Sunday, October 23, 2005

Apple Sauce Day

I was greatly saddened when I wasn't well enough to attend the great Fairwood Apple Sauce Day. However, I decided to post here today an article about it that I wrote last year for school. Here it is to celebrate the occasion.

Ever since I was small, apple sauce day has always been special. First, on the chosen autumn morning, you enter the Main House kitchen where bushels of juicy red apples lie in heaps all around. Then comes the cutting. About a dozen people crowd around a long table, perched on stools and chattering away happily. My hands wet with water and juice, I grip a cold knife, slicing freely while grabbing a tart bite here and there. The apple slurps in protest at being dissected, the blade knocks the cutting board, and then a heavy plink is heard as the apple piece sails into the bottom of a monstrous pot. Soon these are overflowing, and a bible school boy nabs them one at a time and brings them to the black stove to boil. When steam is bellowing out from its depths, he gingerly picks it up with flowery hot pads and races to the next point. Here is the actual apple sauce machine in all its humming glory, and the privileged worker scoops the steamy mush and dumps it into a bowl-like object. Squishing it down a funnel with a plastic red masher, it’s hot work but can be fun. In a matter of seconds, bright pink apple sauce coming gushing down a slide to collect in a large metal bowl, while the pulp rolls ponderously out the side and drops to its end in a garbage bucket.

As each aromatic bowl is brimming, it’s quickly replaced with another and swooped to the counter nearby. This is where you go if you want to steal some of the sweet concoction in a cup. Here a bible school girl bedecked in an apron measures out mounds of sugar to pour into selected portions of applesauce, before funneling the burning mixture into quart jars, marking them, and sealing them. Soon endless rows of warm pink jars are lined up on a small table in the corner, as well as on the floor and on a cart, ready to be deposited in the delightfully musty interior of the Main House cellar. Although apple sauce day is tiring to some, it is evidence of diligent labor and hearty teamwork, which can lead to many happy memories.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Sounds like loads of fun. Sorry you had to miss it.

Anonymous said...

sorry, I wasnt at class today. Some friends showed up when we were leaving. Some day we will be in art class together.

Marie said...

this was awesome. You're following in the footsteps of some of your family members in being a good writer. You are very good:) Made pictures pop up into my head:)

lis said...

Yes, that's exactly how it is! I miss applesauce day, too, Kayla... I did even when I was in Israel!

Anonymous said...

Miss hearin from you:(

Anonymous said...

me too, me too where have you been!? i've missed you. and you haven't writen since September! you should write a little more often don't ya think? love ya can't wait to here from you!