Wednesday, March 19, 2014

"Recipes for Life" ~ In the Beginning

        Every teenager knows everything and I was no exception. Wait, there was one tiny exception: I definitely knew way more than you could ever know.
Our summers in Redding were long, hot and filled with non-stop F-U-N. My four close girlfriends and I rode horses, bicycles, motorcycles, swam in each other’s swimming pools, camped out on our parents' lawns and made trips to Circle K for Slurpees.
            Each morning, the four of us took turns preparing breakfast. One summer morning it was my turn to prepare my mother’s well known sour cream pancakes. The pancake recipe called for an entire cube of melted butter. Positive the recipe was mistaken, I left the butter out. The girls filed in one by one as the cakes bubbled on the griddle. Twirling the spatula, I knew I had this nailed hands down. The girls sat at the kitchen counter next to the griddle, watching with anticipation. Slowly, the edges of the pancakes began curling upward.
Startled, I distracted the girls with orange juice, hot syrup AND the necessary butter for their pancakes. The silent stares were broken when Donna asked, “Hey Deb, do the pancakes look a little strange to you?” Defending my efforts, I replied, “No, of course not. That’s the way they’re supposed to look.”
To prove my point, I said I’d feed one to Cleo, our German Shepard. I called Cleo knowing she’d gobble the pancake. She sniffed the pancake on the kitchen floor and walked away. I picked up the pancake, threw it onto the kitchen floor and watched it bounce. In lieu of breakfast, we raced outside and jumped into the swimming pool for a round of Marco Polo.
The teenage years of cooking experiences continued. Ross, my brother, tried cutting his birthday cake with a saw and chisel, while Ronnie, my step-brother, had his birthday banana cream pie pour onto the dinner table. The cake had too much corn starch, while the pie had none. I was too lazy to drag a chair to the top of the cupboard and get the corn starch.
The spaghetti sauce for the dinner upheld the wooden spoon. I neglected to add water to the can of tomato paste. My brothers raced out the back door when they saw the pot of sauce with the spoon standing straight up in the middle. When my mother came home to find only me, she asked, “Debbie, what could you have possible done to this sauce?” Shrugging my shoulders, I asked, “Mom, what’s the big deal? It’s not like they’re going to starve to death!” My frustrated mother replied, “Debbie, why can’t you ever just follow the recipe?”
Pre-heat oven to temperature of choice. Clear counter top and make room for an array of attempts. Get largest mixing bowl from under counter. Don’t bother with measuring spoons/cups. They won’t get used.
Mix together following ingredients as needed:
1.                  Wisdom from years of efforts, failures, successes
3.                  Regrets, longings, aching in heart
5.                  Patience, impatience, frustration
6.                  Fulfillment from various corners of life
7.                  Faith
8.                  Advice given or received
9.                  Shrieks of laughter
10.             A romantic love like no other
Pour ingredients into heart-shaped pan and set in oven until visually baked. At end of time, pull out of oven, wait until cooled and take a bite. Hopefully, you’ll enjoy every morsel, however, if not there’s always embracing of this one.
Leaving out an ingredient here, adding an ingredient there, the recipes in my mother’s cookbooks never worked for me. As an adult, I’ve created my own recipes from my own experiences, and am having tremendous success.
From I Corinthian 13:13, I learned, “The three most important ingredients to have in life are faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is love.”
Mixing these three ingredients into my life’s bowl, I'm giving it a try.  I now, however, turn on the oven when I want the cookies to bake rather than just have the light melt them. Before I blindly navigate another half century of life away, I’ll lovingly mixing faith and hope into my life’s bowl to see whether this is the recipe for life.

 

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