Sunday Dinner: Green Beans with Warm Bacon Dressing

I posted this on Instagram just a few days ago.

Stop with the Bacon

I’m so tired of bacon as shorthand for “I’m a sexy food hedonist.” I’m also tired of faux taxidermy and Zooey Deschanel.

It only seems right that one day later I was in a grocery store, standing at the deli counter asking where I can find the bacon.

My Mom had us over dinner for the 4th of July. I was missing my Dad, and wanted to be with him too. My choices on that are obviously narrow, and so I ended my recipe hiatus and found something simple to complement the dinner Mom was planning.

The green beans in bacon dressing recipe was perfect, because Dad would have been particularly entertained to watch me try to buy the bacon, try to cook the bacon. Both parts worked out, but I needed someone to tell me where in the grocery store I could find it and also how to cook it in the frying pan. You don’t need any fat to fry it, by the way. Amazing! It makes its own frying fat! I will grant that asparagus doesn’t do that.

I don’t know where this recipe came from. It’s on a little white index card in feminine hand. Maybe my Aunt? We’ll assume for the sake of my digestion that it wasn’t from my long-gone stepmother.

It was good. As I crumbled the bacon over the green beans I would see my Dad’s hands transposed over my own. I loved his broad, manicured nails.

He died just over two years ago.

I have his food and I will (try to) feed it to my kids and keep the transmission clear down through my family.

Green Beans with Warm Bacon Dressing

(2 servings)

1/2 lb green beans, trimmed, cut into 2″ lengths

2 bacon slices

1 Tbsp chopped shallot

2 tsp white wine vinegar

Cook beans in large pot of boiling water about 8 mins.

Fry bacon crisp, remove & crumble

Add shallots to skilled & saute about 30 secs. Remove from heat, cool slightly, add vinegar to shallot mixture

Season warm dressing to taste with salt and pepper

Pour dressing over beans & crumble bacon on top

Parenting Tourist

A few weeks ago we went to Washington DC, where we saw the space shuttle. Fly over! On the back of an airplane! It was amazing. Some domestic observations, though, are what I’m still chewing on all this time later.

We stayed with old friends. The kind of old friends who will let you stay with them for an entire week, and not even let you see how annoying it must be at times. They have two boys who bookend ours, one a bit older and one a bit younger. The thing that was hard to miss right off the bat is that we sure do parent our kids differently. Let’s stick to the moms, shall we? Both because I try to only speak for myself and because you don’t hear a lot about Dad Competition and Dad Wars and whatever. All I probably need to sum it all up is to say that I am more permissive and less organized than my friend and fellow mom. And this is where we fight, right? And there’s weirdness and tension? I mean, she gave my two-year-old a time out the first day we were there! And then later I gave her six-year-old a lecture on good sportsmanship! Except, you know, it was totally fine. It was more than totally fine. It was a real gift to me to get the watch a mom I admire up close for an extended period of time.

I don’t know why there wasn’t any tension. I fretted about it a little bit at first. What if they found my guys annoying? What if they rolled their eyes at what may have looked like coddling to them? And maybe they did. But what they didn’t do was communicate any of that, and that’s all I could ever ask for. Whatever is going on entirely in the privacy of a person’s thoughts is none of my beeswax.

What was going on in my head was an endless series of curious observations. Might a little illustrated chart make our preschool mornings more manageable? Hey, look how refusing to tolerate arguing cuts down on arguing! Most beautiful, make your kids eat OUTSIDE while you eat INSIDE. So genius.

It was like a mini cultural exchange. Nothing as abrupt or challenging as, say, Greenland to Swaziland. More like Germany to Switzerland. Not so different to be painful, but enough new stuff to make it worth the trip.

The Lingering Effects

I was letting my thoughts roam the other day while I washed my hair, and what bubbled up was, “What was Alden’s white blood cell count?” This isn’t unusual. Repetitive thoughts wear grooves in our brains, and so we often return to those places outside of need or logic. What stopped me mid-shampoo was… I couldn’t remember the exact number. I’m sure it’s here, if I care to go back in my archive. Knowing isn’t the point, though. Not knowing is a gift.

I still think about the kids in our hallway of the local children’s hospital. So many of the names on the door never changed, which means they were there longer than we were. Maybe their parents are still reciting test results from memory. I remember how sick I felt when I saw they had corrected Alden’s name on his door (first having used his formal first name, which we never do) because it meant they were getting to know him. Which is so kind. I wanted to be long gone before that happened, though.

Last weekend we went to a beautiful wedding. I lounged in an Adirondack chair and watched my kids plunk stones into a lake and felt again that sudden lightening. It comes over me still probably once a week. It’s a heady, slightly dizzy sensation, a little rush of adrenaline. I think these little rushes are akin to that breathless feeling that comes on just after a narrowly-avoided car accident. There’s a palpable difference between that atmospheric anxiety I can feel for my kids and the very clear, specific threat to one of them that we experienced early this year. The general worry is never gone. But the general worry is a creampuff. A marshmallow.

Our story is most remarkable, in retrospect, for what didn’t happen. Alden’s life was never in danger, we just didn’t know that. I know that is dumb luck, and its uncontrollable nature makes me so breathlessly grateful that it went the right way for us. Grateful to whom, if I say it is dumb luck? I don’t even care.

It’s too early to say, but maybe I am permanently changed by this experience. I had a long, hard day at work not long ago. At the end a colleague was following me down the hall trying to engage me in some problem that needed to be solved and I said, “Can we pick this up tomorrow? I’m trying to get to my son’s tennis lesson.” As my co-worker headed back the way he came I found my eyes filled with tears over the profundity of my good fortune in being interested in something mundane, domestic.

This seems like a lot of drama for what turned out fine. I get that. I think, though, that there is your brain before a doctor says words like “leukemia” and “brain tumor” to you, and there is your brain after that. And I will never minimize what Alden went through, because it was repeatedly invasive and horrible.

He went through his own kind of reckoning after all of this was over. He’s still shaking off the effects. Summer, with its total lack of structure or commitments for him, couldn’t have come at a better time.

This is just my message to the universe that I am grateful. First and always most importantly I’m grateful that Alden is okay. These moments, though, are also a gift. Like the forgetting. And I appreciate them too.

 

 

 

Conversations with a Preschooler

Alden, over his shoulder as he walks out of the room, “Hey Grammy, I’m going to take a nap. If you want to destroy me, now’s your chance.”

 

Today in the car…

Alden: “I want to climb Mountain Everest.”

Me: “Please don’t ever climb Mountain Everest.”

Alden: “Mommy. If I don’t bother the abomindable snowman, he won’t bother me.”

 

My patience is running short today. I need reminders and a little patience for myself.

 

Thanks Easter Bunny

ImageDon’t let the cheerful faces fool you.

Let me back up.

I has three work trips, two unusually long, in four weeks. Many things fell by the wayside (hello blog), including Easter prep. Stuffing baskets is the easy part. At least I assume it’s easy. I didn’t lay eyes on ours until the same moment the boys did. Thanks Damon! What I mean by prep is filling the boys in on the giant rabbit who is going to come to our house in the night. Driving to school on Friday it occurred to me that Alden probably doesn’t remember last year. I opened the conversation with “Hey, guess who’s coming this weekend.” Turns out the poor kid not only doesn’t remember last year, he doesn’t remember ever hearing of this before.

My half of the conversation looked a lot like this:

— “Not a rabbit rabbit. A giant rabbit. With, like, pants on.”

— “He brings eggs because… he is friends… with a chicken. Also with Santa!”

— “No, no. Santa isn’t coming this weekend.”

I managed to confuse him so badly that at one point he said, very tentatively, “Is it my birthday?”

It was pretty much a gallop downhill after that.

What I don’t understand is how anyone manages the Easter basket candy at 7am. Do people give kids their baskets and then yank the candy out of their hands until a good breakfast has been had by all? We did not, and so in short order we had two kids in total sugar freefall. We didn’t let them eat much. But it was enough that they refused their breakfast. And so we crammed two buzzing, fussing little boys into their Sunday finest and carted them off to church. A new church my Mom wanted to visit. We were late. We had to search for the nursery. My allergies got the better of me and I had to leave for a while mid-service. I was that woman no one knows walking repeatedly up and down the aisle. When we picked the boys up after the service and Alden hugged me and said, “How was the wedding?” We do not normally look our Sunday Best on Sundays, I guess.

We got off on the wrong foot and could not get our mojo back all day.

Tantrum Eggs

That’s Elliot taking advantage of Alden’s basket-flinging fit.

And that’s Elliot hoping to make a picnic of pretzels he found in the church playground gravel.

He didn’t appreciate being thwarted either time.

Having a swingset all to ourselves helped, though.

My Mom also made us an excellent brunch for which I had to do not one thing. And I’ve gotten this posted before the end of April. I’m going to call it a draw.