Rite Of Spring Passage
Before you can enjoy the most beautiful spring and summer in the USA in Chicago, you must endure a rotten transition out of the clutches of Winter's gripping hand.
Many a woman has lost her head during the Ides of March in my neck of the woods. The days are dark and grey. The snow is dark and grey. Our thoughts turn to pedicures and haircuts and beautiful umbrellas. Yes we value beautiful umbrellas.
In order to leap into the next season around here, you need some tough stuff. And you need some Irish Soda Bread.
My recipe book is exactly as I like it. Go ahead, ask me for a recipe and I know EXACTLY where it is in this pile of paper. I would be lost if I "organized" it. It is organized already.
Here we have my Nana's Irish Soda Bread......ready to be devoured by the men in my house. They act like it is candy. Fireman feels the need to put a good 1/2 inch of butter on each slice, but to each his own. I told Zach on Saturday, "Son, it's time you learn to make Irish Soda Bread" and he nodded in agreement.
Some things must be passed down in a family.
My children already know how to knit....
but now they must master the Irish Soda bread, so that one day in a Nearly Spring years and years into the future, they can
survive the last week of Chicago winter...
How do you survive the end of winter??/
How do you survive the end of winter??/
Comments
Hugs to you Kathy,
Meredith
I have one of my mother's cookbooks with recipes written in her hand on any blank space she could find. The book is a treasure.
I love green and am Irish, so I get through the first half of March by focusing on St. Paddy's Day. Usually in my parts, that gets us close enough to spring...
I love the idea of passing down family recipes with pictures and stories to accompany.
Oh, and BYW, I enjoyed seeing your recipe book...mine has a similar look! LOL.
what a great idea.. WHy didnt I ever think of that/
It sure would make winter a lot more tolerable.
And of course Irish Soda Bread, and corned beef and cabbage and soup and spaghetti along with stitching something colorful and keeping a fire in the fireplace burning...and
by the way, I think you asked if I had a pattern for the lovely lavender fingerless gloves I was given from Wendy in Australia. I do not, but perhaps you could ask her for it http://ruffsadventures.blogspot.com/
Blessings to you and yours,
xx from Gracie
Funny, I too have a recipe "book" that is a pile of papers. All held together with a binder clip.