The first time I met my wife’s family, before we were romantically
entwined, it was New Year’s Day.
Wait…that was the second time I met them. The first time we were 12 years old, but
that’s a story for the book. So it was
New Year’s Eve. She explains to me that
her family has a huge celebration for New Year’s and it involves a massive,
beautiful batch of paella that requires a full day’s work…would I like to come? I have never turned down a feast. Count me in! I arrived in the early afternoon, walked into
the kitchen and offered a hand. I didn’t
leave the kitchen again until it was time to sit down and eat. Her father put me to work, and as his sous
chef we prepared two giant pans of paella for at least 20 people. The table stretched from the kitchen counter,
through the dining area into the living room.
Prosecco and wine flowed, dogs played and friends caught up and
celebrated a new year. I will never
forget it. If a home or a meal could
have arms that swept people up in gigantic hugs, this family, home and meal
would do it. I was smitten by her and
her family. The rest shortly became
history.
I have been the Paella Day sous chef to my father-in-law ever
since and want it no other way. We chop
veggies, clean squid and crabs with the kids, de-beard mussels, listen to
music, tell stories, drink wine and beer, dance a little, snap a few towels,
talk about fascinating things we have heard on NPR, and share food
philosophy. He probably stands in the
kitchen chopping for four or five hours before we all arrive. The kids and I work with him for another four
or five hours before the paella is about ready to eat. Over that time the house fills with friends
and family, most of whom wander in and out of the kitchen to prep an appetizer,
lend a hand with chopping a veggie, or pour some drinks. If all goes right, the kitchen will be filled
with people laughing, hugging and dancing.
New invitees will come in lured by the scents and oooooh and aaaahhhh;
perennials will comment on what seems new and different. The kids will enthusiastically perform a task
for a few minutes before the Wii beckons.
My two will always joyfully dissect the crabs. At some point, the kitchen filled with joyful
noise, most of the work done, my father in law will look at me, grin, and say,
”Now this is what it’s all about. I
don’t even care about the paella. I just
want my kitchen filled with all of this.
Who needs a quiet day?” I will
laugh and tell him some story I just read from Anthony Bourdain about great
meals being about far more than just the food.
New Year’s Eve 2013, technically February 2, was no
different. The crowd was smaller, but no
less jovial. We had a family engagement
to celebrate. My brother-in-law is newly
engaged and his fiancée and her family were with us. Prosecco was popped, toasts were shared, too
much was eaten. We remembered friends
and family strewn across the globe who we wished could be with us. We sang along to Billy Joel, Johnny Cash, and
Jim Croce. We nibbled on cheese and
crackers, cherry tomatoes, carrots and hummus and sampled homemade beer. We put together colorful, beautiful pans of
paella, dreamt of living on Barcelona’s Las Ramblas, and I mentioned an Anthony
Bourdain meal. At least seven different
people cut, stirred, arranged, cleaned or blended some part of the paella. We laughed and wept at the romance of an
amazing marriage proposal underwater off Catalina. We offered wedding date and site suggestions. We surprised my wife with a birthday cake and
serenade, then ate her cake, and the engagement cake, ice cream and had some
espresso and after-dinner drinks.
Then…oh no!…the forgotten prosciutto e melone appetizer which we had to pay proper respect and eat. Dishes and glasses got washed even if we
forgot to turn on The Big Chill
soundtrack. The kids decided they had
had enough – one went to sleep under a blanket on the couch, not wanting to
miss a thing while the other tread dangerously close to meltdown stage before
we scooped him up and got him in the car.
Amazingly, the day was over. Nine
hours went by in a blink.
This is the way many of our family celebrations go. Meals planned or improvised, always a team
effort, invariably turn out delicious flavored by the love of family, great
company and engaging conversation. Time
goes by in a flash, we laugh and cry joyfully and plan the next
celebration. We toast to friends and
family, not the least of which is, “To Chelsea” while one kid says, “Mom, who
is Chelsea?”
Thomas Keller said a recipe has no soul; the soul comes from the
chef. A lot of soul goes into each and
every family meal, as it does for millions.
In all our foodie-ness, let’s not lose sight of that. The food is important and it is nice to taste
amazing flavors, fresh ingredients and well-crafted combinations. But when we get down to it, it is about our
conversations, our laughter and joy, our love for each other.
Go plan a celebration and fill your house. I need to go plan a birthday celebration.
3 comments:
Loved reading this. Congrats to Dan and Laura. Cant wait for another Leighton get-together!
This piece is a treasure. You're one lucky guy. And boy, that paella looks awesome!
Blogged about this in my own way some time back; you're a dad, so I figure you'll appreciate it:
http://mcproco.wordpress.com/2011/09/13/the-point-of-everything/
Again, nice work.
mcproco.wordpress.com
Thanks so much. Just read the post you linked to...Love it. Sometimes us foodies can get so wrapped up in the food that we forget the real point - the relationships, conversations and fun.
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