Beth always favored ethnic neighborhoods. Her stock argument for living in the city was
“If we don’t live here, Mom, who will?”
This was a fairly old Italian neighborhood of small lots, tidy homes, occasional
two family homes, built that way in the ‘20’s and ‘30’s; the upstairs and
downstairs identical. There were sidewalks,
flower gardens and adventures. Like
police helicopters overhead, illuminating the bushes looking for a suspect, and
all the neighborhood out on their first and second story porches,
watching. Stories any mother likes to
hear.
Chrissie must have finished her degree in harpsichord
because she was back in Cleveland, taking her law degree at Case. Beth may have been back at school, too,
earning a degree that earned a living. I
think they were between boyfriends and especially partial to cheap
entertainment, like the second run movie theater on the corner. Experimenting with cooking, having parties
that involved a little money and a lot of friends.
Beth invited me to come to supper one night for a spaghetti
and pesto dish Chrissie was making as a trial run before trying it out live. I arrived and found the table prettily laid
and the two girls working in the kitchen.
Basil leaves, garlic cloves, pine nuts and olive oil was disappearing
into the mortar and pestle. I hung out
in the kitchen door, watching the two girls working. They decided they needed more basil. One of them went out on the back landing and
returned with a flat of tall and leggy basil seedlings. Past their prime they cost a pittance at the
corner nursery. They made excellent
pesto.
I don't think I have ever eaten pesto. But, with such good things in it, I will have to give it a try!
ReplyDeleteI love pesto, I make a vegan version and I use regular nuts in place of pine nuts because I don't like them. We freeze pesto in ice cube trays so we can enjoy the taste of summer during the winter.
ReplyDeleteJane x
I do not grow much that is edible but I do grow basil!
ReplyDeleteSpaghetti and pesto yummmmy :-).
ReplyDeleteI love pesto. Smear some on extra thin wood fired pizza crust and add some onion and whatever you've got...fabulous. What a great idea they had to get more basil cheap.
ReplyDeleteWe love pesto and have made it as well. It tasted so fresh.
ReplyDeleteYour slice of time spent at Beth and Chrissie's house sounded delightful. Makes me want to put out some herbs from some kit.
ReplyDeleteI was raised by a salt and pepper mom. It was years before I learned that there were other spices. I went wild! Now I'm a pesto fanatic. Love the glimpse into the neighbourhoods of bygone days that you bring to life!
ReplyDelete