Gulf News

When family bonds matter more than the food

- Margaret Renkl ■ Margaret Renkl is the author of Late Migrations: A Natural History of Love and Loss (forthcomin­g from Milkweed Editions in July 2019).

All autumn, in random hours, I’ve been looking for my great-grandmothe­r’s recipe for corn cakes. I have a perfectly serviceabl­e recipe for everyday cornbread, but it’s nothing like those corn cakes I find myself returning to in memory. I keep searching anyway because winter makes me long for those glistening golden discs that Mother Ollie made right on the stovetop, dropping a dollop of thin batter, pancake style, into a shallow pool of heated oil in her own cast-iron skillet. The circles would spread out in the oil, thinner and thinner, until they formed a kind of lace around the edges.

A properly formed corn cake is golden in the centre, soft and puffy, with lacy edges that are crisp and almost brown. Yes, yes, I know the internet is full of recipes for every possible kind of cornbread. The truth is that I don’t want to cook from a stranger’s recipe. I want to cook from a family recipe. It’s Thanksgivi­ng, when I am always most homesick for beloved elders no longer here. I am searching for a very particular taste, for a mixture of corn and salt and butter that will take me instantly back to a farmhouse in Lower Alabama, the house where my people lived for generation­s. I want my kitchen to be filled with the same scents that came from that old kitchen when the house was full of family.

The recipe I’m looking for might still turn up. In her life, my mother created inscrutabl­e taxonomies of every kind, and the cards in her recipe box were no exception. Just because a cornbread recipe isn’t in the bread section does not mean it isn’t in the box somewhere else. And there are hundreds of recipe cards that aren’t in the box at all anymore because Mom pulled them out and never put them back.

During the last years of her life, she ate supper at my house every night. Her own stove was unplugged for safety’s sake, and there was no reason for her to spend hours poring over recipes for dishes she was never going to cook.

When I was growing up, my mother put a hot meal on the table every night.

For me it is always both heartbreak­ing and comforting to open my mother’s recipe box on a rainy Sunday afternoon. The family Thanksgivi­ng recipes are there, of course — the squash dressing, creamed spinach and pecan pie that my children regard as holiday non-negotiable­s in the same way I did when I was in my 20s and feeling both the intoxicati­on and anxiety of independen­ce. Thanksgivi­ng is not a time for culinary experiment­ation, at least not in our family. There’s comfort in a traditiona­l holiday meal that goes far beyond the notion of comfort food.

But my mother’s recipe box is also a kind of living document, an annotated interplay of generation­s. Recipes in my great-grandmothe­r’s hand are adjusted in my grandmothe­r’s, and then again in my mother’s. Tucked behind Mom’s recipe for a ground-beef-and-sour-cream casserole is my recipe for spinach lasagna — I don’t remember copying it out for Mom, but I recognise the notebook paper I habitually used in graduate school. My children have grown up eating Sister Shubert’s rolls on Thanksgivi­ng Day, and they will not be brokenhear­ted if I never find Mother Ollie’s recipe for corn cakes, though I am not giving up the search. Even if I don’t find it in time, I hope my grandmothe­r’s recipe for yeast rolls, newly recovered from the unfathomab­le mysteries of my mother’s recipe box, will fill my kitchen with the scent of home. Perhaps the secret is in the buttermilk.

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