Meet the Pork

Growing up with twelve older siblings, I just assumed we were poor.  We lived in a modest house large enough for us to sit collectively for a turkey dinner, and bunk beds in our basement providing  space to sleep at least eight, uncomfortably, with or without the farts. Yet, being young and ignorant, witnessing people living in neighborhoods within close proximity bathing in their backyard pools, I believed we must be impoverished.

Now, let me be clear. We were never poor.  Yet, even though mom and dad provided three square meals a day, when I’d see friends talk about their nightly adventures to Burger King or McDonald’s, I looked at them as the rich. Up until high school, I don’t remember ever sitting down for a Whopper or a Big Mac. It was tuna on toast every Friday night, fried burgers on Saturday night, and Sunday through Thursday, we ate potatoes and vegetables surrounded by some form of meat. How could they expect me to live in such poverty?

When I began maturing at the age of about ten,  I started thinking we were far from poor when my father replaced his old car with a slightly newer one. (His former car was totaled by one of my older brothers.) He even took me to the used car dealership to help him pick it out.  I then discerned the only reason we didn’t have a pool was because our father knew that six or seven of us might drown in it, even though he taught us how to swim at early ages.  Then, with an exclamation point, he put a definitive end to my thoughts of being poor.  He took the ones remaining in our house out to Chinese dinner.  It was pay dirt for me, and I’ll never forget it.

Without any disrespect to our mother’s cooking, dining out, since it was so infrequent, was always a treat.  It was actually a treat for our mother as well, always opting to remain at home for a dash of peace.  Yet, until I was introduced to the Far East, a pizza parlor was as far down the culinary road we’d traveled thus far, which was just dandy with all of us.

Entering the foreign parking lot of just one of the ten million Chinese restaurants in Spokane, Washington, I have to admit, my stomach was a little apprehensive.  Whether it be food or a baseball game, my dad always knew when I was nervous.  I didn’t have to say a thing.  As the youngest of thirteen, you never actually get a say in anything, but he looked at me with great confidence, and said, “Don’t worry.”  That’s all I needed.  Well, not really, but it was either I follow them into the restaurant or starve for the evening in the car.

Before being seated, I surveyed the atmosphere.  Immediately making me feel at ease was the giant Buddha sitting behind one of the waitresses.  I’d recognized him from pictures in a National Geographic.  He was wearing a smile, and by the looks of him, I thought Chinese food must be divine.  Shortly after being seated, several bowls of won ton soup were placed in front of us.  Nothing special, but ok.  I’d eaten better soup at home, but we lapped it up nevertheless.  Without having time to read the menu, dad began ordering.  First dish:  Fried Won Tons.  They looked harmless, but dad clearly pointed out the bowl of sweet and sour sauce to dip it in on the side.  One dip, and I was hooked like a Mongolian on a grill.  Holy Chinese Checkers!  We’re eating dessert before dinner!  I could have sat and drank that sauce like egg nog on Christmas or Thanksgiving.  It was absolutely delightful.  To this day, I have never met its equal. My father, when not stressed, always had the most pleased grin matching his smiling eyes when something made him happy.  We were happy.

Next came the BBQ pork.  Since birth, I don’t think I’ve ever turned anything down which was barbecued, so my excitement level remained on high.  Although the pork’s presentation made it look as if its outer lining was painted with some phony candy coating, I didn’t care.  Bring on the sweet with the meat.  All of us reaching for a piece, my first instinct was to dip it in what was left of the sweet and sour sauce.  Dad moved the sauce away quickly, and said, rather persuasively, “No, no, no.  Try these other dips reserved for the pork.”  So far, he was batting a thousand with the won tons, so I had no problem listening and paying attention to his calm order.  He then told us to dip it in a sauce resembling ketchup, followed by what looked like standard mustard, although he referred to it as “special mustard”, and finish by submerging it in the sesame seeds.  No problem.  Just before concluding the process with the seeds, he waved at my hand and said, “You need more mustard than that.  Your brothers are going to lap that good stuff up if you don’t eat it while it’s hot.  Putting a healthy dose of mustard on my piece, then cramming it in my mouth, I thought it odd the mustard was actually cold.  I didn’t know exactly what he meant my hot then, but I did within about three seconds after swallowing.  With tears floating in my baby blue eyes, dad handed me a napkin as he and the others were laughing.  The napkin wasn’t for my tears.  Rather, it was for my nose which began to drip, and although the sting was quite a surprise, I hadn’t expected some strange eating euphoria to follow.  It felt like a quick dose of sinus hell followed by heaven, or relief. I loved it.  My brothers and father, when eating their pieces, all had similar whiplash responses as mine, but we were all laughing.  My father loved to eat, entertain and be entertained.  The pork and, hot as sweet hell mustard, was gone in seconds.  “Really clears out your sinuses, huh?”  our father barked with laughter.

Eating family style, he went on to order the usual gang of Americanized Chinese splendor:  Chicken chow mein, pork fried rice, and sweet and sour prawns, which became my personal all time favorite.  I didn’t know what a doggie bag was back then, and I didn’t learn that evening.  I think we even devoured our fortunes in the cookies they brought us after the meal.  That night in China was, indeed, a rich experience.  Not remembering if he took us again as youngster, I just have to guess it was our trip to Spokane’s culinary Disneyland.

Returning home from college one year, keeping in shape with the standard mac and cheese, Top Ramen, and beer diet, I was assuming I’d arrive to a home cooked meal.  Rather, I was greeted by three of mom and dad’s grandchildren at our door.  They included one of my nephews and two of my nieces ranging from ages perhaps in the neighborhood of 7 to 11. (My oldest sister Mary’s three children.)  It was a Friday night, and they were in no mood for tuna on toast.  Dad came out to greet me, and quietly asked, “How about Chinese tonight??  Don’t tell these little shits.  They think we’re going to McDonald’s.”  I didn’t even have to answer.  We drove to the exact same place he’d taken us years ago, and their look of fear made dad and I laugh.  I used to keep my mouth shut proper back then, but they were a little more bold than I.   One of them even yelled, “THIS ISN’T McDONALD’S!!!”  Knowing their mother, there could have been some profanity amidst the panic.

Dad requested the same items, including the BBQ Pork with hot mustard.  It was nice to be on the inside of that joke.  They all winced in pain, made fun of, and laughed at one another.  Dad and I each had a beer and enjoyed part of the food.  With smiles all around the table, once again, there was no reason for a doggie bag.

 

 

 

To a Very Graceful Thanksgiving

“In the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit…….”  Just before plunging into a Thanksgiving feast, my father would utter these words, followed by a simple prayer, and when finished, his sons and daughters would all say with sincerity, “Thanks Mom!”  Since she prepared most of the feast, both before we ate, and after we were drowning in gravy, turkey and stuffing, we would again display our gratitude.  We weren’t forced to do it.  Rather, we knew we owed her the gesture.  And, when the eating subsided, someone would do the dishes.  I was always thankful for those suckers.  Since I was the youngest, it was preferred I just stay out of the way.  No problem.

As a child, those were the days when saying grace and being thankful was so simple.  I was truly thankful for my mother, father and food.  Later, in the early teens, it became a little more taxing to start thinking about those who don’t have food on the table, a roof over their heads, or someone to do the dishes for them.  If you were fortunate like me, you began realizing why we should be so thankful for so many other things besides the side of mashed potatoes and pumpkin pie.  So, as I grew older, the more difficult it became to give thanks before dinner, especially when invited to others’ homes where grace took on a whole new despicable meaning.

I’ve always despised publicly giving thanks on command.  After my dear old mom and dad retired from providing the feast, I ended up in the foreign and ungraceful territory of being invited to other people’s homes for Thanksgiving.  Always being grateful for an invitation which includes food, I would give proper thanks to the person providing it well before dinner was served.  This was an early mistake.  In the event that they asked me to openly give thanks at the dinner table, I was out of ammunition.  This was especially true if I was the last in line to spew any unoriginal appreciation.  Someone before me had invariably already given props to God and Jesus, their dying Grandmother, their children, their friends, their health, their spouse, their disease in remission, their neighbors, their newfound sobriety, or their ability to vaporize themselves exactly when it’s time to help with the dishes.  Can’t we just have a moment of silence instead?  I know what I’m thankful for, and I don’t give a damn what the guy next to me thinks about what I’m thankful for that particular year.  It’s really none of his business.  And, I sure as hell don’t give a yankee dime about his moment of thankfulness.  Now, add holding my neighbor’s sweaty hand during this fifteen minute unceremoniously pious nightmare.  Blahhh.  As a good Thanksgiving guest and soldier, I would suck it up and participate for the host, but I didnt’t have to like it, and I probably wouldn’t return.  Or, should I say, won’t be invited back, after someone recognizes my eyes rolling or an accidental gasp of misery.

Don’t get me wrong.  I am wildly fortunate, and my list of gratefulness  could seriously go on, and on, and on, until the dinner gets cold.  I’ve also given my traditionally required share of toasts at weddings which went about as well as a Donald Trump eulogy at a Muslim’s funeral.  Once, in my early twenties in Reno, Nevada, I attempted to say Grace after several shots of tequila and apparently passed out before finishing.  Therefore, people should be thankful I don’t wish to speak publicly.

My wife and I have hosted Thanksgiving a few times, and if someone wanted to pray or give thanks, we let them do it out on the deck with the dogs.  I am completely joking.  We have never hosted Thanksgiving.  Ok, we have, and I have always encouraged someone, besides me, to say grace before the display of gluttony begins.  So, in truth, I’m not that big of a T-Day curmudgeon.

This year, my wife and I will be cooking at home by ourselves with the rest of our family: two dogs and two cats.   For that, I am thankful. (For the dogs anyway!)  Since my wife has to be back to work at the Sheet Metal Manufacturing Plant by five o’clock,  I’ll be doing the dishes.  For that, she is thankful.

Happy Thanksgiving.

Sometimes, It’s the Worst of Times

For those of us who don’t murder others out of spite, religion or politics, I applaud you.  Why can’t it be that easy?

In general, I’m opposed to murder, and don’t wish this piece to shape anyone’s, or my lack of knowledge, regarding the tensions between Sunni, Shiite, Sundried, and Sunnyside up Muslims.  I simply don’t understand these religious gangs of the Middle East. That’s the only way I can describe them.

I know as much about politics as George W. Bush, therefore, I disqualify myself from competing in debates I wisely avoid.  I simply don’t, or don’t choose to, understand.

After watching the news for several hours last weekend regarding the terrorism in France, I thought it may be prudent to research why people were dying in Paris.  Watching cartoons, similar to what I viewed as a child in my School House Rock days, introducing me to The “Bill of Rights” (I’m just a Bill”), I remained dumbfounded.  I then watched a documentary about the Crips and Bloods. That was enlightening.  As far as I am concerned, the extremists in the Middle East, or their corporate sponsors, are just a group of gangs pushing, shoving, stabbing or shooting those who don’t agree with their views.

While viewing the bloodbath in France on television, my wife and I spoke to one another as is if we were the most fortunate people on earth.  In essence, we are.  This is our great fortune.  In the morning, we open the refrigerator and wonder what’s in it.  Sometimes, when a fuse blows, we replace it.  If we think a twelve pound turkey isn’t enough for Thanskgiving hangover sandwiches, I order a fourteen pound organic one pleasing both the turkey and my wife. When I need a haircut, I stumble across some money and force myself to get one.  Unless I am at a wedding, I don’t dance.  I don’t sing unless I am drunk.  I don’t play scrabble unless it’s a rainy day, and it has to be with my wife or a great friend. Rarely, I wear pants.  I don’t own or carry a gun.  I hope and pray my neighbors leave me alone with my Louisville Slugger. It’s that easy. I enjoy, with my wife, and some dogs and cats, a good meal, followed by a repeat episode of Seinfeld before going to bed when baseball is out of season. Sometimes, those are the best of times.

Much Ado about Football (or nothing)

I’m back in the fantasy football saddle again, and I am about to get bucked off only two weeks into the season, and it’s all my father’s fault.

The Fantasy Football League with which I’m currently participating does not require an entry fee.  It’s just meant to be fun, friendly competition amongst some friends and family members on my wife’s side.  Since both my wife and I have teams, we can share Sundays together watching modern day gladiators on television while I barbecue or cook a hearty Fall stew.  No gambling, great entertainment, digestible food, and a loving family.  Sounds like a stress free environment, right? Wrong.  Although it’s a great league filled with terrific participants,  there is only one thing keeping it from being perfect.  Me.  If this is where I strive for competitive excellence, I should seek therapy.  When my fantasy team falters in some way, I find myself speaking to the television set with a volume causing our dogs to look at me and say, “You ok, Papa?”   Who do I blame?  My father.

Years ago, my father’s art of raising his voice at a television set, fruitlessly trying to manipulate football players’ brain patterns, created tension throughout a very large household.   This trait being passed down to me is my only semi-legitmate excuse for acting like an immature ass in front of my wife and our confused animals while watching football.  I only wish they understood.  When I was growing up in a very large Irish/Catholic family (another excuse for just about anything stupid we’d do) we would watch the Notre Dame Fighting Irish football game every Saturday.  Let me clarify.  Dad would watch Notre Dame, and we would watch Dad.  Watching him seemed to be more entertaining.   Although our father didn’t really know, or claim to know, a great deal about gridiron strategy, he did know when a coach or player, especially the quarterback, would make a mental mistake.  When they did, the cigarette he was smoking would fly out of his mouth just before the verbal tirade.  They didn’t even wish to be on the ash end of his comments questioning the players’ and coaches’ levels of intelligence.  Remarkably, he could get his point across without too much profanity, so it didn’t make anyone in the room too nervous.  In fact, my brothers and I would try to keep from chuckling during his outbursts.

Without knowing the X’s and O’s of football, my father was all about clock management.   “Why are you running out of bounds when you need to keep the clock running?  That running back needs to have his ass kicked up between his shoulder blades.”  Or, “Ahhhhhh………why pass the ball when you need to keep the clock running?  This quarterback doesn’t need his head examined, he needs a lobotomy.”  Or,  “If they show the coach’s wife in the stands one more time looking nervous, I’ll fly to South Bend and give her a reason to look nervous.”  That last one was probably made up, because my father wasn’t a violent man.  And, although he liked going to Vegas or Reno once every few years, he wasn’t much of a gambler, so I know he didn’t have cash on the game.  This is why I questioned why he took it so seriously, and I have to question myself at the same time, because it’s simply ridiculous.

My brothers, Tom, Greg and I would root for Notre Dame, but mostly just because it would keep dad in a good mood.  Other than that, we didn’t really care.  We were preoccupied with the sweet sizzling smell of mom’s Saturday night burgers and getting a kick out of counting how many cigarettes dad would polish off during a stressful ND loss.  We must have second hand smoked two packs a Saturday back then.  Ahh…. when smoking was funny.  Those were the days.  Thank goodness he wasn’t a big drinker.

On the contrary, one of the wonderful traits my father passed down to me is the art of forgetting very quickly the meaningless loss with which you weren’t even a participant.  Even after a Notre Dame loss, when Dad’s cigarette was replaced with one of our mom’s burgers, all was well.  And, similarly, after the bowl of piping hot stew and warm french bread is placed in front of me after a stressful day of watching this terrific sport, I develop fantasy football amnesia.

Luckily for me, when my wife catches me uttering something sounding like I belong in a straight jacket during these fantasy football Sundays, a few minutes later, I’ll catch her doing the same, and we can both laugh.  She’ll never admit it, but I think she takes it more seriously than I do.

 

Jackdog

My step dog, Jack, just turned 14 today, and his tail is still waging.  So is his mouth. His mother, my wife, has treated this dog with respect, kindness, and the proper diet: Table scraps and gourmet cupcakes.JackBirthday-Cupcake

Jack is cute, friendly, thoughtful, has a terrific sense of humor, yet maintains discipline within the boundaries of our property with respect to the squirrels. He is also overweight. We don’t know why.

Our veterinarian lectures us about Jack’s weight.  He also can’t believe how fat, old yet healthy he is.  Our vet also tells us to never feed him table scraps.  Before people judge us, and by the way, we don’t give a crap if you do, I would like to define our “table scraps”:  These are Jack’s table scraps.

Grilled Pork Tenderloin Medallions drizzled with a balsamic glaze accompanied with Sauteed Mushrooms and Garlic Toast.  It’s His go to meal.

Rainbow Trout lightly dusted with seasoned Snoqualmie Falls pancake mix, crispy fried in olive oil with Steamed Cauliflower and Broccoli.

“We can never smell it” Grilled Sockeye Salmon over hickory coals and garlic asparagus.  Jackdog pisses outside.

Chicken Parmesan with Vine Ripened Tomatoes stolen from neighbor’s garden to create a bowl full of Basil Marinara.

The Ridiculous Rueben:  St. Patrick’s Day is the only day Jack requests the most expensive corned beef, cabbage, and cheese.  This comes with toasted Rye and a special sauce.  Complimentary spilled beer on the side.

Cajun Catfish fry with Caramelized Onions.  (Mardi Gras comes more than once a year for our Jackdog.)

Grilled Halibut with Lemon Basil Vinaigrette and Roasted Brussels Sprouts.  (Jackdog likes this with a cheap white wine.)

Roasted Chicken with Rosemary and Buttery Brown Sugar Butternut Squash.

Backyard Marshall Burger:  Look it up.  It’s posted on my blog.

Grilled Brats with caramelized onions, sauteed mushrooms and peppers.  (Jackdog loves this while watching baseball or football.  He’s a great admirer of both sports, and I’ve never witnessed him spill a beer.)

JackDog-SteakJackdog’s Favorite:  Ribeye Steak.  No sides.

One might think my cooking must be dreadful if such culinary delights become scraps. Quite the contrary.  I make enough for five.  We have another large dog as well.  I also save the fifth helping for myself.  Piss on the cats.  They can eat rats.

Happy Birthday, Jackdog.  Keep waging.

 

JacksSteakDinner

Shrimp and Kiss These Grits

When traveling anywhere, I examine the menus prior to ordering anything.   More importantly, I also recognize hospitality.  That being written, if I choose one item on any menu and receive proper hospitality, everyone receives a tip.

Shrimp & GritsIf you ever go to Kentucky, order the Shrimp and Grits from “Proof on Main” in Louisville.  You won’t regret the tip, the grits, nor the hospitality.

Tip Friendly.

 

Mi Espeedo (My Speedo)

My wife and I are in Italy.  Other than sitting down to dine, or walking hand in hand for miles absorbing the cuisine and menu sightseeing, we really haven’t acknowledged one another.

Originally planning to update my daily Italian food blog, I have bumped into a few obstacles on this trip to Rome and other neighboring cities.  Gluttony, Sloth, Extreme Gluttony, Sloth, Premier Gluttony, Sloth and Epic Gluttony.  Behold, my seven Italian traveling sins.

After squeezing in a few extra morsels of anything that ends with a vowel movement, we additionally manage to crawl to the local Roman Colosseum, and Pantheon for some historical sightseeing.  They all make you think of your next meal, for it could be your last.  (Even though my wife is tagging along, since we are too busy to talk while eating and sleeping, she is merely a white Alfredo shadow sauce of myself.)

At this point of our journey, I can only explain my culinary exploits by means of a Speedo.  The Speedo salesmen around these parts are not profiting from the likes of me.  Shares in the Speedo market have plummeted twenty percent since my arrival.  Each time my wife asks me to finish her meal, that’s one more Speedo I won’t purchase simply since they don’t carry a “control top” variety.

Chow

 

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Immortality in India

Three days of sickness in India makes one wish to be safe in a hospital anywhere but India.  We leap to conclusions while serving time in the bathroom.  “I’ll never eat again!!!  I’ll never drink again!!”  Typical eating and drinking hangover phrases. For those three days, I’d pretty much written my will, cashed in my chips and called those I love to say “goodbye”.  Today, I’ve never felt better and I’ve figured it out.  If you drink the India Cool Aid, you develop an understanding of the India Cool Aid.  Suffering for three days is much like penance.  “If you eat our food and survive for three days, you are allowed to stay for an additional thirteen days, and enjoy yourself because the worst is behind you.”

My brother, Steve, an immortal, taught me something about getting sick when fishing on the open sea.  It also applies to visiting India.  In India, you are always waiting to get sick.     If someone jumps on a boat, thinking they will be tossing their breakfast from here to there, well that’s what will happen.  With this mind set, you are, inevitably, going to get sick.  Steve, in the holiest of words once said, “Drink a bunch of beer, throw up while you’re catching a fish, and keep fishing, you pansy.  Your mind shouldn’t be worried about your stomach.  Your mind should be worried about other things like having a good time!  WOOOOOOO!”  I’m just quoting that from my brother, Steve’s, Bible.

After those three days of illness, I really have felt exceptionally better.  I’m having fun with my fellow Chennai brothers, eating anything I want, not wishing to die or provide a will and testament, and having a great time. Lessons sometimes follow pain.  Ultimately, with certain sacrifices, those lessons should remain fun.

In the name of the Father, Son, The Holy Sprit, and Steve…….Amen

Wishful Blogging

As we all know, Christmas is right around the corncob pipe, so we can all develop our Christmas lists of items, or in my case, just simply magical ideas to hope for this holiday season.

1) I wish our 2 dogs and 2 cats could sleep, just once, past four in the morning.

2) I wish our cats knew the difference between cat boxes and carpet boxes.

3) I wish my mother could get brand new ears enabling us to have a phone conversation unlike this: Ben: “Mom, I heard you are going to Alaska!”

Mom:  “What? You think I like Battle Star Galactica???”

4) I wish one of our neighbors would stop placing his yard waste, which isn’t yard waste, in our bin in the middle of the night.

5) I wish not to end up in jail if said neighbor does it again.

6) I wish my sister, Patricia, bless her soul, if only for a day, could text in a language known as English.

7) I wish it would finally rain in Seattle, thus ending this drought.

8) I wish my wife understood that two closets full of shoes just isn’t enough.

9) I wish some of our neighbors would acknowledge us by a different gesture other than two large middle fingers.

10) (this is another inside one, but many of us throughout the world have wonderful friends who could really use this gift) I wish my friend, Chuck, could learn how to swear a little more often.  He’s just so pious.

11) I wish I wasn’t surprised in the morning so often after eating asparagus the previous night.

12) I wish Sasquatch would stop by for some holiday cheer.  Knowing his celebrity status and how these hairy bipeds feel regarding pictures and autographs, I’d merely request a lock of his or her hair.  That would simply make all my lifelong thoughts and dreams a reality.  And, my wife would no longer think I am crazy.

And for the lucky number 13) I wish Charlie Sheen, Mel Gibson, and Tiger Woods would all show up caroling at our doorstep on Christmas Eve………just before descending on an escalator to Hell.

This is my humble list, and I don’t think it’s too much to ask.  I wish for no presents, not one.  If I could add one item to this list, and I think this is the only one that may be a stretch, I would wish for the Swedish Chef to prepare our holiday feast. For those Muppet fans, I’d try and write his tune so you could hum it in your heads, but my Swedish is a little off.  For those people who don’t know who this famed chef is, you may ignore this last part. I only know three words: Bork Bork Bork.

Happy Holidays

Thanksgiving Traditions

We all have our Thanksgiving traditions.  Some people uncomfortably hold hands and pray giving thanks for what they are receiving on the table.  Some people don’t pray at all but give thanks to that mouth guttering turkey on the table.  Some people don’t have turkey at all.  I’ll brighten this up a bit.

Our family of 13 had many traditions, but only one of them was truly glorious.  It wasn’t the nose bleeding fights we’d have in the basement that thankful day causing our father to ban us from boxing gloves.  He was a wise man, but bare knuckles weren’t a wise alternative for us……brothers and sisters both.  It wasn’t someone drinking so much eggnog that precious day causing them to throw up at the dinner table, thus causing me not to partake in Mom’s exquisite cuisine.  It wasn’t even mom being irritated because, in later years, that there was a beer can in every sacred picture.  Mom wasn’t, is not, and never will be a drinker.  That’s probably why she’s 80 something and in better shape than all of her children.  This other tradition is one I believe most can relate. There are three rounds of Thanksgiving dinner.  The first round consists of mass quantities of food, mixed in with someone, (my nephew, Dean), vomiting, followed by those capable of witnessing that event, and actually finishing their dinner.  Second round:  Mom and the sisters doing dishes until next Thanksgiving came around the calender.  Third round: The boys becoming hungry enough to make turkey sandwiches two hours after eating turkey, mash potatoes, sweet potatoes, (I once remember swimming in mom’s gravy as though imagining we could actually afford a pool), and as usual, some idiot would show up with this weird salad known as a Waldorf.  This contains fruit.  I am a fruitcake and I love fruit but not on Thanksgiving.  That thankful day, I would say “no thanks” to fruit.  When I sat down at the table, I was watching Carnivore Central, and nobody was going to change my channel.

Now for the best tradition of all.  It wasn’t always just mom, dad, and the 13 of us in this humble house.  Brothers and Sisters eventually began getting married (to other people who were not related to us…..sorry that happens in some states) and started having children of their own.  That added a bit to the table. Remarkably, we also had friends showing up to mother’s magnificent feast.  So, now we’re talking about five or six hundred thousand people we have eating, drinking, fighting and throwing up.  Growing older and a bit more crotchety, and mysteriously wiser (that usually doesn’t happen with men my dad’s age), he, my father, wanted these people, sons, daughters, uncles, aunts, friends, sons in law, daughters in law, potatoes, turkeys and people he didn’t even know to get the Hell out of his and my mother’s house.  Therefore, the ideal tradition began.  He confiscated all the keys of people capable driving home with their children and started each one of their cars up.  Sometimes, when dad made a point, it didn’t have to be with words.  He was a man of action.  With exhausted fumes blowing through our block, driveway and house, everyone collectively said, “well I guess this party’s over…..see you next year”.

I never knew my father was a genius.

Happy Thanksgiving.