Trash Can Alley

During the process of writing a book, so much material inevitably gets written, cut, added back to the book, and then cut again. It’s sorta maddening. This gem of a story was edited out of the final version of my memoir, Notes on a Banana, for space reasons. But I thought the innocence and playfulness of my childhood friend Gail Martin and I pretending to grocery shop deserved to be shared with others. We were all of six years old when this took place. I hope you enjoy it. By the way, that’s not me in the photo above. I couldn’t find a picture of me rummaging through trash cans—go figure.

David

The alley beneath my window connected Brownell Street to an interior asphalt courtyard of tenements and the back of the Terminal Bakery. Mr. Jeff, who lived in the house next door, was a meticulous man. His trash cans, shiny and with “135” painted in two graceful arcs on each side of the handles, sat beyond reproach at the back of the alley. One summer morning, after being shrugged off by our mothers and told to “go play in traffic,” Gail, my neighbor from across the street, and I headed for the alley to play supermarket. Mr. Jeff, besides his incredible orderliness, was blessed with uncanny hearing, so we had to be cat-burglar quiet.

I lifted the trash-can lid and placed it on the ground. Gail and I then began picking through the garbage for our quarry: food containers in mint condition.

“I found one!” I whispered, pulling out an empty milk carton.

“Ohhh, that’s not fair.”

“Shhhhhhhh!”

Gail began rummaging in earnest, determined to get her share. When she plucked out a frozen dinner box, jealousy seized me.

Deeper and deeper into the can we leaned, tipping it down until we’d ravaged its contents. And there at the bottom was the gem. I nabbed it before Gail could. She was so in awe of it, she didn’t even attempt to fight. I held it out and we just beamed.

Le Sueur Peas

“Luh soo-uh,” she said.

“It’s not ‘luh soo-uh,’” I said, deeply offended.

“How do you know?”

“’Cuz Dina’s French, and she pronounces it ‘ler sewer,’” I said, covering the garbage can and placing the opened can of Le Sueur peas on top.

I became a lifelong Francophile because of Dina. My mother would pick up brochures from the local travel agency, for some trip she’d never take with my father, I guess, and when she was done, she’d let me play with them. I’d sit on Dina’s lap in her rocking chair as we looked at all the pictures of France. It wasn’t until I was in seventh grade and wanted to practice my French lessons with her that I learned that she not only didn’t know a word of la langue Française, she wasn’t even French. Dina was Portuguese and French-Canadian. Her family was from the South End of Fall River—the very wrong end, my mother would say. But back then, before I knew any of this, I adored her because she shunned anything Portuguese. French people, French style, French food were superior.

Once Gail and I had our inventory, we went to work lining up the items against the foundation of Mr. Jeff’s house by sections: dairy, frozen foods, packaged foods, and finally our Holy Grail, canned goods, with the Le Sueur peas at the end. It was a paean to the American packaged foods of the early ’60s that I wasn’t allowed to eat. With our supermarket now opened, Gail and I would shop, making idle husband-and-wife chatter down the aisle.

I’d never been in Mr. Jeff’s house, but if his garbage was any indication, he was a man of varied and exotic tastes. I’d never seen any of his colorfully packaged foods in our kitchen. Instead of moping in front of plates of blood sausage, purple octopus stew, or whole fish with hundreds of bones, I imagined myself at the table with my parents, me in a jacket and tie, because I was convinced that’s how French children dressed for dinner. In front of me would be one of Mr. Jeff’s TV dinner—out of its tray, because separating your food into sections was for babies. Or for old sick people in the hospital. Instead, the meatloaf, mashed potatoes, and carrots would be artfully arranged on the plate by our cook, who slept on the tub-less bathroom floor because, well, she was a servant, and the spare bedroom was reserved not for our most recent hollowed-eyed relative from the Old Country but rather for visiting dignitaries from Europe, who brought me chocolate and cheese balls from their countries, hoping to curry favor with the local government. Being Fall River’s biggest child TV star, I would deign to act as a cultural attaché.

“Get the hell out of there!” Mr. Jeff was rapping on his window. Then his screen door slapped shut. Gail and I fled, she back home, me to the Terminal Bakery.

“Goddamn sonofabitchin’ kids! If I find you here one more time, I’ll wring your scrawny little necks! You hear me?”

As I turned the corner of the alley leading down the steps to the bakery, I looked back. Mr. Jeff was bent over, muttering to himself as he kicked down our carefully arranged supermarket, and I cried.

The word "David" written in script.



About David Leite

I count myself lucky to have received three James Beard Awards for my writing as well as for Leite’s Culinaria. My work has also appeared in The New York Times, Martha Stewart Living, Saveur, Bon Appétit, Gourmet, Food & Wine, Yankee, Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, The Washington Post, and more.


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20 Comments

  1. OMG! David! You are Wicked Funny! A riot and so totally Real! That’s how we played back in the day, exactly! Nowadays kids have parents who buy them their own toy kitchens complete with fridge, dishwasher, oven and sink! And don’t forget all of the play food packages and little sets of pans! ?‍♀️ We put weeds and pebbles on a little plank of wood and cooked up an entire kale soup!
    Thanks for the memories! I so love you!
    Lorna