Friday, December 23, 2011

A kind of immortality





Once of the things I always do at Christmas is make my own mince pies.  There’s something about homemade pastry that means that shop-bought ones never really come close.  I’ve always managed to make good pastry because I use a food processor (cookery tip: over-handling pastry, especially when you’ve got hot hands like me, makes it tough and nasty).  And there’s a story attached to the food processor.


Eighteen years ago when we moved to Ruddington to begin Mike’s first pastorate, a friend of my in-laws named Hertha gave me a generous gift.  She gave me some money and said “You’ll be doing a lot of entertaining as a minister’s wife so buy yourself something that will make that easier.”  I bought a food processor and it has chopped, sliced, diced, minced, blended and mixed every year since.  In particular, every Christmas it has made the batches of flaky, buttery pastry that I have made into mince pies for seasonal church events and socials.  Hertha died more than fifteen years ago, but every year I have remembered and thanked her again, because without her generosity the making of over a hundred mince pies would have been an impossible chore.  This autumn the food processor gave up the ghost and was replaced by a shiny new model.  I have just made my pastry and remembered her thoughtful generosity again.  Now that’s a good kind of immortality.

2 comments:

  1. I love this reflection. Love how her generosity has enabled you in turn to be generous and bless others as well.

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  2. It's a good legacy to leave behind isn't it, and yet it was a relatively simple gift.

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