My Resolution to Behave More Like a Child: Dessert First, Then Lunch — It’s What a Kid Would Do!

February 9th was a teacher in-service day, so I had my four grandkids. I took them to McDonald’s for lunch and $1 ice cream cones.

I also have a fifteen-year-old poodle, Ziva, with multiple myeloma. She is in the early stages of the disease, but she also has some other health issues. Her vision and hearing are iffy, she has some dementia-like issues, and her osteoarthritis makes her mobility a bit sketchy. But she still enjoys a very short walk and loves car rides.

So, when I took my grandkids to McDonalds, I invited Ziva to come along. My husband carried her down the basement stairs, and I lifted her into the van.

The temperature was in the 30s, so I knew Ziva could sit in the car for a bit while we ate at McDonalds. But I didn’t want to leave her in the car while we ate happy meals and ice cream cones.

Once inside McDonald’s, we approached the counter to place our orders. “How can I help you?” the clerk asked.

I had an idea.

I looked at my grandkids, and asked, “Would it be okay if we all got the $1 ice cream cones and ate them here? Afterward we can order our lunch to go and eat it at home? So, Ziva doesn’t have to be in the car by herself for so long?”

The grandkids looked at me like I was crazy for asking. I pressed on as though I had to convince them. “Is it okay? We could call it a ‘backwards lunch.’ Does anyone object to having dessert before lunch?”

“Not at all,” said a voice filled with chuckles. The oldest grandchild, whose face lit up with conspiratorial glee, had spoken. The other three laughed. They’d caught on that Nana was playing the straight man in a comedy routine.

We ordered five ice cream cones and sat at a table overlooking Lake Superior. We had a lovely conversation about this and that while licking our ice cream and crunching our cones.

After dessert we ordered lunch and headed home. The grandkids carried our food into the house while I lifted Ziva out of the van, then carried her up the basement stairs.

Ziva stretched out on her bed in the living room. Car adventures tucker her out. The grandkids gathered at the table, where we ate the first part of our lunch last.

While they jabbered and looked at their Happy Meal toys, I thought about my childhood and desserts.

“You can’t have dessert. It’s too close to supper. You’ll ruin your appetite,” said the adults in my life when I was a child and they didn’t want me to have goodies before a meal.

“If you don’t have room for your supper, you don’t have room for dessert,” said the same adults in my life when they wanted to make sure I cleaned my plate.

For added drama, they might add, “There are starving children in Ethiopia who’d love to have that food.”

So, I’d eat my food. (Unless it was split pea soup or ring bologna, then I’d stare at it, shifting it a round with a spoon or fork, trying to make it disappear.) And I’d wonder why the children in Ethiopia were starving. (In the early 1970s, I couldn’t google it.) But I didn’t ask because to question adults when they dished out words of wisdom (a.k.a. a lecture) was considered disrespectful, and usually met with, “Don’t talk back!” or “Go to your room!” I had a friend who suggested to her mother that the food she didn’t like be packed up and sent to the starving children in Africa. It didn’t go well. My friend was sent to her room for the rest of the day.

Not spoiling one’s supper by eating dessert first, cleaning one’s plate, being forced to eat things one didn’t like, and holding one’s tongue while a parent prattled on were all standard customs when I was a child.

Dessert was a special treat in my childhood home. Mom occasionally bought cookies, ice cream, or potato chips and French onion dip, technically not dessert, but oh so yummy. My dad was a mechanic and my mother was a waitress, so with four children, money was tight. Desserts and salty snacks were considered luxuries, and my mother wisely spent most of her grocery budget on food for our meals. My nana Kitty’s house was a dessert desert, unless you count the raisins or saltine crackers she tried to pass off as goodies. On the other hand, my grandma Olive’s house was dessert oasis filled with freshly baked cakes, cookies, or pies, and she always had ice cream in the freezer. But Grandma Olive lived 350 miles away, and we only saw her for two or three weeks a year.

Our neighbors had dessert after every evening meal. I don’t think Shirley ever baked anything, unless it was a ready-to-pop-in-oven item, but her husband Bill expected a sweet after supper. So, Shirley bought cookies, Danish, ice cream, and pies. My mother bristled at this, saying that having dessert every day was unhealthy.

My sisters and I never cared that Shirley and Bill’s children had dessert every night while we didn’t. We envied them because they had a built-in dishwasher! While my sisters and I cleared the kitchen table and washed and dried all the dishes and pots and pans after a meal for six people, the neighbor kids unloaded and loaded a dishwasher after a meal for five people. Bill went to work in a suit and tie, and Shirley was a stay-at-home mom. Bill made more money than my mother and dad did together. And even as a child, I knew this was why they could afford daily desserts, a dishwasher, and Scrubbing Bubbles, while my sisters and I dreamed of Oreos, washed dishes by hand, and scoured our kitchen sink with Comet.

Occasionally, we’d plead with our parents: “Please, can we get a dishwasher?” To which, my father always answered, “We don’t need a dishwasher, we already have three of them.” Of course, he was referring to my two sisters and me. We didn’t think he was funny. But as an adult when I think about his retort, it always makes me smile. And if I’m in the right mood when I think about it, I laugh out loud.

My parents never owned a dishwasher until I moved out of the house. When I became a parent, I followed my mother’s example about desserts, instead of Bill and Shirley’s. And as soon as I could, I bought a dishwasher.

But I never made my children eat things they didn’t like. I remembered the horrors of being made to chew and swallow ring bologna and split pea soup, both of which I detested. I remember my sister and I helping our youngest sister hide, then dispose of red kidney beans on the nights my mom served chili. Our little sister would be forced to sit at the table long after everyone else was done with their food. Her brown eyes filled with tears as she stared at the kidney beans, but she refused to eat them. Our hearts broke for her. Even our dog, Fritz, often sat nearby in a show of support. We always managed to find a way to get rid of those beans. Sometimes Fritz ate them. Sometimes the beans were surreptitiously wrapped in a napkin and tucked into a nook under the table then later thrown in the garbage.

My parents weren’t trying to be cruel. It’s how they and most of their generation were raised. If there was food on your plate, you ate it. It didn’t belong in the garbage. Their parents all grew up during the depression. Nothing was wasted. My grandma Olive saved every scrap of leftovers, even if the scraps only amounted to several bites. She stored them in small plastic containers that once held margarine, which she’d washed and dried, along with plastic baggies. Everything was reused. About once a week, my grandmother would serve a meal by using up all the leftover food in the fridge. Grandma Olive and Grandpa George weren’t poor. They could’ve afforded to toss leftovers and buy more baggies. They were against throwing out anything that was still useful. Nana Kitty, who did live on a tight budget, shared Olive and George’s viewpoint. “Waste not, want not,” Nana would often say.

My grandkids and I ate our ice cream cones and all of our food. Still, I wisely kept my thoughts about dessert and food and wastefulness to myself. My grandkids probably would’ve considered any words of wisdom I might have on these subjects to be a lecture.

Pumpkin Bundt Cake from the Blog “In Diane’s Kitchen”

If you like pumpkin, this cake is yummy!

Yesterday I made a pumpkin bundt cake from scratch. I discovered the recipe on the blog In Diane’s Kitchen. I’m proving a point to Betty Crocker.

On Tuesday I called Betty Crocker. Well, not a real Betty Crocker because she doesn’t exist. Instead, I talked to a representative in the General Mills customer care department. I lodged a complaint because Betty Crocker cake mixes have shrunk — again.

For most of my life, cake mixes were 18.25 ounces. I have some great cake recipes that call for an 18.25-ounce cake mix and build from there, like a decadent chocolate rum cake and a tasty pistachio cake. So about ten years ago when the cake companies dropped the mixes to 15.25 ounces, I wasn’t happy. At the time, I called Betty Crocker and Duncan Hines to complain. (Unlike Betty Crocker, Duncan Hines was a real person, but he died in 1959.) Neither company cared that I was concerned my cake recipes could become obsolete — 15.25 was their new standard. They weren’t rude, not at all. They were apologetic and sympathetic, but I could read between the lines — I could like it or lump it. (The phrase customer care is an oxymoron.) Fortunately, my cake recipes still worked with the 15.25-ounce size.

But last week I discovered there has been another shrinkage. Betty’s cake mixes are now 13.25 ounces. So far Duncan Hines is still weighing in at 15.25 ounces, as is Pillsbury. When I called Betty Crocker’s consumer care department on Tuesday, I told them I would no longer buy their cake mixes. I explained that I wasn’t about to experiment by using a cake mix that is 5 ounces less than the amount called for in the recipe. I further explained that if other companies followed suit, I would make all my cakes from scratch because I have some good recipes. The customer care representative was sympathetic and kept saying, “I’m sorry about that.” She said she would pass my concerns along. But I know nothing will change, except in the future when the cake mix loses more weight.

You can google to find out how much extra flour and other ingredients, like baking soda, to add to the prepared mix. But go ahead and call me “my father’s daughter” on this one: I’m not buying a product then adding what the company should have added in order to make up the difference. One website suggested buying two boxes of cake mix, and adding six tablespoons from the second box to the first box. Then I was to seal up the leftover cake mix and save it to use for other cakes. AS IF!

So yesterday to prove my point to Betty Crocker, I made a pumpkin bundt cake — from scratch. Because I follow the blog In Diane’s Kitchen, the recipe landed in my email a couple of weeks ago. Pumpkin mixed with a dash of cinnamon, ground cloves, and ground ginger makes this cake taste like a slice of autumn. It has the consistency of a pound cake, which pairs well with coffee. And, in my experience, baking a pound cake is more forgiving than baking a regular cake.

Some thoughts to keep in mind if you make this cake:

  1. Diane recommends eating the cake with vanilla ice cream. I’d go with a creamy vanilla custard. However, this recipe calls for three sticks of butter and six eggs, so I skipped the ice cream. I’ve never baked a cake recipe that called for six eggs. This reminded me of one of my all-time favorite novels City of Thieves by David Benioff. Set in Russia in WWII, the two main characters in the novel have been arrested and are to be executed. However, a powerful Soviet colonel promises to pardon them if they can find a dozen eggs for his daughter’s wedding cake. There is war and famine, but the colonel wants his daughter to have an elegant wedding and a big cake, and so an epic quest for a dozen eggs begins. And this bundt cake? That might serve twelve people at the most? It gets six eggs!
  2. The recipe Diane shared says to spray the bundt pan with cooking oil. I used Baker’s Joy. When it was time to remove the cake from the pan, it came out like a dream.
  3. Diane noted that while the recipe said to bake for 60 minutes, she needed to bake the cake for 64 minutes. So did I, but I started with 60 minutes.

I will make this cake again. It was worth the extra time and effort. Besides while I made the cake, I listened to A Lady’s Guide to Gossip and Murder, the second book in Dianne Freeman’s Countess of Harleigh Mystery series.

[To read my review of Freeman’s first book in the series, click here.]