I once read that over the course of an average lifespan, an American will eat 73,646 pounds of food. Think about that. That’s over 36 tons of food. Apiece. No wonder recipe books sell so well! This came to mind recently as I was thumbing through one of my mother’s mementos. When she died I inherited her recipe box. In liquidity terms it’s worthless, but inside is a great deal of my childhood. I still find it poignant to look through her things although she died two-and-a-half years ago. The memories are thick and tangible. I only now had the courage to look through the foods she tried, liked, and sometimes didn’t. (Some have notes, for example, saying what a friend didn’t like.) We eat every day. And variety is important for health. So, recipes.
But not all cards are for things we eat. The one that really jarred me was the recipe for play dough. I grew up in a family of humble means, but not destitute. I know, and still recognize instantly that Play-Doh smell. It, along with Crayola, encapsulates childhood. But I remember Mom making play dough for us. The recipe is very simple: flour, water, salt, and a little oil (yes, it is edible) with food coloring. I remember trying to mix the coloring in by hand and ending up with stained skin until the dye wore off. And Play-Doh always makes me think of Silly Putty. I think as a kid I kind of supposed the two were married. Similar, but different in significant ways. Kind of like cats and dogs, in my juvenile mind.
Childhood is strange. We tend to cast a kind of rosy glow on it, even if it wasn’t very pleasant. In my case, Mom was my protector. I grew up without a father present and one of my greatest fears on becoming a father was that I didn’t know how to be one. My role models were television figures and men I’d met and admired in my own life. My father was a stranger but Mom made play dough for us at home when we couldn’t afford to buy it at the store. After my daughter was born, and was old enough for them, the smells of Crayola and Play-Doh took me back to that pleasant version of childhood where things were fine and I had nothing better to do than to play. Mom would prepare part of the many tons of food I would eventually consume. And it all came from a simple wooden recipe box.
