This is a guest post by my Aunt Haya who recently shared a very sweet story about food, connections and memories. I love food stories. I like hearing where food came from, how it's changed, and the associations we make with our food; those moments that join us together. I agree with my Aunt that in this over stimulated fast paced world it's nice to have these kinds of connections to make us stop a moment and reflect on the various ways that our food comes into our lives. I also love how so many recipes, when shared, keep the name of the person who gifted them to us.
This evening my congregation will be hosting a group of 32 members of
a congregation in Maryland who are on a 10 day tour of Israel with
their Rabbi. After many guided tours to historical sites
they are looking forward to sitting and talking with folks who live
here. I have been asked to contribute my
three bean salad to the meal. I am always glad to make and share it. While assembling the ingredients I stopped to think about it's entry into our lives.
Nowadays, three bean salad is well known all over the US and multiple
variations are on the web. But while living in Houston (in the late 1960s), my husband and I made sure that each of us would have some private
time each week, with each of our children. On one such outing I went with our son Daniel to attend an outdoor performance of an abridged version of some
Gilbert and Sullivan operetta out on a lawn of The University of
Houston. I think that it was the Pirates of Penzance, but am not sure.
I did not recognize anyone sitting near us in the audience
but Daniel soon picked up a conversation with a boy near his age. I
introduced myself to his mother and learned that they were in Houston
for the summer while her husband, a school teacher, took summer classes
at U of H, in order to eventually qualify to become a school principal
in their home town somewhere I think in Arkansas or Alabama. He was
often busy attending those summer program classes or working in the
university library on his homework, so she and their son were
exploring Houston on their own.
I invited them to join our family
picnic the next week in Herman Park on the 4th of July--speeches, fire
works and all. They were glad to accept and she brought three bean
salad that she'd made. We'd never tasted one before. We all enjoyed it
so I asked for her recipe. She wrote out on a piece of paper which I copied on to a file card after I returned home. I added her
name Eula Ross. We got together only once or twice more during that summer, but
three bean salad became a staple in our family's favorite summer
recipes; particularly as a contribution to buffets and picnics.
Here in Israel the recipe has changed somewhat. I add diced fresh
rosemary needles (that I pick fresh from the shrubs) to the chopped parsley in the original recipe and often use
chickpeas for the third bean.
Today I found that I needed to
purchase more chickpeas so used red beans as I have no red onion and wanted
to add color other than the chopped sweet red pepper to the salad. I use less sugar in the dressing that Eula Ross recommended and
the minimum quantity of oil. But each time I prepare this dish,
whether or not I check the details on the old file card or fly free
with improvisations, I think a special thanks to Eula Ross where ever
she is now.
I am sharing this story with you because in this day and age of
instant communication, information from people whom one never meets,
an entire rainbow of recipes for any dish for which one could
possible conceive of hankering, this older, slower, deeper time of
meeting a stranger who became an acquaintance and shared her recipe
and it's evolution to fit my current location and dietary preferences,
pleases me a great deal.
Eula Ross' Three Bean Salad
2 cups each green string beans, yellow string beans, red beans or
pinto beans,
2 stalks of celery cut into cubed shape pieces
1/2 red union diced
1 cup chopped fresh parsley
1/2 cup chopped bell peppers
1/2 cup vinegar
1/3 cup sugar
1/4 to 1/2 cup oil
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
1/4 teaspoon fresh ground black pepper
Whisk the five dressing ingredients together and pour over the
vegetables.
Mix together cover and chill in fridge.
Keeps for 10 days
Aunt Haya's changes:
1 Tablespoon of chopped fresh rosemary to the parsley
I used frozen cut yellow and green beans which I steam over boiling water
just until they thaw, so that they are still a bit crisp
I sometimes
substitute chick peas for the red or pinto beans - I soak which ever of
the three that I use over night, then cook them myself, drain them
before adding to the salad. (I find commercial canned beans of all
three types, over cooked (too soft) and too salty)
I use only 1 teaspoon of salt
About 1/3 cup of oil
reduce the amount of sugar
I like to use apple cider vinegar
2 comments:
I love this story of food, friendships, and how it shows that though things change, so much remains the same.
My favorite food story from my childhood is my Mom's pea soup. Mom loved to read about food but to spend time actually cooking when one could be reading, not so much. But 1 winter day she wanted soup. My dad who ate everything refused it, the kids refused it, the cats refused it. Event the raccoons refused it by dumping the pot all over our back step where it froze for a week.
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