And then one day the mailman brought a package for Mom. Open on your birthday was written all over it. I thought she should open it right away, but she placed it on top of a cupboard where it waited until her special day. When I got up on the morning of her birthday I climbed up and removed the package and placed it next to her plate at the breakfast table to make sure she would open it first thing and finally reveal what was inside.
We all watched as she slid her knife through the tape and opened the box. I was almost as thrilled to see what was inside as I would have been had that beautiful glossy new cookbook been my own. Page after page of recipes each with their own mouthwatering photo. I was sure that was the best cookbook in the world.
Mom paged through it a little and then we ate. That forenoon I started looking through it, reading every recipe through as I went, by the time I had to help get lunch ready I wasn't even half way through yet so I propped it up on the recipe holder stand until I had time to return to it.
As we were eating lunch Daddy suggested he take Mom and the little boys to a nearby yardsale, while John, David, and I cleaned away the dishes.
Dishes were some of my least favorite things to do and we each had another helping of dessert after they left before getting started on the dreaded task of cleaning up. As I was getting up from my chair David flicked a spoonful of water at me.
I quickly flicked one right back at him. It kept going for a little while and John joined our little waterfight. This wasn't really fair, two against one. I picked up a glass of water and as they splashed me again I swung my arm in a wide arc determined to soak both of them really well.
They got some of the water, but the majority of it landed on Mom's new cookbook. Our laughter and waterfight came to an abrupt end and we got the dishes cleared in record time and had mopped up all the water on the kitchen floor before Mom and Daddy got back.
Mom walked in the kitchen and seemed pleased how clean everything looked, until she discovered what had really happened. All her fun yardsale finds were packed away until later. We had, had quite enough fun for one day.
I felt horrible about that book for a long time and was happy to be able to replace years later after I was married.
I must have over 50 cookbooks! Most of them are fairly new (25-30 years is new, isn't it?) and get used frequently. I also have a lot of cookbooks from both World Wars; my grandmother could have fed Coxey's Army on a pound of ground beef and a handful of oatmeal. My favorite is a small green book from Frigidaire, with recipes to be made in "your brand new electric ice box".
ReplyDeleteAnd then there's that box of index cards!
As a mom now I hope you realize how the little kitchen incident might have been bad that day, the watermarks become a blessed memory.
ReplyDeleteI have books damaged by my children (including my Bible) for one reason or another and every time I come across the damage it brings joy to my heart to think of my children at that age and how that age and time are permanently etched into something special to me.
Bet she loves the original more than the replacement. :)
I love to read cookbooks.
ReplyDeleteNot too long after I met my now-husband, I was looking through a cookbook from his hometown church in southeastern Ohio.
Recipe after recipe called for diced mangoes. Mangoes in soup, mangoes in casseroles, mangoes in spaghetti sauce. I'm thinking, "What in the world?"
When I asked about it, I found out that in that area, a mango is a bell pepper. Well, that was a relief. I wasn't going to have to face having dinner with his family and eating spaghetti sauce made with tropical fruit.
Not sure why but before I read about the water - I thought the story was leading up to you making one of the recipes as a surprise for your parents while they were out
ReplyDelete