Tag Archives: panforte

College Days

Yes, my husband brought Mary Lou home from college for a visit. That was his BMW motorcycle. Or the Honda Civic, I don’t think she had a name. He was ready after the weekend to go back to Aggie-land and looked into Mom’s frig for things to take along.

He hit the mother lode. A two-liter bottle of Dr. Pepper stashed away in the back of a second frig. They live in a dry county in TX. Back in the day, his mother baked all the wedding cakes for the community. She has an album of all the cakes she’s crafted. My husband got about a mile down the road, and took a swig of his newfound Dr. Pepper. Straight vanilla extract preserved in brandy. Ech! Serves him right for stealing! I hope he at least snagged a sandwich!

As we plan for my 10th Thanksgiving with 60 of his family members, I think of the cooking marathons his mother and I have. We can go for days. There are usually at least nine of us at the ranch, let’s say 9-14 and they need to be fed more that just Thanksgiving supper at Nanny’s.

People like us who fly in aren’t supposed to bring anything, but we used to drive in and when family gets used to something, they want it every year.

At first I was frightened of all the gals and “the line” and all the desserts (I don’t bake). I decided after the first year, pre-marriage, brought in for the five-day job interview, that I’d stick to the kitchen table.

After dishes are done, many of the women hang out at a large table in the kitchen while the guys watch The Game (Aggies vs. UT of course and they’re all Aggies). There’s always a crudite platter and chips. I added spicy almonds and cashews, boursin (homemade with his mothers’ herbs) and then spinach balls.

One year I added mincemeat tarts to the dessert table, thinking they’d not go over well because they’re so Brit.  They did so are back every year. Last year I added a vegetarian dish to “the line,” a brussels sprout and cauliflower gratin that was a hit. This year if there is time I’d like to add a new corn pudding. So that’s six dishes from an out-of-towner.

What does my husband do while we cook? He hangs out with father and brother and splits wood or mends fences. On Thanksgiving day? A couple of years ago he took up balloon twisting and there are always Nanny’s new “great-grands” to consider so he’s always on call for that. Otherwise, he’s not that into the game and usually hangs out with moms and kids and Uncle Steve.

Thanksgiving is a male/female thing. The men do nothing. The women prepare, serve, clean up, hang out, re-heat, serve and clean up again.

We’re thinking of taking the train in this year. Last year’s drive and dog-cation was a disaster. We were so glad to say hello, dump the dog with mom and dad and escape for a slice of pizza without her! Do not try to have your dog in a pet-friendly hotel downtown in a big city. There’s no-where to walk her, you have to sign to say she will never be left in the hotel room alone, no restaurant will have her even on the patio, and it’s too hot to have her in the car. Solution? Send husband next door for takeout and eat in the room. Or stay outside of town in a two-star and forget Graceland.

Drive all day and eat in the room with the dog equals dog-cation. Not for me. This year she stays with someone or someone stays here with her. She loves this lady and will be fine without us for a few days. Downside is that Amtrak has no wi-fi so my husband will have to work off-line or use his cell phone tower to tower. Also even though we’ll have our own space to sit and view and take photos (hi Stevie, we’re on the train and this is where Abe Lincoln was born) and sleep, the bathroom is down the hall unless a larger room opens up (we’re on the list). It’s only overnight and we can shower when we get to the ranch.

I’m going retro tonight with a cauliflower mold with Mornay sauce, some Polska Kielbasa hot off the grill with grainy mustard, and Rosti, a Swiss potato cake. Ah, childhood memories. My father grew up eating and of course speaking German even though he was born in the USA.

Kugelhopf. I believe my mother made it as a quick bread. I asked her for the recipe for 40 years. No. There is none. Can I watch you make it? Maybe. It never happened and she’s gone five years now and I’ve lost that, along with our family’s favorite, Viennese Chocolate Pecan Torte that each of us got for our birthday.

I’ll work on the kugelhopf first. For years I haven’t had luck re-creating it online and I don’t bake but love it over the holidays. I’m also thinking of making my sisters’ Hungarian Coffee Cake (a Christmas breakfast staple) and my version of chocolate-hazelnut panforte for here and gifts. Carpe diem, Dee

ps I’m also thinking of a cranberry-orange trifle.

News from the Farm

Brother-in-law and nephew arrived yesterday, elder to help with the farm during their father’s recovery from recent back surgery. There’s all kinds of drama on the farm, with cows and calves and buzzards and going to the sale barn to replace the baby calf that was stillborn yesterday so mama cow can get back in the swim of things. From what I understand buzzards are protected even when attacking livestock?

It’s back to the hospital tomorrow to remove surgical hardware. Tomorrow our dog goes away for the rest of the week to the loving care of a local family, especially their girl, age eight. Zoe needs a bath early morning and I’ll pack her stuff and deliver her sometime in the afternoon, depending upon the weather. Blizzards are in the forecast.

Husband’s mom wants to make a special Italian fruitcake I told her about that I made years ago with chocolate and hazelnuts, called panforte, later in the week (after Turkey Day) so we sent off a nearly 7# package with spiced nuts for Thanksgiving dinner at Nanny’s, lots of dried fruits and nuts and chocolate and a bunch of really nice socks for Jim’s brother. They’re new, just shrunk a bit in the wash.

With our nephew, other family members are already beginning to congregate and all the cousins seem to get along well. It’ll help that Uncle Jimmy is coming with a couple hundred balloons. So far in practice he’s made a bumblebee, pirate sword, princess sceptre and a tree frog hat with a five foot tongue. Let’s hope TSA allows his busker bag on the plane. Today they nearly strip-searched a four year-old boy here, frightened him and the passenger in the security line who videotaped their groping of this young child.

As for the grassroots efforts to have an “opt out” day at airports nationwide on Wednesday, why not have video or stills from passengers awaiting naked scanning or groping and put them all on the news. “Happy Thanksgiving! This is what happened to your grandchild yesterday at the airport.” Next thing you know we won’t be allowed to take cell phones on planes even on “airplane mode.” Or cameras. Or anything TSA finds offensive, not that it in any way enhances our safety.

Let’s have senators and members of congress stand in these lines and go through this humiliation and see if things don’t change for the better for the innocent Americans they are making into criminals every day. If that doesn’t do it, give them a regular pension and make them have the same health insurance they’re forcing us to get. The “haves” won’t leave office because they already are set financially. The have-nots may have a chance at election because they’re not there to be above their constituents but actually represent us.

Now you have to keep this all on the QT. I gave my father-in-law a CNN baseball cap and instead of saying “thank you” he said he wished it said “Fox.” Mind you, I’m not watching that network but am getting more conservative in my old age. Shhhh. Family gatherings are all about him needling me about my liberalism, and even though he’s been through a lot lately, I don’t want to deprive him of his fun. Cheers and Happy Thanksgiving! Dee

Oh, The Weather Outside…

The moon is reflecting off the new-fallen snow. We may get two feet of the white stuff before Thanksgiving, glad I put on the snow tires last week! Only one car has driven down the street and otherwise every driveway is pristine with 3-4″ of snow and I’m wondering why I didn’t spray my new suede hiking boots (bought for Yellowstone and never worn). But I have winter boots and wellies, depending upon the weather.

We fully expect the heavy equipment to roll out early morning. They’re really efficient here at moving snow. Yesterday while my husband and dog slept in, I listened to the mortars going off for avalanche control at nearby ski venues. That’s a sound I haven’t heard in a few months!

Jim’s mother loves fruitcake so I wanted to introduce her to my favorite, panforte from Italy. Started in Siena, but this is a version I made for holiday gifts many years ago with hazelnuts and chocolate, dusted with cocoa. I don’t know when we’re going to make it, probably not in time for Thanksgiving dinner, but I have to go out and look for some of the ingredients because we have a Whole Foods here and I can buy dried fruits et al from the bulk bins so my suitcase isn’t stuffed with pounds of dried dates and apricots. I already have to bring a couple pounds of spiced almonds and cashews that have been in the freezer for a month!

Now is the time to make lists and keep up on the drycleaning (cleaners ate one of Jim’s shirts yesterday, and with the amount of plaid he has in his wardrobe I can’t for the life of me figure out which one!) and laundry, wash the dog and get her nails trimmed. Clean the fish bowl. Figure out what to wear. Sort 500 balloons from Sweden to entertain thirty kids on Thanksgiving day. Oh, we did that yesterday. Yes, hubby is getting in some practice this weekend. A bee, an apple, and the piece de resistance, a neon tree frog hat with 5′ pink tongue. Oh, and a princess wand with a “string of pearls” and heart top, that was a first. If he works on a princess crown, and does a couple of dogs, space guns and pirate swords he’s good to go. If TSA lets him on the plane with his “busker bag” with several hundred balloons. He does have to carry a 2″ pair of child safety scissors ($1 value in case he has to dump them).

I’m hearing varied reports on the TSA, like Michael Chertoff recommended the Rapiscan “naked scanner” while his consulting company is invested in that company. That TSA is purposely “groping” passengers in order to scare them into using the “naked scanners.” That faces are not blanked out and TSA and other agencies keep these naked scans for whatever use they want. And my father just sent an email about the 4th Amendment (remember that one, that the Patriot Act threw out the baby with the bathwater days after 9/11, it’s about illegal search and seizure) that states unequivocally that a few suicidal lunatics set about to destroy the USA and from Bush to Obama, we’ve helped them out every step of the way by making a free nation one that our founding fathers never wanted it to become. Every legal resident of the USA is subject to having no constitutional rights inside our land and 100 miles from the border, and in any airport. We are forced to take off belts, shoes, jewelry, have a naked body scan or be groped in public before going to grandma’s house for an annual holiday gathering.

This is all wrong. Homeland Security only looks backwards, not forwards. Cargo is the problem, not innocent American citizens. There’s a shoe bomber, so we have to take off our shoes. Liquid, so no shampoo or lotion. Terrorists by definition have to find new ways to strike. Do you really think they’re going to send another shoe bomber, now that every American who flies within our country has to walk around barefoot or in socks or hose on a filthy airport floor?

I’ll get us ready to go over the river and through the woods, and make sure our home, dog and fish are taken care of as well. It’s always good to see family, even for a brief time. Cheers and Happy Thanksgiving! Dee