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Callie Feyen

How to Bake Bread

in Uncategorized on 04/02/15

To make a loaf of beer herb bread, you need to start with two packages of yeast. You sprinkle that over lukewarm water and stir to dissolve. After that, you fold in heated beer, sugar, salt, and melted butter. There’s no proofing the yeast in this recipe, and I like that. I hate proofing yeast because I don’t understand how it works. I think you’re supposed to see a bubble in the water after a while, but I don’t have the patience.

This recipe comes from Bread Book by Susan Wright and Irena Chambers. It was published in 1972 and looks like a recipe book that a bunch of church ladies put together at a Bible study cookie exchange. Except in this case it would’ve been a bread exchange. The cookbook belonged to my grandma, Clara Glunesserian Ayanoglou. When she died, I took this, along with a Sherlock Holmes book of my grandpa’s, and a locket with a picture of the two of them inside.

I have no idea why she had the cookbook, because my grandma never used them. Her recipes were created while she sang hymns and banged pots and pans, kneaded dough, and stomped around in the kitchen in her bare feet. My grandma never wore shoes and she never used cookbooks.

She also never shared recipes; none of the Ayanoglou women did. It could have been out of pride. Ayanoglou girls are stubborn and bull-headed. They love when people sneak into the kitchen to take a peek, a sniff, or steal a taste of what’s cooking, but they’ll act annoyed that you’re in there. And if you ask if you can help, they’ll slap your hand, tsk, or shoo you away. “Go play,” or “Pour some wine,” or “Fix my shower head. It’s broken.” And when you’re gone, they’ll put a hand on a hip and smile that pursed lip smile knowing they’re making a thing no one else can make, and everyone wants. Ayanoglou girls don’t need any help because no one else can do what they can do. I know because I’m one of them. I also know that if you’re an Ayanoglou girl, you need a recipe only you can make.

I’m over at Makes You Mom today where you can read the rest of this essay.  Pour yourself some coffee or tea, and come on over.

 

4 Comments

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Comments

  1. Jeannine says

    February 4, 2015 at 7:00 pm

    LOVED this.

    Reply
    • calliefeyen says

      February 6, 2015 at 9:11 pm

      Thanks, Jeannine! Thank you for reading it.

      Reply
  2. alison says

    February 4, 2015 at 11:29 pm

    so lovely. parts of this piece were familiar (either i’ve read portions before or i just remember your stories), but i don’t remember the part about the hummus. i love that. also, i wonder if you remember. you sent me this beer bread recipe right before naomi was born. it’s been a favorite of ours now for seven years…

    Reply
    • calliefeyen says

      February 6, 2015 at 9:10 pm

      thank you! yes, i sent you parts of this essay along the way as it was being developed. thanks for reading it! and i am so glad you like the bread recipe. it’s a nice little recipe, isn’t it?

      Reply

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Hi! I’m Callie. I’m a writer and teacher living in Ann Arbor, Michigan. I write Creative Nonfiction, and in my oldest daughter Hadley’s words, I “use my imagination to add a bit of sparkle to the story.” I’m a contributor for Coffee+Crumbs, Off the Page, Makes You Mom, and Relief Journal. My writing has also been featured on Art House America, Tweetspeak Poetry, Good Letters, and Altarwork, and in 2014 I was one of the cast members of the Listen To Your Mother DC show.

I hold an MFA in Creative Writing from Seattle Pacific University, and I am working on my first book that will be published through TS Poetry Press.

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When I was in fourth grade, I got my front tooth k When I was in fourth grade, I got my front tooth knock out during a baseball game. I was in the dugout, trying to make a butterfly in the dirt with my shoe. The batter, who’d hit not just a home run, but a grand slam, came running in and everyone cheered and so did I because I’d gotten really good at reading cues for when a good thing happens in sports. I even attempted a high five, and somehow I knocked my face into her batting helmet, thus spending the good part of that weekend summer day in the dentist’s office getting a root canal.

No teeth were lost in this latest incident, but I was lost in a bit of imagining on Sunday when I tripped and fell on Packard while running. I look like I’ve been in a bar fight and my shoulder looks similar to how Wesley’s looked after being attacked by an ROUS. 

But I’m going into work today, and when I told my boss I’m nervous about how I look she said, “It’s OK because you have a story,” and if that isn’t the best thing you could ever say to me, I’m not sure what is. 

So, here I am with a story. Thanks to all my friends and family who’ve been so kind and keeping me laughing.
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