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Dilutions of Grandeur

by Frances Giles

They say children of a certain age absorb knowledge like sponges and I believe that to be true. You have only to look at how very young kids pick up foreign languages effortlessly. That being said, I believe the same holds true for ingesting and absorbing other types of information, memories, for example. My mother and her family lived on a farm during the Great Depression until she and one of her sisters left Caldwell for the big city of Houston to work for “rich folks” as housekeepers and babysitters. They all had a pretty hard time of it on the farm and, to a lesser degree, in Houston, according to the stories Mama and several of her 3 siblings told. The oldest married at a young age and we saw her less often that we did my uncle and my other aunt as I was growing up.

I guess I heard them tell about their experiences so often I got the idea that one had to be very careful to conserve, save and avoid waste at all costs. As we were somewhat poor during my own childhood, the lesson went straight home. It might have even been embedded in my DNA, to some extent. The result was I became downright stingy about some things. Both my brother Butch and I usually had little banks in which we dropped our change. The idea was save for a rainy day, in my mind, and Butch was more likely to save until he wanted to buy something, a model airplane kit, candy, marbles, perhaps. I became obsessive about counting my money and could be found a couple of times a week with a butter knife, sliding the blade into the slot to enable the coins to slip out onto the table, then stacking them in different denominations. All I needed was a high wooden stool, a tall desk to match and a green eyeshade, and I could have passed for a miser in a 19th century counting house with no trouble. This behavior did not go unnoticed, either. Frankly, it drove my mother to distraction and she often snapped at me to go find something else to do, “for Heaven's sake, Sissy!”

My inner urge to save and conserve extended to the kitchen, in particular, which affected the rest of the family. Frozen orange juice was still a fairly new item, I think, in the mid fifties, and my job was to mix it up and get it to melt in time for breakfast. The thing is, there was only one method used to fast freeze foods and it took forever to get the little orange iceberg to melt and blend. That meant endless stirring. The directions called for 3 cans of water to be added to the frozen concentrate. Now I loved, really loved, orange juice, and I started thinking of ways to stretch it so that I might have a larger portion. I began to add a few extra ounces of water at a time and thought I was pretty smart. At some point, however, it became noticeable to the others . My brother and my mother reacted with great vigor, and I was told to follow the directions on the can...period. It was with reluctance, because I did think they were making a big to-do over nothing, that I got back on track for awhile, but then the temptation to extend this liquid sunshine grew to be too much and I started watering it down again. I made it all the way up to an extra can and a half and was busted, once and for all.

My other culinary conservation effort centered around Kool Aid. The directions were straightforward, empty the nickel packet of powder into the pitcher, add one cup of sugar and two quarts of water. Stir, then serve over ice. Okay, no big deal. Then that little demon, my inner skinflint, started speaking to me. “Save sugar”, it said. “It costs lots of money”, it whispered in my ear. “Might need it later for something really important.” and “It's a good thing you're doing, Sissy.” I admit it, I was helpless to ignore the call. Some might say what I did was hoarding, but I prefer to think of it as a sort of husbandry or stewardship over the light tan five pound paper bag, waste not, want not, and all that. I became convinced that a half cup of sugar wasn't really so much less than a full cup and went whole hog. On that first foray into becoming a financial savior of the Giles household I didn't bother to dilute the pitcher because I was already points ahead on saving sugar. Now I've always liked sour and astringent foods and beverages so I enjoyed my first sample, but it became quickly evident by the facial expressions on Mama, Aunt Pee Wee and Butch that I may have miscalculated somewhat. Butch demanded that I not be allowed to mix the stuff “ever”, even my kind and gentle aunt shook her head and whispered “Sissy, Sissy” and I was, once again, off kitchen duty.


© Frances Giles
"True Confessions and Mild Obsessions" June 13, 2015 Column
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