The most amazing thing has happened. And even though, for eight and a half months I knew it was inevitable, it was going to happen, nothing could have prepared me for that exact moment when it did. The moment Emerson was born. The moment I became a Mom.
I'm not sure that I'm one of those
people who always knew I would be a mom some day, or dreamed my
whole life of having a baby. To tell you the truth, it was never
something that was all that important to me until it was. And that
was not all that long ago. And now there is absolutely nothing that
is more important. Not even close.
Though it's been just four short/long/short weeks since Emerson was born, one minute it feels like yesterday and
I'm lost without a clue, the next it's like I've been doing this,
like I've known her forever. Time has never expanded and contracted
at this level for me before. And don't even get me started on the
hormonal scatting my body has been performing. I was recently talking
casually about the weather or some such thing with Fred as tears
streamed down my face for seemingly no reason at all. Pay no
attention to any tears you see. Unless, of course, you disregard
the wrong tears. The real tears. How dare you be so glib about how
I'm feeling – what I'm going through?! I don't understand.
Everything's changed!*
I constantly vacillate between “What
am I doing?” and “I got this.”
Regardless of the tears, legitimate or
absurd, and whatever side of confidence I happen to be on at any
given moment, every droplet of me knows I have never loved anything
like I love this little person. And every part of me knows that I
will do anything and everything I possibly can to keep her safe and
happy for as long as I live. That yes, everything's changed.* And
that I would not want it any other way.
That alone is enough to put someone
through a ricochet of emotions from pure, ethereal bliss to sheer, paralyzing fear.
And don't even get me started on the hormones... again.
Fred says I'm like a shark; I must
constantly be moving and doing. He's right. Though I have spent
countless still and quiet hours just staring at Emerson in awe,
disbelief and appreciation, it has been a challenge to be so
motionless in all of the exterior elements of my life. Work, friends,
chores, errands, cleaning, reading, emailing, crosswording,
gardening, phone calling, self-grooming, cooking and writing have all
had to be put in the back seat. (I do pat myself on the back for
being timely and up to date with thank-you cards. I am a good
southern girl, after all.)
I have learned am learning to stop, let go and rely
on the kindness of family, friends and neighbors - and have been
overwhelmed to the point of tears (of course) by all of the
thoughtfulness, selflessness and generosity (and food!) that have poured in for me and my family (family!!). Fred who has continued to
do so, so much – has added witnessing his partner in life
morph into Sybil meets The Excorsist... and still manages to say I'm beautiful and strong and that he loves me (#keeper).
The other day we decided it was time to
do 'something normal.' You know, like cook something new and fun and
take pictures of it, normal. I was pretty sure I wanted to play with
this extraordinary, ginormous burgundy okra we have growing in our
garden. Considering I haven't done much of it, pickling was the
obvious choice. On the weekend before the okra pickling was to take
place, Paz came over for a practice session. We used squash,
cucumber and red onion (also from my garden) to make a bread and butter pickle
in addition to a standard dill pickle. They turned out pretty great with a
couple of little tweaks I would make the next time – like peel the
squash.
With my new pickling confidence, I
began to think about the okra and what exactly I wanted to do with
it. It occurred to me that I had recently had some pretty memorably
delicious pickles prepared by Travis Milton, chef de cuisine at
Comfort here in Richmond. Coming from rural Southwestern Virginia
with the culture of Appalachian food, Chef Milton is known for
preserving and furthering the foodways of his old stomping ground and
is heavily involved with the Central Appalachian Food Heritage
Project, and the Appalachian Community Table. He was even featured in
the most recent issue of Garden & Gun Magazine for his Cast-Iron Green Tomato Pie.
So I emailed him and got his
Grandmother's recipe for pickled okra. Booya!
Being back home in Richmond has not
only brought me back to my mom and dad, but also the other people
that I call family. One of these people who I am so grateful to have
back in my life is Mary. Mary is Sam's mom and she is family to me.
Her house is one I know very well - one overflowing with wonderful,
euphoric memories of youth. Now I can add to that a recent
Christmas Eve filled with just everyone, a beautiful ladies lunch
(just the two of us), an al fresco early Summer dinner in the yard
with friends of Sam near and far and new memories we are adding all
the time. Speaking of new memories, Mary is pretty excited about little Emerson, too. Oh, and Mary also has one of my all-time favorite kitchens.
So Fred, Emerson and I packed up our
okra fixings, camera equipment and diaper bag and headed to Mary's
house for the afternoon. While I pickled, Fred photographed and Mary happily looked after Emerson (though I did find myself scurrying out of the
kitchen to peek in on my baby every so often). In a way, I think
Mary, Fred and I all got to do something that felt kind of normal.
Comfortable. Happy.
But as a thank you for the use of her
kitchen and for looking after Emerson, we left the pickled okra in Mary's fridge. Maybe for her to enjoy – or maybe we'd find it there
on the next visit, for us all to snack on together.**
Look at me, I so got this.
*A favorite line from Raising Arizona
(among so very many).
**Mary ate the okra the next day and
said it was delicious!
Pickled Burgundy Okra
(Recipe by Chef Travis
Milton)
“Okra is one of my favorite things
to pickle or can, as it's insanely simple. A lot of people try to
over complicate it with different ways to get rid of the "snot",
I don't bother with any of those methods and it always comes out
great. With burgundy okra you will loose some of the color in the
pods, but it will color the vinegar nicely.” -Chef Milton
INGREDIENTS
5 pounds of okra, trimmed at the cap
5 pounds of okra, trimmed at the cap
2 red cayenne peppers, de-seeded and
sliced into thin rings
1 1/2 Tablespoon dried dill
6 cups of apple cider vinegar
1 cup chardonnay
1 1/2 cups water
4 shallots, thinly sliced
2 heads of garlic cloves (about 20
cloves) sliced thin
2 Tablespoon yellow mustard seeds
2 Tablespoons yellow mustard (By mustard I
mean just straight up yellow mustard. It may sound weird, but its
something my great grandmother did.)
3 Tablespoons black peppercorns
DIRECTIONS
Place okra in a large metal mixing bowl.
Place okra in a large metal mixing bowl.
Bring all the other ingredients to a
boil and pour over okra. Let the okra sit for 45 minutes.
Pack in Mason jars and cover with
liquid up to 1 1/2 inches below the lip of the jar.
Process or not at this point.
Printable recipe.
One year ago: Fried Green Tomato Benedict with Smithfield Ham & Pimiento Cheese Hollandaise
Printable recipe.
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Five years ago: For the love of TOMATOES!
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