my
mother's footsteps
by laurey masterton
Ive
just come from a very inspirational weekend in Boston at the
Women Chefs and Restaurateurs (WCR) conference. The overall
theme this year was Food, Flavor, and Family, which guided the
thinking of each of us as we trooped around from seminar to
presentation to meal. Top name women in food founded this organization
and some of them were with us this weekend.
I
guess that one of the most moving parts of this time for me
was remembering, once again, how important my mother is to me
and how important she was, in her time, to the world of food
for women. Her books were quite amazing for they were filled
with conversation and comforting instructions and were received
by an audience of other women (and men) who did not have access
to cooking schools (or The Food Network!) to learn this art.
What my mother cooked was way beyond the food that was taught
in home ec classes and the way she wrote about that food was
very different and, in its time, tremendously innovative.
I
had a brief and significant conversation with two food historians
who spoke, along with Mimi Sheraton (formerly the food critic
for the New York Times) about important women in food history.
Barbara Haber, author, historian, and curator of the cookbook
collection at the Schlesinger Library at Harvard University
and Laura Shapiro, historian and author both spoke about personal
story and talked about the importance of these stories being
told. After their talk I approached them, wondering what they
might say about my mother.
Do
you know the Blueberry Hill Cookbooks? I asked them. They
both nodded, politely. Yes, of course, they were literary women
with a focus on food. Yes, they knew these books.
My
mother wrote those books, I continued.
OH!
they both gasped, stopped, reached out to me. Your mother
was Elsie? You are Elsie Mastertons daughter? You have
no idea how wonderful it is to meet you! they exclaimed.
I
knew it wasnt ME they were excited about meeting, but
that their response was to this daughter of the woman who, at
a certain time of their lives, had meant so much to each of
them. It took MY breath away, their reaction.
I
have many stories about growing up with my mother, I said.
And I wonder about putting them together into a book.
People ask me, but I dont know if I should or if these
memories are something that should just stay in my head, comforting
me. I dont know what to do.
You
MUST tell these stories! they exclaimed. Please.
You must!
I kept their words with me for the rest of my weekend. Sometimes
I do my day to day life and forget my roots. But this weekend
reminded me that I really am following in the path of a remarkable
woman. She translated the elegant into the manageable, bringing
the fanciness of fine New York restaurants to the lucky ones
who made it to Blueberry Hill, either in person or through her
cookbooks.
I met other daughters who were following their mothers
paths: Helen Chen led me through Chinatown and told stories
about her mother, Joyce Chen, a renegade saleswoman and tireless
advocate of all things Chinese. And I listened, rapt, as Anna
Lappé told stories about traveling with her mother, Frances
Moore Lappé as they wrote Hopes Edge, 30 years
after Diet for a Small Planet changed so many of our worlds.
So
even though my mother has not physically been with me for a
very long time, she is very much inside me every day, guiding,
observing, coaching, prodding, and suggesting. I remembered,
this past weekend, why it is that I do what I do. My mother
is a big reason. I think shed be pleased.
Laurey
Masterton is the Proprietor of Laureys Catering and Gourmet go Go
in Asheville where she tends the stoves, greets the guests,
and writes a thing or two every so often.
laureysyum.com