(This was written seven years ago. Momma would have turned 95 today. I made her recipe on Sunday to share with friends. You should, too! You will not be disappointed…)
Momma would have been 88 today. Even more, she would have been a young 88. She would have been immersed in us kids and would have jumped at the chance to go shopping with us girls, to spend time with her grandkids and would have still loved being in her kitchen cooking with so much love.
As she always said, she would have been giving us girls a “run for your money” had she been born during our time. She was a classic, a true beauty, her own woman and the best Momma anyone could have asked for. We kids each received a piece of her personality and talents–my sister received her compassion, my brother–her will to always see the better, and myself–her baking expertise and love for the written word.
So, in honor of “Tukie” being 88 with Jesus and the apostles, here is her infamous Mighty Good Chocolate Cake recipe:
MIGHTY GOOD CHOCOLATE CAKE
1 cup butter
1/4 cup cocoa
1 cup water
2 cups of sugar
2 cups of all purpose flour
1/2 cup buttermilk
2 eggs (beaten)
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon vanilla
Put butter, water, cocoa in pan and cook until boiling. Pour over sugar and flour and mix thoroughly. Add buttermilk, eggs, soda, and vanilla. Mix well. Pour into greased 15 X 10″ pan. Bake at 400* degrees for 20 minutes. (depends on oven) WHILE CAKE IS BAKING PREPARE FROSTING: 1/2 cup butter or oleo 1/4 cup cocoa 6 tablespoons whole milk 1 lb. box confectioner sugar 1 teaspoon vanilla 1 cup chopped pecan nuts Combine butter, cocoa, milk and cook until boiling. Remove from heat; ad powdered sugar, vanilla and nuts. Mix will. Spread on cake while the cake is still hot.
I miss you everyday. You are alive in my heart as well as in my dreams. I hope you are dancing with Daddy, laughing with Mackie and tossing a tennis ball with my Hannah.
I remember Momma saying how the years would fly by once I hit twenty five. She always demonstrated the passing of the years by blinking both eyes while saying “25…30…35…40…50…”
Like everything else Momma told me as a teenager, it went in one ear and out the other. She was right.
I blinked and the years have sped right by. It somehow seems so surreal. One day you are dancing at your favorite club on Market Street and the next day you are at your orthopedist asking how the hell you can’t place your arm to touch the center of your back any longer.
Then, I thought about my Momma.
I thought about her mother’s, my grandmother, story about the chinquapin patch:
There was a young girl and she spent her day walking through the chinquapin patch with her Grandmother. Her Grandmother told her to pick the most perfect one as they made their way through the patch. As she walked, she would pick up the spiny nuts and, one by one, she would put them down. One would be too small, another too prickly. One would be cracked, another not shiny enough. She had a hard time not finding one covered in its thorns. One by one, she picked one up just to find a flaw so she went to the next. Until she got to the end and she was empty handed.
Momma seemed to tell us this story at least once a year. She reminded us that we were too particular about things: clothes, apartments or houses, boys…The version she told my older sister went like this:
A young boy sat with his Grandmother and asked her how she married his Granddaddy. She said “Let’s go for a walk”. On the walk she said for him to pick put the best stick he could find along the way. Some were short. Some were long. Some were weak. Some were strong, but none were good enough. He would pick one up just to replace it with another. He ended up at the end of the trail with nothing but a twig. He sat and cried, holding the scrawny twig in his little hand. His Grandmother simply replied, “And that is how I married your Grandfather…”
Two stories. The same ending, both about not ending up with what you wanted.
Regret…
We walk through life, sometimes running. When we are younger, we think we are indestructible. Little things don’t seem to worry us because it is about the big picture and how we are going to look, feel and how it affects us. We think we have all of the time in the world.
We look at life shortsightedly. We never know if we will walk the path and get the prize or will we end up empty handed.
My Mother lived with regret. On her death bed, she spoke about all of the things she wished she had done, the places she longed to visit, the experiences she felt she had missed. It was very sad, really, but it was also a wake up call.
It led my sister to follow her dream of opening her own restaurant.
It has led me to writing again and planning my next steps in food and heart.
We all walk through our own patches in life. Some are moments of blind faith where you jump in with your soul and land on your feet. Some are periods of falling over and over again because you get stuck with a burr in your heart or head.
Those are the tough ones–the ones where you get in your own way.
In life, there are mistakes and there are lessons. The mistakes are the ones we do voer and over again, but they do not have to define us. The lessons teach us to look harder, to search deeper, to love harder.
I guess, you could say, I am still walking through the Chinquapin patch.