Feb 04, 2014 in breakfast, sponsored, outofthekitchen, epicurious. Read the original on: A Southern Fairytale
This post appears in the Face Time in the Kitchen challenge.
Some of my favorite, and most vivid memories of childhood are centered around my Grannyâs kitchen. Like many southern women of her time, Granny showered those she loved with food. Whether it was chicken fried steak, chess pie, apple pie, cinnamon rolls or chicken spaghetti; Grannyâs kitchen was always a source of love, food, family, and laughter.
Standing on a stool at her side, with flour dusting our hair, mimicking her every move â my love of cooking, and my passion for sharing food with those I love.
I have my Grannyâs handwritten recipe cards, as well as her old cookbooks, and theyâre one of my greatest treasures, I love flipping through them and sharing the memories surrounding each recipe with my kids.
I have my favorite recipes of her, the ones that hold the most memories in them hanging in my kitchen where I can see them and remember, daily.
My kids will often run their fingers over the faded writing and worn cards, and ask if we can make one of âGrannyâs recipesâ and if Iâll tell them memories while we do.
I think that one of my kidsâ favorite cooking stories from my own childhood revolves around Grannyâs Bran Muffins, me being a teenager, and a lesson learned about Tbsp and tsp and baking powder vs baking soda.
While we practice fractions, and reading directions I tell my kids about the time that I made Grannyâs Bran Muffins, but didnât understand that big T means Tablespoon and little t means teaspoon. So instead of 3 tsp of baking soda and 2 tsp of baking powderâ¦.
I added 3 TBSP of baking soda and 2 TBSP of baking powderâ¦
The result â 3 dozen completely inedible, bitter as the day is long things that werenât even worthy of the title âmuffinsâ
The kids laugh at me and goggle at the thought of their mom, who can seemingly make anything, messed up a recipe so badly.
While we laugh and talk, sharing stories from my childhood, and making memories of our own â my kids are learning a bit more about my love language, their family history, and theyâre practicing skills which will carry them throughout their lives: reading and following instructions, counting, measuring, fractions, and taking care of themselves.
Sharing Grannyâs recipes with my kids ties our family together across the generations.
Want to know how to build a successful restaurant? Check out BonAppetit.comâs âOut of the Kitchenâ, a glimpse into the inner workings of two successful restaurants. Meet the back of the house inner circle and see how face-to-face relationships keep customers coming back for more.
This is a sponsored conversation written by me on behalf of Bon Appetit. The opinions and text are all mine.
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Read the original on: A Southern Fairytale
7th Generation Texan. Boot Lover, photographer, recipe developer, Mom, Wife, Laugher, and lover of happiness.