There we were, all dressed up in flowery dresses with new spring coats, hats and purses to match, shiny Mary Janes clicking noisily down the walk in the Easter Parade to St. Barth’s. All the boys looked stiff and uncomfortable in their little suits, white shirts and ties, but they, too, strolled beside their parents on the way to Mass, one beautiful Easter Sunday morning in the forties.
1948
COUSINS CONNIE AND PAT
We’d been up several hours, eager to find the colored eggs and treasure-laden baskets that the Easter Bunny had left us, along with the new outfits. We’d enjoyed the traditional Easter breakfast of fruit cocktail with bananas, frittata, toasted Easter Bread and Café’ Latte; fitting fare to break the abstinence of the past 40 days of Lent. Now we were going to church to celebrate the religious glory of the meaning of Easter.
Meanwhile at home, sauce was simmering for the homemade cheese ravioli that was always served at Easter dinner. There would be chicken and braccioli cooking away in the sauce until oh! -- so tender!
The usual mountain of tossed salad appeared with the ravioli, and then we would have a course of baked ham, sweet potatoes glazed in the ham juice and pineapple slices that were brushed with brown sugar and broiled.
Dessert was usually some type of layered Jello-O fantasy, depending on what was all the rage that year, and the ever present nut roll. Of course, there was never any lack of candy, including what came in the baskets and the luscious fruit and nut or marshmallow nut eggs from the confectioners. The latter two were so rich, that slices were cut from the huge eggs and quartered. A little went a long, long way!
We usually had our Easter Dinner about 1:00 p.m. and then we’d go visiting to the homes of our relatives, to be back in the evening in time for them to come and visit us! Most of the time, folks were a bit hungry again by then, so we’d be munching ham sandwiches, hard-boiled eggs from the hunt, some pickles and pickled peppers and there would be plenty of sweet Easter Bread to toast and butter, along with nut roll and Jello-O. Thus passed another holiday to be remembered by the scent of spring flowers, and the tantalizing aromas and flavors of something good.
When our children were young,
in the sixties and early seventies, we still did the new outfits for them and had much fun awaiting the Easter Bunny and hunting eggs. Our breakfast held as true to tradition as always and even today the grandchildren get new duds, while the bill of fare doesn’t vary to any great extent. Sometimes we have turkey for dinner, since we get the yen for it by then, so far from Thanksgiving, but we have never done without cheese ravioli in my memory. I make Easter Bread and nut roll--if there isn’t any in the freezer from Christmas, and most of the time I make the ravioli, too, although you can now buy them frozen, and of quite good quality.
Spring and Easter always bring about opportunities for new memories, and why not? Spring is the beginning of everything young and fresh and smelling sweetly of new life. It is time to remember the past and relive the traditional, while we savor the aromas of the present world around us.
(See EASTER MENUS & RECIPES)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
EASTER SUNDAY BREAKFAST
MENU
FRUIT COCKTAIL WITH SLICED BANANAS
TOASTED EASTER BREAD
FRITTATA
KIELBASA
COFFEE -- CAFÉ LATTE
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
EASTER BREAKFAST
RECIPES
Frittata
Preheat Oven to 325
9x11x2 Glass Baking Dish
(Butter heavily on bottom & sides)
1 lb Loose Italian Sausage, brown and drain well
8 oz Pepperoni, sliced thin
8 Eggs - ˝ C Milk - 1 tsp Salt - ˝ tsp Baking Powder
Arrange Pepperoni slices to layer bottom of baking dish.
Blend Eggs, Milk, Salt and Baking Powder in blender for 1 minute.
Pour over Pepperoni in dish.
Sprinkle cooked Sausage over the Eggs, pressing under the batter slightly with a spoon.
Bake until Butter Knife inserted in center comes out clean and top of Frittata starts to brown--20 to 30 minutes.
Cut in 2 inch squares and serve straight from the baking dish.
Easter Bread
Large Bowl for mixing and raising
Large Cookie Sheets for Baking
4 Packs Rapid Rise Yeast, dissolved in 1 C very warm Water
After yeast is dissolved add 4 T Sugar, dissolve & set aside
12 Large Eggs Beat in Mixer 5 minutes on High speed. Beat in 30 drops of Yellow Food Coloring (a bit more if you like a deep yellow color.)
While Eggs are beating:
Heat 1 13 oz Can Evaporated Milk Heated to very HOT
Remove from heat and add 1 STICK BUTTER, allow to melt
Cool the milk mixture to warm and add to the yeast mixture - set aside
Slowly add 3 C SUGAR to the beating Eggs, beating constantly and scraping bowl until the mixture is creamy and light.
Beat in 4 oz. Pure Vanilla.
Alternately add approximately 14 C All Purpose Flour and the Yeast/Milk Mixture beating well each time. Start and end with the FLOUR. To the first Cup of Flour and 1 T SALT.
When the batter is too heavy for the mixer, use a wooden spoon.
After all flour and liquid is used, flour a board well and turn out the dough, working in enough more flour, as needed, to make a VERY stiff dough.
When dough is stiff enough, KNEAD 5 to 10 minutes, or until dough is elastic and shiny.
Oil a BIG BOWL on sides and bottom in which to raise the dough. Put ball of dough into pan, punch down a bit and turn over, oil side up. Cover and let rise in a warm place until double. This takes 4 to 6 hours with rapid rise yeast, and up to 12 hours for regular yeast, because of all the sugar and vanilla. DON’T PANIC! Easter Bread is a creation of “patience”.
When dough is risen the first time, punch down, cover and let rise again until double. (Takes about half the time of the first rise.)
When dough is doubled, cut it into 8 pieces. Form round smooth balls about the size of a grapefruit. Place on lightly oiled cookie sheet 2 or 3 to a sheet---or---
Shape 3 rolled lengths of dough into a braid, and place an egg into the dough for a ‘head’. Place 2 or 3 dolls on each sheet. (Draw a ‘face’ on the baby doll after the bread is baked and cooled.---OR--- make any combination of loaves and dolls in any size you desire.
Cover loaves with clean towels and let rise in warm place until double. (2 to 4 hours) Again, Don’t Panic. Loaves need to be airy and light or they won’t bake through. Time and Patience are your best friends when you are baking Easter Bread.
Preheat Oven to 325. Bake on middle rack, one or two trays at a time, depending on size of your oven. Do not bake on double racks, however. Bread takes about 20 minutes to bake--check in 15. Medium brown color and a hollow sound when tapped, indicates bread is done. Remove from sheet and cool on rack.
You can decorate the loaves with confectioner’s icing, or if you wish a shiny brown loaf, beat an egg together with a tablespoon of milk and brush on loaves before baking.
(I made enough dough to make 4 baby dolls and 8 small loaves of bread to give as gifts and for Easter Breakfast here. I started at 4 P.M. on Tuesday and helped myself to some 'patience' by letting it rise through the night. I finished the baking at 1:00 P.M. on Wednesday afternoon...and slept most of today. 8-)
Happy Easter, EVERYONE and enjoy your day of Memories!
I"ve never had an easter like that..my mom was talkin bout cheese ravliold\e the other day it sounds good i've nevr had it n all that food for easter wow
by night light (PM , CC ) on Friday April 6, 2007 @ 12:42 AM
You have the most beautiful posts... And you have everything I love, pictures, stories and recipes.. It's a feast for the senses..
You've made me want to dig up my old Easter photos growing up and those of my two teen girls.. One parishoner at my church said I dressed up my girls for Sunday Mass like it was Easter Sunday each week... I loved those days...bonnets, white gloves, lacy dresses..adorable !
Happy Easter and thank you for such an endearing post..
by AZRON (PM , CC ) on Friday April 6, 2007 @ 12:15 PM
Thanks for the beautiful post and memories GrannyJo.....I hope you have a very special Easter this year. Can't wait for Spring though, my memories except for one blizzard way always warmer then this. Love and hugs
by Gecko (PM , CC ) on Friday April 6, 2007 @ 10:55 PM
Love your blog and will book mark it. Thanks for the recipes! I ran to just put on a pot to boil my eggs, got to have colored Easter eggs! n. Have a lovely Easter with your family!
by n. lynn (PM , CC ) on Saturday April 7, 2007 @ 5:55 PM
Note to Self: Never visit this blog on an empty stomach. Just reading this made my tummy GROWL. Now I have to go scrounge up some dinner. Somehow, yogurt and fruit doesn't sound that charming now.
Have a wonderful Easter. (Thanks for the recipes.)
by Lucy. (PM , CC ) on Sunday April 15, 2007 @ 1:58 PM
Granny Jo, Thanks for your visit to my blog and your kind comments, you are great :)
Wanted to let you know I have been down about 2 weeks now with the cold/flu/bronchitis and was thinking of you and how ill you were :(
I have a friend who has been calling me, checking one me, he says go to the DR girl, I don't want you to *leave me*. He's a black man, a long time friend, he calls croaking leaving...
Told him *I ain't going nowhere yet* lol
Yesterday he called me and asked me and said it again so today I called him, I think it scared him until I said I just called you to let you know I ain't croaked yet, I am still among the living...
The poor man, I think I scared the crap out of him when I called today, my voice sounds so awful...
He is a crack head so I am certain his addiction (drugs) doesn't make reality any easier for him, I was trying to ally some fears for him (that I am still alive) and in calling him I think I scared the crap out of him...
Now idea why I am telling you all of this Granny Jo NONE!!!
My life long best friend who passed away in 95 was married to him so he and I have been like forever friends, I think he *sees* her in me *sighs* perhaps that's why it scares him so when i get sick, since she is gone and we all remained so close all those years...
Life is strange Granny Jo, I am sure you can relate...
by Gecko (PM , CC ) on Monday April 30, 2007 @ 2:36 AM
Thanks for your comments and concern everyone! I am having some problems that keep me from blogging very often, but my check up yesterday was promising. I hope we will have the swelling in my legs under control soon.
I've still got about a half year of input from "I Smell A Memory" to share yet, so here's keeping my fingers crossed that all goes well. I hope you all enjoy MAMA! 8-)
Many Blogstream members are there
already! Quotes from members: "It's like blog lite!" -- "I like the instant
gratification!" -- "Stop spectating, get in the game!"
If you have not joined in, you are really missing out!
And you have everything I love, pictures, stories and recipes..
It's a feast for the senses..
You've made me want to dig up my old Easter photos growing up and those of my two teen girls..
One parishoner at my church said I dressed up my girls for Sunday Mass like it was Easter Sunday each week...
I loved those days...bonnets, white gloves, lacy dresses..adorable !
Happy Easter and thank you for such an endearing post..
Lucy
Sorry I was late Granny Jo
Hope you had a Happy Day
~Reba~
I loved your story.
Have a wonderful Easter
My mom and June make Easter bread - but I cannot tell you if the recipe is the same
Thanks for the memories! Cute pictures too!
ron
n.
Just reading this made my tummy GROWL. Now I have to go scrounge up some dinner. Somehow, yogurt and fruit doesn't sound that charming now.
Have a wonderful Easter. (Thanks for the recipes.)
Enjoy a classic Bugs Bunny...I laugh everytime I see this !
I WANNA EEEESTA EGG !
Love Lucy
Myspace Falling Objects
Love Lucy
Thanks for your visit to my blog and your kind comments, you are great :)
Wanted to let you know I have been down about 2 weeks now with the cold/flu/bronchitis and was thinking of you and how ill you were :(
I have a friend who has been calling me, checking one me, he says go to the DR girl, I don't want you to *leave me*. He's a black man, a long time friend, he calls croaking leaving...
Told him *I ain't going nowhere yet* lol
Yesterday he called me and asked me and said it again so today I called him, I think it scared him until I said I just called you to let you know I ain't croaked yet, I am still among the living...
The poor man, I think I scared the crap out of him when I called today, my voice sounds so awful...
He is a crack head so I am certain his addiction (drugs) doesn't make reality any easier for him, I was trying to ally some fears for him (that I am still alive) and in calling him I think I scared the crap out of him...
Now idea why I am telling you all of this Granny Jo NONE!!!
My life long best friend who passed away in 95 was married to him so he and I have been like forever friends, I think he *sees* her in me *sighs* perhaps that's why it scares him so when i get sick, since she is gone and we all remained so close all those years...
Life is strange Granny Jo, I am sure you can relate...
Reba
I've still got about a half year of input from "I Smell A Memory" to share yet, so here's keeping my fingers crossed that all goes well. I hope you all enjoy MAMA! 8-)