By Vicki Mayk
My grandmother presides over a kingdom of white appliances in her kitchen, the humming Frigidaire a monarch in an alcove. Underfoot, a black and white linoleum floor hopscotches to the stove where spaghetti sauce erupts from a pot like red lava.
The kitchen table sits like an altar. I’m on a stool while my grandmother stands with a rolling pin in her hand. Behind her, a porcelain sink stacked with pots, pans, dishes. I’m trying to spot the trick, the magic that allows something delicious to spring from her fingertips without ever consulting a recipe. She tells me to add butter the size of a hen’s egg, spices by the pinch, flour doled out by the fistful. I ask her questions. Is a pinch equal to a quarter of a teaspoon? Is a handful a cup?
It looks so easy. Fettuccine cut by hand without the aid of a pasta machine. Dozens of Christmas cookies that flow from her hands: tarrels, pizzelles, pastry horns filled with honey-flavored nuts. I try to coax the recipes from her before her memory is erased. My grandmother does her best to translate measurements, knowing all the while that her love can’t be measured.
Vicki Mayk is a nonfiction writer, teacher and a higher education content writer. Her narrative nonfiction book, Growing Up on the Gridiron: Football, Friendship and the Tragic Life of Owen Thomas, was published by Beacon Press. Catch up with her at https://vickimayk.com/.
Image by Luca Nardone courtesy of Pexels































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































“add butter the size of a hen’s egg” – how perfect! Beautiful story.
Thank you, Vicki! Took me to my mother’s kitchen and the experience of magic there–the unmeasurable love.
I enjoyed this glimpse of your childhood, Vicki! My Grandmother also had a porcelain sink that I still recall from a child’s viewpoint.
“flour doled out by the fistful”. I loved that! You set the scene beautifully. I feel like I’m there with you. Heartwarming. Thank you❤️
“… knowing all the while that her love can’t be measured.” beautifully delicious.
Beautiful, evocative piece, Vicki!
So few words. So much love.
We can never replicate grandma’s recipes except with love. I saw the red lava boiling over. Wonderful.
Gorgeous details – I feel like I’m in the kitchen with you. While missing my grandmother at the same time (whose recipes I never wrote down). What a delicious flash piece! Thanks for sharing with us.
Beautiful – it took me back to my Nana’s kitchen and cooking & baking with her.
Gorgeous depiction – we experienced it all with you!
Thank you!
Gorgeous, Vicki. Such strong images, and that perfect last line. I’m in awe.
I felt myself there on the stool next to you, Vicki, wanting to taste your grandmother’s love.
Vicki, this is a beautiful piece at the perfect before-Christmas time, when lots of readers will remember their grandmothers’ magic.
This is gorgeous!! That last line lands so perfectly.
I was just making pizzelles with my 90-year-old aunt yesterday. She couldn’t find her measuring spoons and was uncertain about the flour. She even forgot to plug in the iron. But I was there to help her remember…especially about the love.
The urgency to grasp the moment before it slips away, universal beyond food and one day’s memory to the endless desire to hold onto what will be lost and to keep what we have alive for the next generation. Brava.
Beautiful. As a merely adequate cook myself, I gasped at “without ever consulting a recipe,” and I smiled reading the last line.
Coaxing the recipes while she can still remenber – is so poignant. Thank you for taking us into the kitchen with you.