Vines & Vittles

with John Brown

Remembering Sunday Dinner

Since I am able to trace one-half of my ancestry back to southern Italy, I am prone to wax poetically from time to time about the tasteful treats emanating from that remarkable boot-shaped peninsula bisecting the Mediterranean and Adriatic Seas.

And while it would be a gross oversight to disregard Italy’s contributions to art, culture and, indeed, Western civilization, my interest in the country has always been squarely focused on food and wine, along with the warm and talented people who produce those exceptional products.

My maternal grandparents landed at Ellis Island in the late 19th Century, following others from their home state of Calabria to north-central West Virginia. After more than 15 years working in the mines, my grandfather built a bakery in the North View section of Clarksburg that, to this day, my cousins continue to operate.

Sunday family dinners at my grandparents’ home, replete with dozens of cousins, aunts and uncles, are happily and indelibly seared in my memory. Those Calabrian-inspired feasts, washed down with jugs  of home made red wine, would begin shortly after noon and proceed until early evening.

Once the multi-course meal was completed, the adults would insist that we children provide the postprandial entertainment. As our elders sat sipping vino or grappa, we would sing, recite poetry and/or perform little skits to our always appreciative audience.

Grandma, Grandpa and the Sunday dinner clan

One of my occasional duties on those Sundays decades ago was to descend into the earthen-walled, dark, dank and spooky basement to fetch a jug of wine from one of the oak barrels in my grandpa’s cellar.

I would rush down the steps, open the door to wine cellar, and pull the string on the single hanging light bulb to illuminate the room. Then I would turn the spigot on the barrel, quickly fill the jug and hurry back upstairs, hoping to avoid any contact with creepy crawlers or poltergeists.

Once, in my haste to complete the task, I inadvertently filled the jug from the wrong barrel – one containing vinegar. My grandpa, anxious to toast that day’s meal, poured himself a glass, uttered the words “Salute” and took a big sip of the vinegar.

Suffice it to say, the next words out of his mouth were  unprintable, but I was no longer asked to fetch the wine on Sunday.

We still keep the tradition in our family of gathering for Sunday dinner and many of the recipes I’ve recounted to you over the years have been versions of meals from those halcyon days. I’ll even open a bottle or two of my home made wine on occasion.

And while I do not (intentionally) make vinegar, some not so subtle individuals, after tasting my home made wine, suggest that  I have killed two birds with one stone!


Comments

4 responses to “Remembering Sunday Dinner”

  1. Loved your article this week, John. The Brown family carries on the tradition and I’m glad to have been part of it on occasions.

    1. John Brown Avatar
      John Brown

      Paula: You and Tom are certainly part of the extended Sunday meal family. Let’s keep the tradition going with Ian, Colin and their respective families.

  2. Leigh-Anne (Risher) Valdes Avatar
    Leigh-Anne (Risher) Valdes

    Hi John,

    So glad Terry Durst posted your article on Facebook. I was just down in WV visiting my Nana (your Aunt Mary…yep I’m Eleanor’s daughter.) I am working on a scrapbook for her and a little bit about our family’s history. I did not realize that Grandpa worked for 15 years in the mines so thank you for that detail. And although I never attended a “North View Sunday dinner” I shared many dinners with Aunt Rose and Uncle Frank Derro and I too had to get the wine from the cellar! You brought back wonderful memories…thank you! Hope you are well…sending you a long distance hug.

    1. John Brown Avatar
      John Brown

      Leigh-Anne: Your Nana and my Aunt Mary and you aunts and uncles were all part of the Sunday dinner group. Nice to hear from you.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *