Welcome to September and The Wednesday Hodgepodge. If you've answered today's questions, add your link at the end of my post, then leave a comment for the blogger before you. Here we go...
1. Next Sunday is Grandparent's Day. Share a favorite memory, photo, recipe, or something you learned from a grandparent.2. What's a quote from a book (besides The Bible) that has stayed with you?
I could write a book with quotes I love from books I've read, and how do you choose an answer here? Pat Conroy is one of my favorite authors so I'm going with one of his-
"I could bear the memory, but I could not bear the music that made the memory such a killing thing." Pat Conroy in Beach Music
3. What's your number one food pet peeve?
Someone talking with food in their mouth.
4. What's one thing about you that is still the same as it was when you were young?
I still love books, walking barefoot, sweet treats, and a full table with family and friends gathered round. I'm still an optimist, and it takes a lot to make me angry.
5. September is National Preparedness Month...does your family have an emergency plan? Do you have some sort of preparedness kit you keep on hand? If so, tell us one thing that's kept there.
We do not currently have an official emergency plan, but we are also not totally unprepared for an emergency. We've had plans in the past, mostly when the girls were single and we were all living in different parts of the country, but circumstances change and we don't have a firm plan in place in this house.
It's become something we all laugh about (except me because I'm serious about this sort of thing), but my girls will tell you I give them some sort of emergency preparedness gift every Christmas. Everything from weather radios and fire starters to an earthquake evacuation kit for Daughter1 when she lived in Washington State. She was living there as a newlywed when the scary New Yorker article about the risk of earthquakes along the Cascadia Fault came out. The article was called The Big One and the title alone was enough to make me hit purchase.
6. Insert your own random thought here.
My basil has absolutely exploded this year. I think it's loved all the summer rain we've had and it has thrived. My grands love it right off the stem and they snatch a leaf to snack on every time they walk past.
I harvested a big bowl full over the weekend and made pesto with it. I used this recipe and it is delicious.
It's also good topped with some shrimp or grilled chicken, but we'd had a big late breakfast after church and wanted a lighter dinner.
Your basil is so pretty and the pesto and pasta dish look so good! Talk about preparednes - you are growing your own Italian kitchen! Lol!
ReplyDeleteThat's a great grandparent memory! I think that people who live into adulthood with at least one grandparent alive and healthy are fortunate (it's probably more common than not- my husband had three of his four grandparents alive and well into his twenties). Your basil looks so good! My one basil plant has thrived, too, and I am not doing a good job of using it. Unfortunately, I don't care for pesto so I'm not using it for that. That's great the your grandkids like it so much! I do like the smell of it even with a "compromised" sniffer, I can detect whiffs of it and I like it :). Thanks for the link up/questions and have a great day!
ReplyDeleteAww! Your GiGi is just adorable and sounds like a wonderful woman!
ReplyDeleteThat annoys me too when someone talks with food in their mouth.
Well done with the basil. It sounds like you family is loving it!
That basil...wow! That quote is beautiful, and true. Sometimes the memories aren't sad, but it's the music that makes me cry! Thanks for sharing today, friend. xoxo
ReplyDeleteWhat a sweet picture of your grandmother! She looks just as precious as you described her. It sounds like it was a busy, hard time for your mom when you were young and your dad was away for that year. I am so impressed at your pesto & that meal looks delicious! Also, I gave my daughters fire blankets last year for Christmas, so I think that is a great gift idea :). Thanks for hosting this post!
ReplyDeleteLove the grandma memory and photo!
ReplyDeleteyou crack me up. Here in NYS we are saying our basil did so well due to the NO rain and High heat and humidity in July. haha I don't know how to make pesto otherwise I would. I've been sharing with neighbors and also tucking basil into sandwiches, salads, wraps. SO good
like you, I have SO many fave non-Biblical quotes from reading but i chose the one that ALWAYS is in the front of my mind especially when thinking on the 2nd greatest command Jesus left us with.
HAPPY WEDNESDAY!
Basil is one of my favorite herbs, but I have had the hardest time getting it to stay healthy in the pot I have by my window. Yours is absolutely beautiful!
ReplyDeleteThat is a sweet photo of your grandmother and daughter2. That is nice that your girls got to know her. My children didn't get to know their grandmother. They were toddlers when she passed away. Interesting quote. That is definitely a pet peeve for sure.That is so sweet that you are still the same as when you were young. I'm jealous. I love that you give them those emergency type gifts at Christmas. Love your random thought. Hope you have a lovely day.
ReplyDeleteOur basil is going strong this season too. :-) I plan to make pesto this next week.
ReplyDeleteI had to laugh at eating with food in your mouth. Hee Hee, yep, not good.
I enjoyed your answer to #1.
xx oo
Carla
A precious picture of your grandmother and such a great memory.
ReplyDeleteI might just add basil to my green thumb next year.
Oh, I just loved reading your answers today! What a beautiful tribute to your grandmother.. Those kinds of memories are treasures we hold forever.
ReplyDeleteI completely agree about the food pet peeve (I can’t handle that either, ha!). And barefoot walking, sweet treats, books, and family around the table…yes to all of that!
Your basil story made me smile…so sweet that your grands grab a leaf as they go by. Simple joys like that are the best.
That is so sweet that your girls were able to know their great grandmother and how sweet that you have so many memories with her. Grandparents are such a good support system for families. I'm smiling about your preparedness gifts! The reality is hitting me as I'm looking out my window at the smoke that is obliterating our mountains and I'm seeing fire agency truck after truck drive past our home to help with the fire about 14 miles north of us. What is really heart warming is that these trucks I'm seeing today are all the way from Kitsap County. (On the other side of Puget Sound!). I hope your September is emergency free!
ReplyDeleteoh how I love your #4. I go barefoot in the house all the time and for grounding purposes, I even walk outside barefoot. I can just smell that fresh basil right now. so pretty and refreshing. Thanks Joyce..so glad I joined your Wednesday Hodgepodge.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Joyce! I am so going to buy me some basil!
ReplyDeleteI wished I could take out of the screen your last plate ! That's what I love and suffer here with their potatoes with each meal ! For 54
ReplyDeletefor 54 years we ate mostly Italian, and here peas and carrots ! I only knew my grandma, there were no photos when my great grandma lived. I only know that she had 12 children (poor girl) and my grandma never talked about her.
ReplyDeleteLove the photo of your daughter and your grandma! The basil is so beautiful. Our local grocery had large pots of it this spring, and displayed all together they scented one whole end of the store. I'm with you on the pet peeve. Never even thought of that one!
ReplyDeleteI love your grandma memory and that photo! Thanks for another great Hodgepodge, Joyce! I almost bought a basil plant to put in my raised bed. Yours looks amazing, so now I need to get one planted. Thanks for the reminder!! xo
ReplyDeleteGreat phots and some damn good answers
ReplyDeleteSuch a heartfelt post! GiGi sounds like an incredible woman, and that photo is pure sweetness.
ReplyDeleteYour pesto looks amazing - so fresh! When we moved back to Minnesota in the early 70's, my grandparents came to live with us and continued to live with my parents until each of them passed. My grandparents had their own apartment connected to the house but ate all their meals with us and there were many blessing to living together! Our daughters called my mom Nana and my grandma (her mom) became G-Nana to all the great grandkids. The girls have such fond memories of her!
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