Constance Walker is the
author of several Gothic and contemporary fiction works. Learn more about her
and her books at her website.
Ode to
Autumn
Autumn is my favorite season – there’s an
orderliness about it that I like and after long, hot sunny lazy days of “where
shall we go, what shall we eat, what shall we do?” summer, there’s a return to
planning in almost every part of our lives. It’s time to get back to the
routines of jobs, school, family, and friends. As the Professor in my new
novel, Storytime at the Villa Maria,
believes, it’s really the beginning of a new year. And it is!
It’s goodbye to summer meals that you never
felt like cooking and hello to thick vegetable soups and stews and lasagna and
spaghetti. It’s hello to winter pears and juicy oranges and baked potatoes and
hot cocoa in the evening, fragrant teas in the afternoon. It’s fresh-baked
chocolate chip cookies and sponge cakes and hot fruit pies. (Ella, another Villa
resident, always baked “sweet apple pies” for her war-wounded veteran husband.)
Autumn has its own language of clothes: it conjures scarves and jackets and
gloves and heavy sweaters – Sophie, who also lives in the Villa, loves to knit
them for her family and friends. It’s taking out that old soft sweatshirt that
you’ve had for years – the one you swear you’re going to throw away “soon” but
somehow never can because it’s your lucky sweatshirt that has so many good
memories.
There are autumn words and phrases that
convey feelings of home and family and peace and calm: “Brisk” walks on city streets and
country roads, “chilly” nights that require a blanket or afghan, “windy” days
and nights like when, Ben, another character, has to retrieve the hat of a Villa
resident that has blown down the street.
Even autumn light is different – somehow the
sun is a deeper gold, the sky bluer and the clouds whiter and more distinct.
The season’s colors – burgundy and crimson and deep yellows and purples and
oranges are reflected in big pots of chrysanthemums and pumpkins, and golden
tans, scarlets and dark green shades show in just-about-to, or already, fallen
leaves.
There’s a refresh/reset button for people in
September, October and November – it’s a getting back to order before the cold
comes. It’s a vow to straighten closets and drawers, to read a book, to listen
to the sounds and rhythms of the family. It’s children’s arithmetic homework,
it’s taking care of the family and having lots of “sniffle” tissues in the house,
and it’s a “must lose ten pounds before the holidays” promise to yourself. It’s
getting back to old friends – Saturday night get-togethers for adults and board
and electronic games with the children, and the promise of Hallowe’en fun for
the kids and the excitement of many religions’ holidays to come.
Autumn is the beginning of everything in its
place, everything in order. Autumn is my favorite time of the year. I look
forward to it. I revel in it.
Autumn is…
The characters in Storytime at the Villa Maria are in the late-autumn/early winter of their lives, but that doesn't stop them from enjoying whatever the golden years may bring.
The characters in Storytime at the Villa Maria are in the late-autumn/early winter of their lives, but that doesn't stop them from enjoying whatever the golden years may bring.
Dutch
Apple Pie
Ingredients:
1 deep dish pie shell (everyone has their own
favorite way of making pastry)
6 cups peeled, cored and sliced apples (I use
a combination of tart and sweet apples like Granny Smith McIntosh, Johnathon
Gold, Winesap, etc.)
1/2 cup granulated sugar
1/4 cup packed brown sugar
1/4 cup flour
1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon nutmeg
1/4 teaspoon cardamom
Topping:
3/4 cup flour
1/4 cup granulated sugar
2/3 cup brown sugar. Packed
1/3 cup butter or margarine at room
temperature
Preheat oven to 375F degrees F.
In a large bowl, mix the sliced apples, lemon
juice, sugars, flour, cinnamon, nutmeg and cardamom. Place mixture in pie
shell, mounding the apples higher in the middle.
In another bowl, blend together the topping
ingredients with a fork or pastry blender until it begins to crumble. Sprinkle
the crumble mixture evenly over the sliced apples.
Bake for 45-50 minutes until the crust and
topping are deep golden brown.
Storytime at the Villa
Maria
Meet…
Dominick, who married “the most beautiful woman in the world”…
Sophie, who is haunted by terrifying memories of the Holocaust…
Ella, who made “sweet apple pies” for her war veteran husband…
Tom, whose music lured women into his arms…
Artie, who is plagued by the ghosts of long-dead soldiers…
Frank, who can't let go of his yesterdays, though a better tomorrow
beckons…
Join them and others as they gather every Monday night in the library at
the Villa Maria to share their memories, their fears, and their dreams.
Storytime at the Villa
Maria—the unforgettable book about
life lived and still to be lived, and about the mysterious threads of joy and
heartache and love that are woven into every life—including your own!
A charming novel of senior citizens, storytelling, nostalgia, and a
world gone by but not forgotten
Buy Links
3 comments:
What a beautiful tribute to autumn! You make the season come alive, just as you make the characters in STORYTIME come alive. I loved the book. I can't wait to try that apple pie recipe. Is it Ella's recipe or yours?
Thank you -- appreciate it.
The pie is my own recipe -- Ella has her own.
Thanks, again.
Constance Walker
WWW.CONSTANCEWALKER.COM
Great post on "#COOKING WITH CLORIS--GUEST AUTHOR CONSTANCE WALKER ON AUTUMN AND APPLE PIE". As a professional chef i have to appreciate your work. Keep Posting useful posts like this. Keep in touch with my websites- icing courses dubai | icing program in dubai
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