Archive for March, 2007

For my Sister(s)

Thursday, March 8th, 2007

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It’s International Women’s Day.

It’s also my little sister’s birthday.

I was fourteen years old when she was born. It made no sense, it was crazy: my ma was in her early forties! I was in high school, trying to figure out algebra, boys, girls, and my new love of acting. It was all a bit much, really. I wondered why my parents couldn’t have been more, well, careful.

That red-faced scrunched-up being grew into a charming little blonde-haired girl. I grew into feminism. While Lydia discovered language, learnt how to read and got signed up for ballet lessons, I started writing for the feminist paper in town, haunted alternative bookstores, and took a women’s studies course that rocked my world. I told Mr Turner, my Grade thirteen English teacher I could not possibely participate in his all-male list of authors and said I’d read an equal amount of women authors and write about each one. I created an eclectic, polyglot reading list, cribbed from an obscure anthology, but that’s how I discovered Anais Nin, Mary Shelley, Virginia Woolf. I read Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own while working at The Hudson’s Bay Department Store in the women’s change room. Politics and women’s liberation and social change were still abstractions to me, glamorous things that only happened downtown, miles from the two-storey, aluminium-sided suburban house we lived in. But I read that book, and it changed all the molecules of my body.

As someone who often writes in autobiographical modes, I’m always amazed at how unevenly memory works among those who know each other well: how family members each remember a different part of their shared story.

My sister recalls that I often took her to the women’s bookstore and let her choose a book that I would then purchase for her. She also tells me that I took her to see I’ve Heard the Mermaids Singing, a proto-lesbian film from the 1980’s, and then took her for a walk and told her I was a lesbian. (I don’t remember the film part).

I remember that she said, thoughtfully, “Hmmm. Lesbian. I like that word.” (She doesn’t remember that part).

My sister isn’t little anymore. She’s a beautiful woman with a ready laugh and a talent for drawing and painting: the walls of her home are filled with her art. We see each other once or twice a year. We enjoy each other’s company. We gossip about family and swap memories. I sure do love her. But we struggle a lot, too, with tensions and and anger that, I think, have nothing to do with each other really, residues of difficult childhoods that we trigger in each other.

After years of demonstrations, collectives, organizing committees, coalitions, rifts, splinters, failures and victories, I’m still a feminist, though not so much of an activist these days. But that’s not to say there isn’t anything to be active about. Where I work, women make the majority of non-tenured contract faculty, pulling brutal hours for peanuts - no benefits, no security. In that sense, we are a microcosm of the rest of the world.

I’ve always felt it was rather special that my sister was born on International Women’s Day. Whatever I managed to glean about feminism, miraculous messages-in-a-bottle that washed up on my suburban shores, I tried, with great earnestness, to pass on to her. She would alternately blink solemnly or shrug good-naturedly, and go about her business.

Happy Birthday sis!

Happy International Women’s Day!

Angels in the Kitchen, Part 1

Monday, March 5th, 2007

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Hearts like accordions, opening and closing in a zigzag pattern of jagged notes.

It happens, and sometimes it’s OK: disagreements and arguments can clean out a lot of crap. But it can also feel disastrous, a circuit of anger, shame, disappointment coursing through you. Too difficult. Too tiring.

“Here’s what I think,” said The Guitar Player, in desperation. “I think we should plan a meal every week, shop for it, and cook it together on Friday night. I don’t think we should try do anything else. That’s what we’re good at. That’s what we’ll do.”

I wanted a summit, a G8 meeting. I wanted resolutions and rules of engagement. A grid. A Plan. A Cure.

“We’ll do that too,” said The Guitar Player, gravely, sensibly. (It’s best to agree with me at times like these). “But for now, let’s just cook.”

[“We cook together like angels,” I had said to The Food Columnist, just that week.]

It’s true. And not everyone can.

Crepe Day was that week. I didn’t know how to solve these impasses we kept getting into, but for some reason, I knew about Crepe Day.

So we were thinking about crepes as we went to Dufferin Grove Farmers Market. And mushrooms. Where I come from, mushrooms cure all ills, so there had to be mushrooms. The concept of mushroom crepes led to the purchase of organic shitakes. But then we got seduced: by Jessie Sosnicki’s organic perogies (Jessie is Ukrainian and Ben is Polish, and between them they have enough relatives and friends to make 2000 perogies at a time, at a church kitchen near her farm). We got distracted by brick-oven-baked bread. And, finally, by a First Nations man selling fish he’d caught just that morning in Georgian Bay. He was a large, unassuming man with a gruffly polite manner. His prices were so cheap. We had to change our plans.

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We walked back to my place through the snowy park, hand in hand, full of delicious ideas. We ate the perogies as soon as we got home. Those perogies are in dangerous competition with my ma’s. Don’t tell her I said that.

Dinner that Friday was fried fish with almond cream mushroom sauce, over rice. We slow-danced to jazz as the rice cooked. We tasted each others’ seasonings, made suggestions, moved around each other gently, smoothly, like we were still dancing.

Breakfast the next morning was rediculous excess: buttermilk crepes with raspberry filling, whipped cream and chcocolate shavings.

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Sometimes, you just pretend. Sometimes, you find the one thing that works, and just do that. Sometimes, that’s the cure.

Whitefish with Almond Cream Sauce
Serves 2

2 6-8 oz. Whitefish fillet
4 oz. vegetable or chicken stock
4 oz. Whipping cream
2 oz. Unsalted butter
salt & pepper
1 oz. Sliced almond
flour
2 oz. Dry white wine
2 oz. Oyster or Shiitake mushrooms, sliced (domestic button mushrooms may be substituted)

In heavy bottom skillet melt 1 oz. Butter over medium high heat. Add sliced mushrooms, sauté until golden, about 5 minutes. Add 1 tspn. flour, and stir until mushrooms are coated. Add sliced almonds, sauté 1 minute. Deglaze with white wine, scraping up any bits from the pan; simmer until liquid reduces to a glaze. Add warmed stock, and cream; simmer until sauce thickens, stirring constantly, about 7 minutes. Season with salt and pepper.

Melt remaining 1 oz. Butter in heavy skillet over medium high heat. Season fillets with salt & pepper, coat lightly with flour. Place fillets in skillet; sauté until just cooked through, about 2 minutes per side. Spoon sauce over fillets and serve.

Buttermilk Crepes
Yield: 12

2 eggs
1/4 cup sugar
1 cup buttermilk
1 tsp vanilla extract
1 tsp cinnamon
1 1/2 cups all purpose flour
1 tsp baking powder
2 tbsp unsalted butter, melted
sugar, for sprinkling

In a medium bowl, whisk together eggs, buttermilk and vanilla extract. Add sugar. In a separate bowl, sift together cinnamon, flour and baking powder. Whisk into buttermilk mixture and stir in melted butter. If too thick, add more buttermilk until a pourable consistency. Allow batter to sit 10-15 minutes before making. Heat a flat, non-stick pan over medium heat for 5 minutes. Grease lightly with oil or spray and pour about 2 oz of batter into the center of the pan. These crêpes will be thicker than usual crêpes. Cook for about 2-3 minutes, until edges brown. Lift crêpe gently with a spatula and flip over. Cook for 1 minute and remove from heat.

Winter Walking Meditation

Saturday, March 3rd, 2007

High Park, Toronto, March 3, 2007
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“So practice listening: turn off the radio, turn off the television, and just listen once in awhile. Listen to traffic or work sounds. Listen to your own thoughts. And, of course, listen to others.”

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“I think this profound kind of listening is the source of all inspiration and creativity…”

-Norman Fischer, Taking Our Places: The Buddhist Path to Truly Growing Up

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