Her mother`s apple crisp recipe is an enduring reminder
Transcription
Her mother`s apple crisp recipe is an enduring reminder
Her mother's apple crisp recipe is an enduring reminder of childhood and family traditions byLisaEvantroronto he spicyscent of cinnamon and nutmeg blended with the sweet aroma of apples emanated from my Mexican oven. Heat enveloped the room, steaming up the closed windows, but I barely noticed. I'd trapped the heat, along with the smell of my childhood, inside. Living in Mexico, thousands of miles away from my family, it was that smell that connected me to my Canadian home and I was feeling slightly homesick. Many childhood memories are wrapped up in this aroma. On that particular day in Chiapas, Mexico, the image of my mother, bent at the hip, lifting the steam- ing dish out of the oven crystallized in my mind. A seven-year-old me was kneeling on the seat beside the kitchen table, too excited to sit with mybutt on the chair and still crunching on the leftover apple peel we'd diligently removed an hour earlier, my favourite part of home cooking. As my mother gingerly laid the dish on top of the stove to cool, the sweet aroma wafted out from the oven in one fell swoop, titillating our noses. "Mmm, smells good," cooed my mother, as she inspected the bottom of the dish, making sure the apples were thoroughly cooked. I watched the apples bubbling through the glass bottom, taunting me. "Wait until it cools," my 58 Our Canada ocroBER / NovEMBER 2013 mother wamed, knowing I couldn't wait to dive in. My mother's apple crisp was my favourite dish growing up, and is still my go-to dessert. Every Christmas and Thanksgivingwas accompanied bythis sweet treat, topped with a hearty serving of vanilla or butterscotch ice cream. The crisp oats and hot, steaming apples melted the cold ice cream on contact, creating a smooth, milky substance that floated around the bottom of the bowl. While she's changed her recipe over the years, adding cranberries, raisins and walnutsexperimenting with food combinations-the original recipe is still my favourite. I've carried the recipe to every home I've had since leaving my parents' humble abode. As a university student in London, Ont., I became knoltm as the political science department's baker, bringing the dish of sweet baked apples to group study sessions and potluck parties. While living in a country where desserts are an uncommon accompaniment to a meal, my mom's ap- ple crisp recipe remained stuck to my refrigerator, a constant reminder of home. On that particular day, I'd made the dish to share with my new family. Upon my arrival in Chiapas, where I worked as a writer and English teacher for more than two years, I fell seamlessly into the warm embrace of a local family. They had spent the first six months of my stay there providing me with delicious Mexican meals, comforting me during mybouts of illness, teaching me how to hand-wash my clothes, how to shop at the open market and lifting me up when I felt homesick. It was my tum to give something back-a small piece of down the table at Diego, a seven-year-old boywho I'd grown close to in my time there. His plate was still full. He pushed the apple mixture into a comer of the plate with his fork and looked up at me with apologetic eyes. I knew he didn't like it but was too shy, and too polite, to tell me. He passed the dish to his mother and left the Canada-and I could think of nothing better than my mom's apple crisp to introduce them to my country. As I scooped the warrn apples onto dishes and table to playwith his cousins. I would be lying if I didn't say I felt disappointed. I'd wanted to share the best of my country with my new handed them around the table, I was met with curious looks. "What is this?" asked my house mother, poking at the dish with her fork. I fielded a barrage of questions: "ls this apple?" "Apples for dessert?" "What s the brown stuff on top?" "This is from Canada, yes?" "Yes, this is a Canadian dessert made with apples and oats. W it," I said, laughing as the 78-year-old aunt tentatively raised the fork to her mouth, raising it to her nose to take a whiff before allowing the apples to rnelt on her tongue. "Oh, it's good," she exclaimed; the surprise in her voice made me laugh. The others followed suit and within minutes their plates were scraped cleaned. TWo asked for more and helped themselves to the remaining apple crisp. Thrilled that the dish was well-received, I glanced family. I had dreams my own future children would someday get to experience the same smells and tastes I associated with my childhood home. The image of my own son or daughter kneeling on the kitchen chair crunching on an apple peel was fixed in my head, a dream that had yet to come true, but I somehow had imagined young Diego would want to practice the tradition with me. Then I realized, for a child who has never seen snow who has never curled up next to a buming fireplace or cradled a cup of hot chocolate in his freezing hands and who has never seen leaves change colour, Canada would be an acquired taste. He loved the maple-flavoured sugar cookies and the Laura Secord chocolates I'd brought back on my last trip, so perhaps a future love for apple crisp wasn't too far away. I 59