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  • Texas | Columns | "True Confessions and Mild Obsessions"

    Come to Me, My Melon-choly Babies

    by Frances Giles
    Watermelon, a high Summer treat if there ever was one. It ranked right up there alongside baseball, exploring and running through the hose, as far as great ways to spend the unencumbered days. Long, hot, humid weeks invited relief in any form, and this was most definitely a high point.

    Normally Mama bought a melon at the local grocery store, Weingarten's, Henke & Pillot, Evans or Fertitta's on Park Street. It depended on where she chose to shop and whether the budget would allow for a splurge. If we were very lucky we would have been on a trip to Caldwell to visit my grandparents and would have stopped at a roadside stand in Hempstead, the Watermelon Capital of Texas, at least at that time. Back in the 50's and 60's they often sold for as little as 6 or 7 for a dollar, depending on the variety, I think it was mostly the light green ones.

    My mother would tote the torpedo, she usually bought the long, light green ones, but occasionally she'd get one with dark green stripes, out to the back yard and place it on newspapers spread across the cement picnic table that was edged with decorative, colored, glazed ceramic tiles that sat middle of the yard, matching benches on either side. Then she would split and slice that big boy. The members of my family had their unique ways of eating it. My Aunt Lydia always ate hers standing up, a chunk of French, or slice of any white, bread in one hand, utensil in the other. Mama opted for a slice of rye with hers, if we had any. Each time Butch and I questioned the bread thing, we were told that “Granny always eats hers this way.” I never remember any further explanation. My father took his without any sides except salt. YUK. I loathed the idea, and taste, of salt on a perfectly nice, juicy, refreshing treat. Not so the others. They were universally agreed that this was the way to eat watermelon. I repeat, YUK.

    Even the choice of utensils was individualized. Our Dad used a fork, which I personally thought shredded everything to a soggy pulp. Butch would only use a spoon, a small coffee sized one, digging deep into the light green rind, leaving little baby craters filled with puddles of juice, until Mama told him to stop and get more melon if he still wanted some. My Aunt Pee Wee used both a knife and a spoon at various times, and Mama preferred a long butcher knife, the same one she used to cut the melon. As for me, I always used a heavy butter knife, safe but sharp enough to saw my slice into squarish little bricks.

    Once in awhile our mother would let us invite a couple of neighbor kids over, and she would sit us down on in the grass on newspapers, or maybe on an old sheet, spread out under us as a chigger deterrent, and bring slices outside for each of us. That meant bending our heads down and chomping from side to side until we were done, and our faces, hair, arms and legs were a sticky mess, the hard, black, and soft, embryonic, white seeds stuck flat against our skin. Before we could attract hordes of flies, we were sent off to “get the hose.” Then the real fun began. I'm sure Mama only wanted us to get rid of the dried juices before coming inside the house, but this was too good a play opportunity to pass up. We shrieked, squealed and ran in and out of the spray. The kid controlling the hose had a lot of power and usually wielded it unmercifully, and this was very often my brother Butch. He was able to occlude part of the end of the hose with a thumb or finger in such a way that he created a hard, stinging stream of water that mimicked jillions of gnats nipping at our bare skin.

    When our clothes were saturated and practically transparent, we stepped up into the screened in back porch and stripped down to our underwear and went off to dress in dry duds while the neighbor kids ran home to do the same. We weren't the adorable little imps found in the children's book, the Water Babies, but we had just as much fun.


    © Frances Giles
    "True Confessions and Mild Obsessions" September 24, 2013 Column
    Related Topics: Food | Columns | People | Texas Towns | Texas
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