Showing posts with label heritage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heritage. Show all posts

Monday, January 2, 2017

I am apple butter.

I am apple butter.

I take planning and dedication.

My process is lengthy. I am slow-burning and hot to the touch. And I require constant attention and affection.

I am of the mountains. I belong with the hill people, those who appreciate the process. The togetherness. The ones who have biscuits and coffee no matter the time of day. I belong with those who bring me out of the dairy house for family, not just any old person who doesn’t understand the work that has gone into me. I am formed by old timers telling stories over me, praying over me and dedicating days to me

I started so humble-grown on a tree with so many just like me. Then I was taken from all I’ve ever known and while my neighbors got to stay, I’ve been mixed up with other kinds.  

Cooked down until I’m unrecognizable to those I spent my formative years with, taking on flavors of my new neighbors and those I’ll grow old with. I become something they’ll see as unnatural-away from my roots & limbs.

I keep well, for the long-haul: loyal and steady. But I must be canned quickly-I’ve required a lot of sugar to sweeten me up. But that’s apple butter and that’s me. I’m not quite sweet though it seems I should be.

The churning is constant. The turning over and movement from one spot to the other but always in the kettle, What do I want? Who will I be? Where do I want to live? What will my life turn out to be?

I like to be surrounded by people, in theory, but when it comes down to it one at a time is all I can handle. I am heritage, roots and Appalachia. I am fall foliage, sweaters and family gatherings, long and tedious. Fun at first but I quickly turn into a lot of work. More work than I’ll be worth later.

I’m messy and I don’t go easily from the fire. The work never stops until you’ve put me under pressure and shut me up, finally.  Enclosed with thick, black cauldron walls to the cool home of a jar-glass walled and exposed.

I am meant for breakfast with biscuits. Scratch made. More work. And isn’t that just like me? The work never ends. I can’t stand alone, I have to go along with something else.

Cans. Jars. Lids. Rims. Labels. Time. Shelf-space. I wait impatiently surrounded by jars that look like the new me. Looking for our turn: to show the unique flavors I have to offer.

Although I may look like it, I’m not like the others. I want you to like me just a bit more. To brag on me to your relatives and friends, “Now that’s a good jar of apple butter,” you’ll say and they’ll know what you mean, as compared to the others. And I’ll be secretly thrilled.

Maybe I’ll be that batch. The one. The batch they’ll remember each year as they count the hours-stirring when they say “I hope this years is as good as 1989s, now that was good apple butter.”


You’ll run out of me before next year. There’s never enough of me and I won’t make it till next October. So you’ll be left wanting more. But that’s the appeal, if I was around all the time, you’d take me for granted-I wouldn’t be special anymore. I’m not just any old jelly that’s easy to come by-I’m rare. 


Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Let's Talk About Heritage

My hometown has a (hmm... what's the word festival, street fair, gathering... any of those will work) every year on Memorial Weekend and it's called Heritage Days. At some point though I think my brother called it "hergtige" (like hedge but with a r and only 2 syllables) so when I think of this word and go to say it, it usually comes out wrong.

I digress. I've been thinking a lot about heritage lately for some reason. And in pondering on it I recently connected the dots to realize how deep my roots are here in Virginia. From at least 3 generations back (all of my great grandparents) were from Virginia. Those are deep roots folks. No wonder it's hard to imagine leaving sweet Virginia.

The balance between hanging on and letting go is difficult in any situation but in my case it has been hardest in maintaining my roots. Clearly my accent has not left me and many have told me it's gotten worse. And I take much pride in my home but what I don't understand is the shame some people feel. I am so proud of where I come from and the self-made people there.

In researching Appalachia it's been so nice to read positive views of the Appalachian people rather than the stereotypes. In my experience, it's the Appalachian people themselves that tend to speak more frequently of the locals regarding the typical stereotypes like welfare abuse, hillbilliness (new word alert) and ignorance. And while there's no shortage of those things in the world, certainly none of them are exclusive to Appalachia. And why would any of us want to encourage those stereotypes (anybody been watching Buckwild?? shame on you!)

I'm not someone to embrace the stereotypes and I will direct you to a post from forever ago about mountain intellectuals. I know plenty of them, people without formal education who know a lot more than most professors I've had. My mother is the youngest of 11 and was raised in a household where her mother made their clothes and her daddy worked in the mines. My daddy was raised by the hardest working woman I know and a man who preferred working for himself rather than for the man. Thank God for those roots. I carry them with me everyday.

In thinking of all this over the past weeks my mom's sister posted some old pictures of their family through the years and I wanted to share. After going "home" this weekend I will try to post some of my dad's family if I can get my hands on some. Hope you enjoy them and that some of them speak to you:

 
Christmas

My sweet papaw, I miss him so

My mamaw

The swoop bangs belong to my naked little mommy



This could potentially be my favorite picture of all time.
3 of my mom's sisters
 
 

Would love to hear about your heritage fellow bloggers. Take pride in it, it's made you who you are.