Grandmaโ€™s Silver Spoon

When I first told David, my partner of nearly 20 years, about my tumultuous upbringing, he was shocked. You see, my emotionally volatile mother, whom I loved dearly, was seemingly strong on the outside but fragile inside.

My father, who was legally blind, was severely limited in his ability to play the role of dad as I longed for it to be played. Both of them had hot tempers that often led to loud and sometimes physical confrontations.

When I was seven, they separated, and they divorced soon after. Much of the rest of my childhood was spent consoling my mother, helping her find happiness not only in her own life but in mine.

My father, meanwhile, depended on me to take care of him. I learned to do his shopping, make his meals, clean his house, pay his bills, and balance his checkbook by the age of nine. In many ways, the roles of parents and child were sadly reversed.

Finally, when I was 14 and life with my mother and her third husband in their horribly tension-filled household became unbearable, I left.

But there was one person I could always depend on to be there for me: my beloved grandmother. She didnโ€™t need me to give her emotional support or take care of her. She just needed me to be her grandson and accept her unconditional love.

I have countless memories of her. She cut a fine figure, had tightly curled hair, and always wore stockings and a dressโ€“usually one that sheโ€™d sewn herself. Sheโ€™d never go out in public unless she looked just right. She was a ladyโ€”a very independent ladyโ€”who was as comfortable moving a heavy piece of furniture or hammering a nail as she was making a cake from scratch.

My most vivid recollections of her are in the kitchen. Oddly, I donโ€™t remember her cooking; itโ€™s possible she wasnโ€™t very good. But her baking was incredible. And there were three necessary components to everything she madeโ€”her big brown crock; her wooden spoon; and her scratched, misshapen silver spoon, which I cherish to this day. I remember seeing that spoon in every kitchen my grandmother ever baked in. It was like a constant friend or a favorite family member.

I remember Grandma baking buttermilk bread for sandwiches and scooping the flour with her silver spoon. Iโ€™d sit in the kitchen, watching her mixing all the ingredients, and wait for the bread to rise.

The process fascinated me, and once the loaf went in the oven the smell of it baking was pure comfort to me. I sat on pins and needles anxious for the warm slice of bread with butter that would soon be mine. And at Christmastime sheโ€™d bake me a special sweet treat by shaping the same dough into rolls and studding them with colorful candied fruit.

Then there were the times sheโ€™d bake a cake. Sheโ€™d sit with her big crock on her lap, beating the batter inside with her silver spoon. After sheโ€™d poured the batter into the pan, there was always, miraculously, just enough left for me to โ€œtestโ€ with the spoon. That spoon was so thin and beat up it was amazing that I didnโ€™t cut myself. But just as my grandmother expertly wielded it, so I learned to masterfully maneuver it.

Grandma's Recipe

I recently happened upon her recipe for raisin puddingโ€”a dessert she made all the timeโ€”written in her own hand. Iโ€™m not sure if I should call it a recipe, though, because it includes only the ingredients.

It doesnโ€™t say what size pan to bake it in or what temperature to set the oven to. Maybe we were destined to guess, or maybe we were just expected to know.

I later found the same recipe, entitled โ€œGrandmaโ€™s Raisin Pudding,โ€ in my motherโ€™s handwriting. Her version includes the missing pieces. It says to drop the flour-and-sugar mixture into the syrup with a โ€œteaspoon,โ€ which makes me chuckle because I know the โ€œteaspoonโ€ referred to is Grandmaโ€™s old silver spoon that I watched her use every time she made this dessert.

Sheโ€™d scoop it into the wet batter and then drop it into the waiting hot syrup without bothering to shape the individual puddings. But once they emerged from the oven, they were almost perfectly round biscuits sitting atop the most delicious river of thick, rich syrup. In my childโ€™s mind, her spoon had special powers. It could take blobs of dough and shape them into impeccable biscuits. Itโ€™s one of my very favorite memories of her.

According to my grandmother, the spoon was handed down from her motherโ€™s mother. It supposedly originated in England, but that part has always seemed suspect to me since itโ€™s rather a grand origin for something owned by our humble family. As a child, I simply couldnโ€™t fathom how anything could be so old, so ancient.

When my grandmother passed on, the old spoon was handed down to me. It remains one of my greatest treasures. So far from glamorous, yet beautiful to me, it rests comfortably among our set of perfect silverware.

Itโ€™s this spoon that I pull out anytime I want to try a new recipe or make a beautiful meal for David or just sense that I might need some extra support in the kitchen. Is it my lucky spoon? I canโ€™t answer that. But I can say that I go into a panic when I want to cook something special and canโ€™t find it.  Somehow I feel I need it to achieve even the slightest success in the kitchen.

Maybe itโ€™s a crutch, or maybe itโ€™s just a piece of metal that evokes wonderful memories of me and my grandmother in the kitchen. It doesnโ€™t really matter, as I canโ€™t promise a decent meal without it.




About The One

The One, a real estate broker in Manhattan, has been with David for 27 years. (As David likes to say, thatโ€™s 64 in straight years.) Despite what many of you probably think, itโ€™s actually The One who does most of the cooking during the week. He prefers Manhattan while David enjoys the country, so they have a Green Acre-type relationship. The One is Eva Gabor to Davidโ€™s Eddie Albertโ€”without the dresses and diamonds. Or is it?


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78 Comments

  1. Thank you for sharing this lovely story it is women like your grandma, that help growing up a little more bearable when we have dysfunction in our lives.

  2. I forgot to ask in my previous post: where I might find the โ€˜fullโ€™ recipe for your Grandmaโ€™s raisin pudding? Afraid Iโ€™m not very good at filling in the missing pieces.

    1. Ivan,

      Iโ€™m working on it right now and hoping to have it posted soon. (It has to go through all the testing they have here!)

      1. Awesome โ€“ Iโ€™ll patiently be waiting!!!!!!! well maybe NOT so patientlyโ€ฆ but more than willing to wait. ๐Ÿ™‚

      2. Meant to ask โ€“ do you get to sample all the trials and then decide which one most closely matches your Grandmothers?

      3. Hello again โ€“ I was wondering if the recipe had been perfected yet? or have I missed it somehow?

        1. Ivan, no, you didnโ€™t miss it. Iโ€™m not sure why The One hasnโ€™t added it to the post. Iโ€™ll have to ask him.

          1. Hi David

            Loved this story when you first posted it and itโ€™s still as relevant and poignant as before. Iโ€™m wondering if The One has figured out the recipe yet or is he still โ€œworkingโ€ on it? Would love to try it here as I KNOW my โ€œThe Oneโ€ would love it. Heโ€™s NUTS about raisins in anything!

          2. Hey, Ivan! Alas, The One has been unsuccessful in recreating the dish. Itโ€™s been slippery and elusive. If we do finally hit it, I promise we will publish it and update the post. Cheers!

  3. One of the most charming stories Iโ€™ve read in eons. Canโ€™t say that we have a silver spoon to use in our cooking, but weโ€™ve managed to hang in there for 25 yearsโ€“Iโ€™m not sure how many that is in straight years, all I know is I wouldnโ€™t trade him for anything.

      1. LOL thanks for the math โ€“ Iโ€™ll tell my โ€˜the oneโ€™ and heโ€™ll probably have a minor coronary โ€“ no worries really, he has a strong ticker.

    1. Ivan,

      Iโ€™m very touched. Thank you. You might not have a silver spoon, but Iโ€™m sure you can find something else that memories were made of in your kitchen.