A SPRING LETTER FROM MISS MARTHY TIDWELL:
Dear Rachel,
I hope this letter finds yall all well and warm, and dug out from under all that Ice and Snow! We are all well as Common and gettin all set up for Spring.
Sledge got us a new little Troy-Bilt this year---said the old one was just give out, and too heavy, besides, so we've got the rows all ready, and some of the reddishes are just about eatin-size and the peas might soon make a good mess to cook. I know your Mammaw always said wait til after Good Friday to put a seed in the ground, but once he got his hands on that new little red plow, he was out there by February when he could find a sunny day. He's got a good stand of snap beans and the cucumbers and those cantaloupe vines are takin off into the middles, already.
I always think of that time with my Mama's cantaloupes the minute one vine shows on the ground---that was just the meanest thing that Mrs. Walker ever did, and Mama never forgot it. I don't know if I ever told you the story, but it come about with the Missionary Society at their July Meeting. You know, they went around the county, with one church hostin one year, and another the next---well it was our turn, and there was such a great foofraw for everything to be JUST SO---you know how good cooks put their best pot forward haha. And this year they had the idea to make a really fancy Salad Bar like they'd see on a cookin' show.
Well, we'd had a real Bumper Crop from that handful of saved-up seeds you gave us on our trip up there that year, those Decker seeds that they said wouldn't grow anywhere but Indiana---well they musta thought our Miss. dirt was close, because we had a right smart good turnout all through July. We had enough to give a few neighbors one, and they just couldn't quit makin' over those Mushmelons.
So when Mama heard that the preacher's wife had saved up grapevines and made baskets special for the boquets for the tables, and their son John had come home that day before from Delta State just to do the flower arrangements---who ever thought ferns and pitcher plants and bayou lilies would look so elegant? Well, Mama thought she'd give everybody a taste of those good melons.
She'd saved up four of the best ones. You know they're big as a basketball, and so sweet. Well she got out a couple of real nice platters, and begged the borry of Earnestine's silver wedding platter, too. She peeled and sliced those melons into the perfect moon shapes, and I'm tellin' you those platters looked like a magazine. We even put a few sweetpea blossoms on there for a little purple. We had to put books in the back seat to balance all those platters, but they made it to the Fellowship Hall OK.
I went on ahead, because I had made a double recipe of Chicken Salad. Four of us did, to have enough. Then I waited and helped carry in the platters and they were so pretty under that Saranwrap.
The melon went into the church refrigerator to last the mornin til lunch, and when finally lunchtime came, the church ladies brought in the food. Everything looked so pretty when the ladies came into the hall, and Mama walked over to see all three of her platters of that golden goodness, just plumb scattered with enough black pepper for a hog killin'. And salt too, for all those pretty slices, washed down in all the juice leakin' out, and just RURNED that good melon. Well, she’d done takened, and scattered hafe a box of black pepper all over them cantaloupes!! It looked like it was covered in ants, and a lot were swimmin’ in the juice down on that silver Weddin’ platter!
I could see the tears in Mama's eyes for how ugly that was and all that waste. And Mrs. Walker standin over there, just watchin to see how Mama took it. Mama asked who did that and why and she said, "That's the way WEEE like it at my house."
Mama said she first started to say this wasn't her house it was the Lord's house and she hadn't no businness prinkin up somebody elses food, but she just kept her mouth shut because ladies from all over the county were coming in. But many and many a member saw that mess and knew all that salt and pepper was just to burn Mama's hide. I don't know if Mrs. Walker ever got to help with a luncheon again.
That's all til next time. I clean forgot to turn on the TV for my story, I got so caught up in tellin this. Take all mistake for Love, your friend, Marthy Tidwell