Mama Clarsie’s biscuits – a memory 5


Mama Clarsie would let me eat as many of her delicious biscuits as I wanted and never tease me about being greedy or say that I was fat. I was ten years old and  “pleasingly plump,” mostly because I loved her food and would go upstairs to visit her and eat whenever my Mom and my dad, her son, let me.  We shared a two-family house in St. Louis.


A favorite memory was when Mama Clarsie taught me how to make biscuits.  She didn’t use measuring cups but had an old china tea cup that she used to scoop the flour.  She instructed me to fill the cups twice and showed me how to level the flour with the swipe of a butter knife.  Then she taught me to add the other dry ingredients.  She used Old Clabber Girl baking powder and measured it with a soup spoon.  She poured a small amount of salt into the middle of my palm.  She had me sift these ingredients together in the hand-sifter with the red wooden knob at the end of the handle.  I loved cranking it.
      
She then had me scoop the lard, for that was what we used then, into a tin metal cup that she used solely for this purpose.  She showed me how to cut the lard into the flour .  She used her fingers but taught me to use two forks.   After the flour and lard were blended together, she told me to make a well in the center of the  mixture.  
      
I can hear her saying, “now slowly, slowly, pour the buttermilk into the well – just enough until you fill it.  You can always add more later if the dough is too dry.”  The buttermilk was in a glass bottle.  It had been delivered to our front porch that morning by the milk man, who came twice a week to our street.  Mama Clarsie drank buttermilk with most of her meals – especially neckbones and navy beans with collard greens on the side.  I didn’t like the taste of buttermilk straight out of a glass but I loved the flavor they added to biscuits.

I sprinkled flour on a piece of wax paper on the kitchen counter and then I dusted the big wooden rolling pin with flour.  First, I had to roll the dough around in the flour making sure it wasn’t too sticky to roll out.  Then I ran the rolling pin over the dough a couple of times.  Next I did my second most favorite thing to do –  dipped a glass into flour and cut the biscuits with it.
 
“Put the glass straight down,” she instructed with a smile.  “You’re doing it just right – you’re going to take my spot as the biscuit maker in this family,” she laughed.
      
We set the oven to 425.   (Mama Clarsie lit the pilot light in the gas oven with a match, something I was thrilled to see but scared to try to learn to do.)  While the biscuits were in the oven, she told me to grab the pan of butter that she kept in the refrigerator and set it on the gas burner to melt.  She turned the fire down real low so the butter would melt without burning.  
      
After about ten minutes, I grabbed the oven mitts and opened the door to see if the biscuits were brown.  They were!
      
Mama Clarsie put the pan of hot biscuits on a cloth kitchen towel and took a small paint brush used just for this purpose to brush  the melted butter over the top of them.  We didn’t invite anyone else to eat my first batch of biscuits.  The two of us sat down and drank hot cocoa and had biscuits with syrup – the name of the syrup we used was Sho-Is-Fine.  It came in a tin can.  We also had apple butter and grape jelly.  My favorite topping was apple butter, but I also liked to dip the biscuits in syrup.
      
Mama Clarsie passed away at the age of 94 a few years ago.  I am now the head biscuit maker in my family although I use butter or vegetable shortening (or a combination) instead of lard and real maple syrup instead of imitation.  Whenever I make biscuits, I am transported to her kitchen and the love and patience she had for me.  I felt warm and safe eating those biscuits.  I have taught my daughter how to make them and in a few years will teach my granddaughter, too.  Recently I helped a friend’s daughter, who is 10, make her first batch of biscuits, continuing the tradition of love and sustenance begun more than forty years ago.


     


About Candelaria Silva

Candelaria Silva-Collins is a marketing, community outreach and programming consultant; writer; and trainer/facilitator who lives in Boston, Massachusetts. She has designed and facilitated workshops on a wide variety of topics including communication, facilitation, job search skills, team building, and parenting issues. She currently coordinates the Community Membership Program of the Huntington Theatre Company. Her work as Director of ACT Roxbury was profiled in several publications, including The Creative Communities Builders Handbook. Candelaria’s children’s stories, short stories, essays and reviews have been published in local and national publications and she is an active blogger. Her publications include the booklets, Handling Rejection; Pushing through Shyness: Networking Tips when You’re Shy, Slow to Warm Up or Just don’t Feel you Belong; and Real Questions about Sex & Relationships for Teens: A Discussion Guide for Parents. She has served on the boards of Goddard College, Wheelock Family Theatre, Boston Foundation for Architecture, and Discover Roxbury. She is currently Chair, Designators of the Henderson Foundation.

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5 thoughts on “Mama Clarsie’s biscuits – a memory

  • Anali

    Love this post! You brought me right back there with you. I hope one day you’ll share a picture of those biscuits with us. This reminds me of some recipes that I’ve seen where they call for “tea cups” or “coffee cups” instead of the regular measured cup.

  • Candelaria

    Thanks so much for your comment.  I am glad you could relate to this post.  I will get better about taking photos when I write anything related to food.

  • cheryl

    This post is bittersweet for me. I smiled while reading your experiences with your grandmother. My heart grew heavy that I didn’t take the time to learn how to bake my mother’s lemon cake before she passed. I’ve tried and tried to duplicate it. Good for you for capturing that tradition.

  • George Buggs

    I can still smell my Grandmother’s biscuits and see the steam rising when, hot, fresh, they were pulled open by eager fingers, buttered and bounced from hand to hand on the way to a saucer of Karo syrup. What a grin they put on my face after the first dip and taste of sweetness straight from her heart dissolved on my tongue. Thank you Candlearia! Pass the grape jelly please!