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Grammy Bread with Dan Fickes

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Manage episode 282665003 series 2850593
Treść dostarczona przez Ally Donnelly. Cała zawartość podcastów, w tym odcinki, grafika i opisy podcastów, jest przesyłana i udostępniana bezpośrednio przez Ally Donnelly lub jego partnera na platformie podcastów. Jeśli uważasz, że ktoś wykorzystuje Twoje dzieło chronione prawem autorskim bez Twojej zgody, możesz postępować zgodnie z procedurą opisaną tutaj https://pl.player.fm/legal.

With a fistful of yeasty dough, Dan Fickes is nervous. “I’m 57 years old. I’ve never made bread in my life.” The Hingham man is not just making any bread. He’s making Grammy Bread--the simple, white bread that got a wounded woman out of bed to face life without her first-born son. “I just can’t fathom losing one of your children at any age--let alone your first child, at age five.” Fickes, who grew up in Camp Hill Pennsylvania, wasn’t yet born when his oldest brother David died. The preschooler had a brain tumor and lived only days after the operation to remove it. Their mother Shirley fell into a deep and crippling depression. “It was almost a year, maybe more,” Fickes said. “She stayed in bed. She cried. She slept.” It was a friend from church, a woman named Chickie Bresnahan, who came to the house with a brown bag of groceries that would slowly tug Shirley back to the land of the living. “She had the flour, the yeast, everything and said, ‘Shirley, get out of bed. This is what we’re doing.’ From what I understand it was a fight to get my mom out, but reluctantly she put on her robe and slippers and went to the kitchen and they made bread that day.” Fickes says his mom kept baking for decades. “I think at first it was just a way to keep herself busy, to get her mind off things. She would bake loaves for our family and then, she started giving it away.” She passed out loaves of bread and everyone would ask for it--aunts, uncles, cousins, even Fickes’ own children Kristi and Elise, now 11 and 12, who gave Grammy Bread its name.

In 2008, Shirley started to make mistakes. “Making this bread is something my mom can do with her eyes shut on a normal day, but she kept having issues in the kitchen. She’d have to start over from scratch,” Fickes said. “We should have known then that that was the beginning of her memory issues.” Over the years, her condition got worse and early this year the family decided 89-year-old Shirley needed more help than her doting husband Ralph could give her. “He would not leave her side. He would not leave the house. He had absolutely no social life whatsoever,” Fickes said. “We were worried at how rapidly my dad was aging being her caregiver.” Ralph and Shirley moved into an assisted living facility in Pennsylvania on March 1. Eleven days later, the state shutdown. “It’s tough. It’s tough,” said Fickes. “When my father first moved in, he was talking like that place was a cruise ship. He finally had people to talk to. He was walking the halls and saying hi to everybody.” Now Ralph and Shirley are forced to wave to their kids from their third floor balcony while talking to them on the phone. “But hey, at least we get to see them,” Fickes said, “And they're doing fairly well. We feel blessed they’re in a safe place.”

Because of the pandemic, their family can’t all be together for the holidays, so Fickes decided try his hand at baking his mom’s bread. “I thought the least I could do was try to make it and send it out to everybody,” he said. One Thanksgiving, years ago, he asked his mom to show him how to make it. He was worried the recipe would get lost as her memory got worse. “I can cook,” he said. “ But baking? I don’t know.” His mom laid out all the ingredients and showed him the way. “I took two pages of copious notes. We had a blast.” Fickes pulled out those notes and started baking for Thanksgiving. “It was very intimidating,” he said. “I didn’t want to just make her bread. I wanted to make her bread perfectly--down to the sesame seeds on top.” It took all day, but he made the white bread with the sesame seeds that had been such a part of their family’s life. “I was really worried,” Fickes said. I made bread, but was it Mom’s bread?’’ The day yielded six loaves. He kept some for his wife Kaja and the girls and shipped the rest to Pennsylvania. “I wanted everybody to have it on their Thanksgiving table.” Fickes choked up when he shared his brother’s reaction. “He didn’t know I was doing this,” Fickes said. “He called me and said, ‘I never thought I’d have this bread again.’ That was great.’” But there was still his mom--the woman who had poured her grief and love and generosity into this bread for years.

“My mom asked my Dad, ‘Did I make this?’” Fickes said. And when she found out that it was her youngest son that made it---the memory of them baking together more than a decade ago, wiggled forward. “She remembered! She said, ‘Danny, you finally made it. All these years and you made it.’ Yep,” he said. “Surprise.”

  continue reading

52 odcinków

Artwork
iconUdostępnij
 
Manage episode 282665003 series 2850593
Treść dostarczona przez Ally Donnelly. Cała zawartość podcastów, w tym odcinki, grafika i opisy podcastów, jest przesyłana i udostępniana bezpośrednio przez Ally Donnelly lub jego partnera na platformie podcastów. Jeśli uważasz, że ktoś wykorzystuje Twoje dzieło chronione prawem autorskim bez Twojej zgody, możesz postępować zgodnie z procedurą opisaną tutaj https://pl.player.fm/legal.

With a fistful of yeasty dough, Dan Fickes is nervous. “I’m 57 years old. I’ve never made bread in my life.” The Hingham man is not just making any bread. He’s making Grammy Bread--the simple, white bread that got a wounded woman out of bed to face life without her first-born son. “I just can’t fathom losing one of your children at any age--let alone your first child, at age five.” Fickes, who grew up in Camp Hill Pennsylvania, wasn’t yet born when his oldest brother David died. The preschooler had a brain tumor and lived only days after the operation to remove it. Their mother Shirley fell into a deep and crippling depression. “It was almost a year, maybe more,” Fickes said. “She stayed in bed. She cried. She slept.” It was a friend from church, a woman named Chickie Bresnahan, who came to the house with a brown bag of groceries that would slowly tug Shirley back to the land of the living. “She had the flour, the yeast, everything and said, ‘Shirley, get out of bed. This is what we’re doing.’ From what I understand it was a fight to get my mom out, but reluctantly she put on her robe and slippers and went to the kitchen and they made bread that day.” Fickes says his mom kept baking for decades. “I think at first it was just a way to keep herself busy, to get her mind off things. She would bake loaves for our family and then, she started giving it away.” She passed out loaves of bread and everyone would ask for it--aunts, uncles, cousins, even Fickes’ own children Kristi and Elise, now 11 and 12, who gave Grammy Bread its name.

In 2008, Shirley started to make mistakes. “Making this bread is something my mom can do with her eyes shut on a normal day, but she kept having issues in the kitchen. She’d have to start over from scratch,” Fickes said. “We should have known then that that was the beginning of her memory issues.” Over the years, her condition got worse and early this year the family decided 89-year-old Shirley needed more help than her doting husband Ralph could give her. “He would not leave her side. He would not leave the house. He had absolutely no social life whatsoever,” Fickes said. “We were worried at how rapidly my dad was aging being her caregiver.” Ralph and Shirley moved into an assisted living facility in Pennsylvania on March 1. Eleven days later, the state shutdown. “It’s tough. It’s tough,” said Fickes. “When my father first moved in, he was talking like that place was a cruise ship. He finally had people to talk to. He was walking the halls and saying hi to everybody.” Now Ralph and Shirley are forced to wave to their kids from their third floor balcony while talking to them on the phone. “But hey, at least we get to see them,” Fickes said, “And they're doing fairly well. We feel blessed they’re in a safe place.”

Because of the pandemic, their family can’t all be together for the holidays, so Fickes decided try his hand at baking his mom’s bread. “I thought the least I could do was try to make it and send it out to everybody,” he said. One Thanksgiving, years ago, he asked his mom to show him how to make it. He was worried the recipe would get lost as her memory got worse. “I can cook,” he said. “ But baking? I don’t know.” His mom laid out all the ingredients and showed him the way. “I took two pages of copious notes. We had a blast.” Fickes pulled out those notes and started baking for Thanksgiving. “It was very intimidating,” he said. “I didn’t want to just make her bread. I wanted to make her bread perfectly--down to the sesame seeds on top.” It took all day, but he made the white bread with the sesame seeds that had been such a part of their family’s life. “I was really worried,” Fickes said. I made bread, but was it Mom’s bread?’’ The day yielded six loaves. He kept some for his wife Kaja and the girls and shipped the rest to Pennsylvania. “I wanted everybody to have it on their Thanksgiving table.” Fickes choked up when he shared his brother’s reaction. “He didn’t know I was doing this,” Fickes said. “He called me and said, ‘I never thought I’d have this bread again.’ That was great.’” But there was still his mom--the woman who had poured her grief and love and generosity into this bread for years.

“My mom asked my Dad, ‘Did I make this?’” Fickes said. And when she found out that it was her youngest son that made it---the memory of them baking together more than a decade ago, wiggled forward. “She remembered! She said, ‘Danny, you finally made it. All these years and you made it.’ Yep,” he said. “Surprise.”

  continue reading

52 odcinków

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