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Village Squire, 1975-11, Page 12The female ate nothing for two days but made several trips to the creek. The fever went away. The puppies nursed and grew fat, there was plenty of milk for three. Reynard was a model husband; he ranged through the meadows and the swamps bringing home mice by the dozen, rabbits and ground hogs. The young ground hogs were easy prey. At exactly four weeks to the day from birth the first pup sidled up to the den entrance, took a hasty look and retired. That place up there was too big. However, next day he tried again and soon every day all three were playing on the hillside. Jimmy Parsons had come to stay with his gra idparents and to go to the country school. In the city the past winter had been hard for him. He had measles and then a succession of colds. He was in need of country air and lots of grandmother's cooking. It took a few days to get used to the food at Grandma's. There was no crispy crunchy cereal for breakfast, they had oatmeal porridge slow cooked overnight. It didn't taste too bad, sort of chewy but the milk was funny. "The milk tastes awful thick, Grandma." "That's the cream in it. It's Jersey milk dear." "What's a Jersey?" "It's a breed of cow that gives rich milk." At noon they had a heavy meal; instead of wieners they had thick slices of fried ham. There was so much food that he got an over stuffed feeling just looking at it. But there were so many places to see and so many things to do that he had to go at a run. It was amazing how the stuffed feeling disappeared to be replaced by a cavernous emptiness. it was then that the mysteries of Grandma's kitcnen became a delight. At one end of the long, low room, sat the old wood burning stove made of cast iron with all the curliques and fancy patterns on it. On the oven door it said "Old Homestead, Western Foundry, Wingham". The wood box was behind it and Jimmy had to keep the box filled with split sticks of hardwood from the wood shed. In the oven of this squatting monster, Grandma conjured up all sorts of miracles. Three sticks in the fire box working on some flour and buttermilk and what not in the oven produced biscuits like no biscuits J immy had ever tasted. Eaten hot with butter they melted in the mouth. There was a cast iron frying pan. "That's an awtul big heavy pan, Grand,.ia, I never saw one like it. "You can't buy a pan like that Jim. Paddy Burns made that pan for me when he worked in the foundry. He slipped the mould in with a row of other moulds. The boss never knew the difference. Paddy was a good friend. We used to dance a lot together at Paramount Saturday nights." "I remember that," sato Grandpa, "You had to hold him up he'd be so drunk. It took six bottles of beer to get Paddy sobered up on Monday morning so he could mould again." "Well, anyway, it's a good frying pan." In the pan Grandma made huge pancakes. She flipped them with a lifter, the pan was too heavy to flip. A big pancake with a puddle of maple syrup in the middle was a feast. The syrup tasted different from what you got in the supermarket; perhaps because Grandpa made it in big iron kettles on an open fire. Twigs and leaves and other things got in Grandpa's syrup. It could be called a vintage syrup because some years it was better than others. Perhaps the snow was deeper in a particular spring or maybe more tasty twigs fell into the sap but the standard was always high because Grandpa boiled the sap down real thick. Tup;dav was bread day. The yeast was made in a crock the 10, VILLAGE SQUIRE/NOVEMBER 1975 JUST ARRIVED! Collection of Co-ordinated Autumn Sportswear 100 PERCENT POLYESTER TWEED Carib Blue, Mosstone, Fall Wing Pant - $15.98 Skirt - $17.98 Long Skirt - $23.98 Jacket - $33.98 Collared Vest $27.98 Shirts - $14.98 Sweaters - $12.98 SIZES 8 TO 20 aN cliaje/r's LADIES WEAR LIMITED ON THE SQUARE GODERICH