The Allegory of the Green Beans
Applied
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Several
years ago, while I still lived in Washington, I visited Dad in Harlem. It was
during the last days when my step-mom was still able to do simple things for
herself. She put the meal on the table.
She was
never a good cook. She’d raised eleven children and her meals were made to feed
hungry bellies. Nothing was thrown away, ever. I don’t remember the meal.
Certainly a meat, potatoes, perhaps a cabbage slaw since it was toward the end
of Dad’s garden. But I will never forget the green-beans.
Withered,
shriveled, in a tiny bowl, perhaps eight or nine pieces of green-beans,
snapped, not whole.
They had been offered every meal since I’d arrived. The
beans were so over-cooked they no longer had color, well, cement gray. I wasn’t
about to touch them.
I looked
across the table and met my Dad’s eyes. We’d both been looking with disdain at
the beans. Dad reached for the bowl, dumped the desiccated mess on his plate,
gave me a half smile and said, “If I don’t eat these, they’ll come around
again.”
I thought, “Greater
love hath no man.”
All of us
whose parents had lived through the depression, through other hard times, grew
up that way to a certain extent. We used, re-used, patched and repaired. The broken
shovel today might be ground down, given a different handle, and appear as a
garden trowel tomorrow.
Some of our family’s
early examples and ways stick with us, unquestioned. Some practices we rebel
against. All leave a residue that influence decisions we make in our daily
lives.
Having grown
up on a family farm, we always had food, fresh from the summer garden, or from
jars in the cellar or frozen packages in the freezer. Beef, pork, chickens and
eggs; we had it all. My tolerance for left-over food is limited.
I have a
friend who makes a vat of soup or spaghetti to eat for a week. I couldn’t do
it. Today, tomorrow and maybe one portion frozen for a month. Then my stomach
growls, “Nevermore.”
Last week I
baked bread. I bake all my bread, good farm-style loaves for toast or
sandwiches or plain bread and butter.
I’m not
quite sure where my head was that day, but my focus clearly wandered elsewhere.
While I was kneading the dough, it didn’t feel quite right. “Maybe it will be
alright.” When I have that thought, through long experience, alarm bells and
whistles go off.
In a hurry
for a reason I don’t remember, I ignored the warning. Set the dough to rise,
punched it down later, after the second rising, formed dough into loaves and
plopped them in the bread pans, even though the dough still didn’t feel right.
Well, I wasn’t going to just throw it away, was I?
I lit the
oven to pre-heat. Turned my attention to another chore. As soon as the oven was
hot, I plunked the loaves in to bake. Truthfully, I didn’t even look at the
dough to make sure they’d risen, just shoved the pans into the oven.
What came
out of the oven looked pitiful; puny loaves but solid as bricks. They made up
in weight and density for what they lacked in size.
I cannot
even tell you the last time I made a bad batch of bread. Other things, other foods,
oh, yes. Bread, no. I make four small loaves, keep one out for present eating
and freeze three.
Almost
always I enjoy the first slice, still warm from the oven, slathered with
butter. I ate it. That’s all I can say. It wasn’t dreadful. It wasn’t good. My
second rationalization was, “Maybe it will be okay for toast.” Again, warning
bells and whistles sounded. I turned away.
I don’t eat
bread every day. So a couple days later I sliced a piece of bread to toast. I
looked at that dense slice of bread. I mean, I really looked at it.
And what I
saw, as clearly as though I were still sitting at that long-past table, was
that pitiful little bowl with eight pieces of withered, gray green-beans.
I gathered
my bread, the slice I’d just cut for toast, and the loaves from the freezer and
took them out the far rock wall boundary of the ranch and crumbled the offering
across the rocks for my enemies, the iguanas, a penance of sorts. (Waste not.)
Today I
baked bread. I paid attention to every detail, gave each part of the process my
fullest focus.
The loaves floated out of the oven, light and perfect, evenly
grained. I cut a slice of hot bread, slathered it with butter and savored every
bite.
Sondra Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
July 30,
2020
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
No comments:
Post a Comment