The DNA of Tarts
As part of my new path I have made and fulfilled a number of changes in my daily life and outlook. Thanks to Greg Drambour in Sedona, who gave me my list, I am nearly there. Just a couple more and I will have made my commitments. Feels very good.
On Saturday I joined the California Writer's Club, formed in 1909 by Jack London, and still active with 1800 members in a dozen or so locations. At my first meeting we met with a novelist and food writer and she gave us a few writing prompts. Now that I am putting in three days a week writing, these help to focus and begin the process. Writing about my food memories from childhood is easy:
On Saturday I joined the California Writer's Club, formed in 1909 by Jack London, and still active with 1800 members in a dozen or so locations. At my first meeting we met with a novelist and food writer and she gave us a few writing prompts. Now that I am putting in three days a week writing, these help to focus and begin the process. Writing about my food memories from childhood is easy:
The DNA of Tarts
Butter tarts –they sat on a plate in Nana Northey’s oak refractory
table in the room that doubled as a living and dining room. She had chosen to use the adjoining, smaller
room as a parlor, a nod to her days as the daughter of a gentleman farmer in
Norfolk. In her childhood home there
were servants and most likely a morning room, a grand parlor, a library, a
snug, and a dining room that accommodated twenty guests. Here in her two-bedroom walk-up apartment
over a busy, unfashionable Toronto street, noisy with streetcars and vendors, she
had raised four girls, cots for each in one bedroom, the other reserved for her
and her second husband. I never went in
her room, it was always cloaked in half-shadow stillness, but from the door I
could see the fancy spread and collection of dolls she made clothes for.
Pastry tarts were the only dessert she made – and she made
them regularly. Butter, jam, and her homemade mince at Christmas. When we all
crowded in on these family gatherings, our cheeks red raw from the wind, father
left behind to find a parking space in the slushy, slippery cold, we headed
straight for her tarts, coats hastily flung on the nearest bed, and devoured
them with abandon, for she always made dozens.
They were little bowls of perfection. Flaky pastry cradled a
mixture of butter, eggs, cream and brown sugar, cooled and firm as these
confections were always served at room temperature. To try them straight out of the oven was like
putting boiling napalm into your mouth and so she made them the day before and
stored them in Queen Elizabeth Commemorative tins, layered with wax paper. Never runny, never adulterated with corn
syrup as some did, the filling with its frothy top had a gooey texture stayed
in your mouth so you could savor the caramelized sugar mixed with subtle, rich
hints of butter and cream. Bits of pastry always stayed on your lips to be
licked off later, and after the filling had all been devoured, there was a
small crescent of pastry left to savor before all that was left was the memory.
Her tarts were made weekly, waiting for whenever we visited,
later as students when we came to see her in her new, modern efficiency model
on the 10th floor of a highrise for seniors. They sat on a china plate next to a pot of
steaming, Red Rose tea, cups and saucers mixed together in a riot of flowery
patterns. These tarts were the
conversation starters, opening the way for a landscape of troubles, curiosities
(such as the discussion about why our small breasts were so much easier to live
with than the kind that flopped about in bed and necessitated a bra for
comfort) and stories of England. Nana’s
stories were as exciting as our own lives, filled with WWI romances, punting on
the Thames, ardent soldiers returning from battle, the loss of her mother in
the Great Flu Epidemic, her father’s humor and playfulness, all a world away
from our Canadian lives. She told us she
had run away with our grandfather, a mysterious man who ran an acting school
where they landed in Montreal, who was perhaps a Communist, union organizer,
flim-flam man, cheater of epic proportions, and long, long gone. He had disappeared during the Second World War,
and we only heard later that perhaps he had not actually gone to fight but to
take up with another woman whom he called his wife. I believe Nana was still a little bit in love
with him, certainly she never spoke ill of him, the fuller picture came out in
bits and bobs from my mother, who remembered sharp and tender moments all on
the same path, but for whom she only came to miss much later in her life when only
the softer moments remained. The wounds from a fractured life my mother
dismissed more and more as time went on, transformed into legends of her
mother’s bravery and stoicism in the face of poverty and disillusionment.
Though buried beneath admiration for the parent left behind, the scars remained,
bitter tracings through a life fraught with demons and ghosts. What remained
though, was my mother’s love of pies, and though nearly blind and without a
working oven, she still makes them with the same vigor and purpose as the women
before her.
The raspberry jam and butter tarts were my Nana’s welcoming,
they spoke of the old country, her roots, which were never nostalgic because
she had made her break with her family and seemed more rooted in her new home
despite the financial hardships and the loss of a widowed father she clearly
adored. Too proud to let him know he had
been right, she never went back to England, and I am left wondering just how
much he knew and for how long. This charismatic
and mysterious man she had stolen from her older sister’s embrace, the
illegitimate son of a washer woman, a Jewish refugee from the European pogroms,
the one who had enticed his bride to abandon everything she knew, bestowing on
us unknown remnants of a history we live through the tangled web of DNA that
directs our futures, even now.
We choose the memories that sustain the woman who gave us
our start in the wandering world, who gave us her version of chance and pride
and resilience. We are hers, and she was
ours.