Home Port of St.Louis and Vacation Port of Boston.
MORNING MUSINGS 2 DECEMBER 2012
REVISITED 5 MAY 2017
I am running behind so much this morning
that the afternoon is moving into my morning musing time zone!
My mother is the only person in my family
who liked frog legs.
The only one! I believe she had access to these when she
worked for Harvey Restaurant Chain in downtown St. Louis. Along with the frog legs, this seems to be
the place my mom served political persons.
According to my grandmother, she was liked by everyone. Years later, she received Employee of the Year when she worked as a
cashier at Arlans, now history itself.
It was similar to Walmart. She received
a certificate and a television. Being so
popular with the customers, alas, also meant that they came to her long
checkout line to enjoy her love of people of all ages.
I
didn’t know ‘whose’ brains. At the time,
having limited cuisine knowledge to draw on, I only was aware of cows as a
possible source for what I was looking at.
In time, my mother, thank god, would take this strange looking glob to
the stove and fry them in the skillet.
Believe the fat to fry these came from bacon, hence, the pig family.It was only two days ago while conversing with a grocery store food demonstrator who was passing out samples of
pork tamales, easily accessible on street corners here in south tejas, that I realized my dad was also the Only one in my entire family that ate tamales, in St. Louis!
These were not cooked on the stove in the kitchen like the brains, but were sold my a vendor pushing a cart down our dark street around 9:30pm on Saturday nights. We knew he was in the neighborhood by his cry of ‘TAMALES TAMALES’. I do not recall going outside with my father to get these; actually my mother probably did the buying. What I do recall is standing looking outside into the dark being barely able to see the cart. I certainly never saw the vendor. Tamales! Where did that come from? My dad was Irish and grew up in south saint louis. Restaurants there had Italian and German food. Mexico was still not a household word as it is now. The next morning, Sundays, a young man came down the street using what looked like the same cart on wheels selling the Post Dispatch Newspaper. I wonder.
Family History Update. A few genes have carried forward. I had 'a' frog leg caught and cooked by my
husband’s brother while visiting his family in Ohio, near Defiance. Naturally.
I have never had, nor will ever have,
brains of any sort of any animal cooked in any way.
It seems tamales are as difficult to figure
out how to eat as are lobsters! What a surprise to learn that, unlike the burrito tortilla wrap, you are not suppose to eat the corn husk wrap that the tamale is cooked in! It should be as avoided as
the green stuff in lobsters. I Have eaten lobster but only under the expert
supervision of an east coast native.
As the Afternoon looms into my Morning
Musing, I shall end with this.
I never had rice until I lived in the
Philippines; never had spaghetti until I lived in Italy; never had lamb until I
lived in Turkey. I am beginning to think
unraveling my family history of eating may be as complicated, but much more fun, than unraveling the
DaVinciCode! 



