Writers Tricks of the Trade Vol. 5, Issue 4 | Page 18

PRESS “CONTROL” THEN CLICK ‘BUY” TO PURCHASE THE BOOK IT COULDN’T GET MUCH CRAZIER THAN THIS (CONT’D) groan. She kept up a chant of "Oy Vey" the whole time the inspector was there. It was an award-winning performance, and I remember it to this day. The poor inspector took one look at Ma and said "Oh my, she is very sick, isn’t she?" He gave her a comforting pat on the arm and said, “We’ll bring him home to you as soon as possible. Don’t worry, Mrs. Schwartz. Just hang on.” After he left, my mother got up and went back into the kitchen to finish cleaning the chicken! And, as for Meyer? They granted him a two week furlough and he came home a week later. ADD THESE BOOKS TO YOUR LIBRARY Talking about food, in my generation food was boiled or roasted. Our stove in the kitchen was heated by coal. It had an oven and on the top were four burners. Under each burner there was a cavity that had to be filled with coal. The heat from those burners was used to keep the oven hot. Then when the coal became ashes, the ashes were removed and fresh coal was put in. So you see why we only had the two choices of boiling or roasting. We didn't have the ability to broil or barbeque food. It took many years before gas or electric stoves took over. As for the vegetables, the basic standards were carrots, celery, onions, potatoes, tomatoes, cucumbers, cabbage, and beets. We had plenty of apples, pears, peaches, grapes, oranges, bananas, or whatever other fruit was in season, and my mother generally bought that fruit from the fruit vendors who drove horse-pulled wagons through our neighborhood. BUY Okay, let’s get back to life back then. My brother Joe was drafted into the navy. He was a little more fortunate than Meyer and was stationed at Great Lake, Illinois which wasn't too far from Chicago. Being that he was stationed so close, he managed to come home about once a month, and he always brought at least one other sailor with him so his pal could enjoy our crazy family. Somehow we managed to put up his friends and they enjoyed my mother’s home cooking and some of Ma’s loving attention. Buy BUY WRITERS’ TRICKS OF THE TRADE PAGE 7 JULY-AUGUST 2015