“Do you want to make a
pie?”
We have a number of fruit trees in our backyard. Most of them are of the citrus variety,
appropriate to the terrain. But we also
have an apple tree.
A lot of our fruit gets picked over by birds before we get
to it. We have a large fig tree beside
our driveway, but almost all the figs get eaten up by the flyover avian
traffic, who later, figs being digestion enhancers, drop numerous unwanted
deposits on our outdoor furniture.
The ten or so apples that our recently planted apple tree produced,
some normal sized, some smaller, had so far been left untouched by the
non-human inhabitants which whom we share the neighborhood though not always
compatibly. At Dr. M’s suggestion, we
determined that, this time, we should beat them to the punch, extract the
apples from the tree…
And make a pie.
Which I have never made or helped make, though I have
observed pies being made in the past, and have most happily eaten the results.
At this point, let me inject a word about me and
cooking. Knowing I am in trouble here,
whatever I say.
In other writings, I have described myself as a member of an
identifiable cohort that I have
labeled, “The Men Who Lost Dinner.” It’s
a generational thing, by which I mean that in every generation throughout
history – except mine – the women prepared dinner, and the men ate it.
It’s different now.
And to be honest, though that “change” is no longer recent,
the consequent disorientation has not entirely worn off. (It takes time when there’s a behavioral
alteration dating back to when Eve cooked for Adam.)
You know, bigots – I like to bring in bigots to make me
sound less disgusting by comparison – not meaning to be any kind of an apologist
and certainly not for the “Implacables”, but some people were once bigots of
one sort or another, they eventually saw the light, or had “the light” shone
very powerfully in their eyes, and they changed.
But not overnight.
Just because something is right does not mean the relocation
to that position is immediate and automatic.
There’s a necessary “adjustment period” required. And then, hopefully, you move on.
That is, more or less, me and cooking. I am gradually (some might say too gradually) getting the picture.
So when I’m invited to join in the baking of a pie, I am skeptical, but unscoffing.
“Let’s do it”, I reply. (Almost entirely sincerely.)
And so we do. Me, donning
a protective apron with a Passover motif – it’s a matzo-designed print – and
off we go.
Acknowledging an imbalance in our experience, I am
inevitably the sous-chef, hauling out
ingredients, leveling the measurements with the flat side of a knife (to insure
accuracy), rinsing off utensils that will be needed again, and, my most
challenging responsibility – peeling the apples.
Although we have a specific apple peeling apparatus, neither
of us knows how to use it. So I employ a
carrot scraper instead. It works
acceptably well on the larger apples, but on the smaller ones…
INJURY REPORT
I slice the underside of my left, middle finger, which I immediately
self-medicate with Neosporin and a
Band-Aid.
INJURY UPDATE:
I will not miss any games. And,
in fact, I returned courageously to this
one. Though reassigned to less dangerous
activities. (Turning on the oven.)
In the meantime, the chef, consulting two cookbooks, did all
the fancy work. Which included preparing
the crust. (Recently Learned Cooking
Tip: Hardened butter is recommended
to hold ingredients together and avoid “crust crackage.”)
We work easily as a team – efficient, cooperative,
productive and cheerful. The entire
effort (not counting the baking) takes an hour-an-a-half. But to be honest, it felt like… I won’t lie
to you. It felt like an
hour-and-a-half.
There was something special about the collaboration. I don’t know, it’s like there’s this natural, age-adjusted progression created for couples:
You start out – you produce children. When you're done with that, you remodel your
house. When your house is finished, you
take extended vacations. And now…
A new pleasure of its own
kind.
And in the end…
1 comment:
I was always baffled by the idea that men didn't (or couldn't) cook. Most have been single at some point in their lives. Didn't they like to eat? Even more baffling was all that sf wishing to reduce meals to a simple pill you could swallow. Again: didn't they like to eat?
But I will plant this thought for next time: apple crisp is a lot easier than apple pie and just as good (or, to my taste, better). No crust to mess up, y'see.
If you'd ever like a kick-ass recipe, just ask.
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