Saturday, December 24, 2011

Merry Christmas!

It’s the most wonderful time of the year…





Well, it can be if you slow down, unplug, relax and take the time to take it in and be mentally and spiritually present for the opening of the presents. When you are overworked, overwhelmed and overrun with the stresses of everyday life already, Christmas can seem like the straw that broke the donkey’s back. (I know that a camel is normally used in this cliché but being that we are discussing Christmas, a donkey just seemed more appropriate)


It’s not until you are forced to stop the insanity and listen to the jingle bells that Christmas really starts to take shape and mean what it should. The fact that society has added so many layers to the simple celebration of the Greatest Gift given means it really takes a conscious effort to quiet the noise and step out of the fast lane. Christmas plain and simple is Christ.


It took an entire week away from the office to finally wake up and feel the quiet that Christmas should bring. Now, on Christmas Eve, I feel the weight of the birthday we are celebrating and the excitement and nervous anticipation that I always felt as a child. Had I not taken the time away I never would have awakened this sense of wonder and Christmas would have come upon me as any other over planned and busy day. It would have caused additional stress instead of a sense of peace. I am thankful for the opportunity to have had the time off, and for the blessing of a family to spend the time with. Having young children this time of year is amazing, simply amazing. The joy of giving will be tangible tomorrow as the boys come down the steps and wipe their eyes, rushing in to see what Santa left under the tree. Coffee will be brewed. Gifts will be exchanged. Kisses given. Pictures taken. And somewhere in the mix between the ripping wrapping paper and the excited laughter it will hit me that my kids are experiencing the same magic that I did 30 odd years ago. The amazing feeling of celebrating Christ’s birthday by getting and giving the gifts ourselves. Even now 2011 years later, He is still celebrating Himself by giving to others. Amazing.


I hope you and your family have an amazing Christmas, that you are able to quiet the world around you for long enough to hear Christmas, and that the gifts you give are a true expression of the love you live.






Merry Christmas!

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Family is the great gumbo of life.




I like gumbo.  When I was a bartender at Applebees working my way through college I loved Thursdays.  It was chicken gumbo day.  The soup du jour.  At Applebees it was, as is everything there, very very consistent.  No surprises.  It was really my only gumbo experience.  Growing up in Northeast Ohio does not lend itself to a wide range of culinary exploration, especially in the gumbo arena.  So the never-changing Applebees gumbo was in my mind the “good stuff”, the norm.

Turns out that gumbo and normal should have NOTHING in common.
Once I was married and branched out a bit in the cuisine category I started noticing that each different restaurant had its own wonderful variation on all sorts of dishes.  I realized that between the Midwestern food of my youth and the cafeteria consistency of college food service and then the standard fare of Applebees, the virtually endless world of food had been completely lost to me.  I had never really considered what an artform cooking could be.  Granted I did occasionally get creative with hot dogs and ramen noodles when the grocery budget had been blown on an unexpected Thursday night out.  But this was very very different, and I wanted to taste it all.

One of the things that I decided to make my goal was to taste test all of the Toledo area restaurants' individual take on gumbo.  There was no shortage of restaurants in Toledo (not much else to do but eat) and unlike many of the other dishes; gumbo was something I could actually afford in almost any restaurant, even as a newlywed fresh out of college.

There was the peppery seafood-laden Joe’s Crab Shack gumbo, the much more chili-like Hungarian gumbo of Tony Packo’s, the standard Creole style gumbo from the Old Navy Bistro (my favorite) and the fancy lobster gumbo of Mancy’s.  All was wonderful.  All was gumbo, all had very different ingredients and very different effects on the consumer.  One could expect anything from a general overall warming of the body to an outright rush to grab the nearest beverage after each bite.  Whatever the effect I loved them all.  My next step was to learn to make it myself.

What I found when I started to look around for recipes was that depending on where you looked, they are all completely different except for 3 ingredients that seem to be the glue that hold the “gumbo” label to the dish.  Rice, meat, and heat.  All of the gumbo recipes I found had these three things in common.  They all had some form of rice or soft grain all had a meat or preferably variety of meats, sausage, chicken, shrimp…and all had some level of heat.  Spicy is relative to the tongue of the taster.  To me if gumbo doesn’t make beads of sweat start to appear on your brow after the third bite its nothing more than spicy soup.  Kid’s stuff.  Starter gumbo.  That was not what I was interested in.

Once I started in on my gumbo cooking adventure two things happened.  First I became more comfortable with my wife working second shift at the hospital, because I could come home from work, stop by the market and cook myself into a corner without her seeing the mess or tasting my experiments and second, that using a recipe for gumbo is not unlike copying someone’s biography and putting your name at the top.  It just doesn’t work.  Gumbo is about exploration, variation and experimentation.  It is about using what lurks in the back of the fridge and finding that it tastes great with okra.  It is individual and it is NEVER exactly the same twice.  Alton Brown says it right when he was quoted “Gumbo is a very spiritual food, and much of the satisfaction comes from who you are eating it with.”  It’s flavor depends on the environment.  It depends on who its cooked for, and the venue it is to be served.  Its ingredients depend on the region it is cooked in and what is commonly available there.  It is always different, yet always gumbo.

I am remembering all of this now partly because I am admittedly hungry, but mainly because as I have grown older I have come to realize that my always standard and normal Midwestern family is changing.  The flavor is far different from what it was in my youth.  It used to be predictable, like the Thursday Applebees gumbo.  I used to be able to come home and have the same conversations and see the same people and give the same hugs.  Over the past decade or so the recipe started changing on me, but my craving for the same old taste didn’t.  Some ingredients were removed, Grandparents passing, marriages ending.  Some ingredients changed, brothers growing up, family relationships stressed.  Some new ingredients added kids, new spouses, new friends.  All very different, yet still family.

This happens to all families.  And just like all families it is a huge stress to mine.  Feelings have been hurt, anger has taken the place of acceptance.  The taste of the gumbo is very different now than it used to me.  I am realizing that just as gumbo is gumbo despite being different every time, family is family despite being different every year.  It still has the same core ingredients; mothers, fathers, sisters, brothers, spouses, kids and grandparents and it is still spiced with all of the emotional baggage and love that goes into every family stock pot.  I realize that just as I did with the gumbo, I need to experiment to find out what works best with the current batch.   

No matter what though, family is family.  It is just as varied and as diverse as gumbo and it can be too spicy and hot for some palates.  The key is to find an appreciation of each ingredient, new, old and even bold. And it never hurts to have a beverage within reach.

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Remembering a credit union hero of Pearl Harbor

Remembering Pear Harbor…

On December 7th 1941 as the first wave of enemy planes began  to attack Hickam Field several scored direct hits on the Hawaiian Air Depot's engineering building. After the first raid, all Hawaiian Air Depot officers came in to help with firefighting, salvaging material, and other heroic work to keep the depot operation amidst the attack. Approximately 100 civilian employees also reported for duty, including Mr. Phillip Ward Eldred, a purchasing clerk. 

Mr. Eldred had helped create the Hawaiian Air Depot credit union, and was dedicated to the coworkers who had trusted the fledgling institution with their hard earned money.  After the order was given to abandon the depot because of the devastating fire it was under Eldred suddenly remembered that the credit union deposits and records were still in the now burning building and turned to retrieve them.  He was rushing to save the credit union records when he was strafed by enemy fire and killed just outside of his office.  Mr. Eldred's second job you see,  was treasurer/manager of that credit union, and he knew it was vital to those he trusted and fought beside.  That credit union that he gave his life to save is what is now the Hickam Federal Credit Union at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam.

Hickam Depot after the attack
 
So many heroic acts and phenomenal sacrifices came from that infamous day in December, I just wanted to highlight one that, as a credit union leader, I have a heartfelt connection to.  What an amazing Country we live in, thanks to the amazing men and women who have fought to keep it that way.