joined the adults’ smoke filled living room for turkey sandwiches layered with Hellman’s real mayonnaise and cranberry sauce on Arnold’s white bread.  It was heaven. 

When it was time to leave Grandma put “How Much Is That Doggy in the Window?” on the record player. Excitedly, we got our coats  anticipating Grandma’s kiss accompanied by a shiny quarter pressed into our hand.

                                                 Thank you Grandma.

                                                                              ….Just Saying                                                                                                                                                      

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Got to Love Scotty McCreery

Got to Love Scotty

Age & Attitude

   Scotty McCreery, the deep throat apple pie American Idol winner, who stole my heart, released his debut album “Clear as Day” a week or so ago. Those eager blue eyes and barely old enough to shave face displayed on a super store kiosk spoke to my motherly instincts. I am not a Country Music kind of gal but impulse purchases could help him go gold. Mr. Wonderful* agreed and we made the buy smiling.

We were not disappointed. The album consists of twelve love songs. Chris Talbott writes in “Moving On”, an Associated Press article, “Each of the 12 songs comes from a youthful perspective or voice, and McCreery says they just naturally fell into categories of love – romantic love, family love, and love for the place you come from.”

That explains what happened to me listening to “I Love You This Big.”

My son’s first word was car, my daughter’s boat. Many days, after teaching at PS 72 in the Bronx, I would put them in the car and drive to look at the boats in the bay at College Point. I would park our orange 1973 Datsun (with a hole in the floorboard) and take their hands to walk the shoreline saying, “See the ocean, that’s how much I love you.” Their young minds could not grasp the concept of endless love, but it made me feel better.

Scotty’s vocals transform the words, ” This Big, I love you deeper than the ocean, I love you all the time. I’ll spend the rest of my life explaining what words cannot describe. I love you this big.” His music speaks to your heart.

It is probably better to listen to the album.

Scotty McCrerry, I love you now but I needed you then.                   

                                                                                                                  ….Just Saying.

*Mr. Wonderful is my husband of forty years.