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Archive for July, 2012

The 4th of July is a time to celebrate America’s independence from Great Britain. It is time to reflect on our forefathers and their dream of freedom. A time to remember our veterans who fought hard to preserve our way of life.

It is also a time to cook meat. To cook it over fire. To cook it like a man.

I recently ran across this picture:

I’m not sure who this is or where it is (although it must be somewhere in the vicinity of Citronelle, AL), but this is the way real men barbeque. No namby pamby gas grill with a little stove knob to start it. No sissy tongs, sauce mops, or thermometers.

This carnivore’s delight started with the phrase “First you dig a hole.” Then you get some iron bars and place them across said hole. The grilling surface is completed with the addition of chicken wire. It’s fencing, y’all. No little, sorry store-bought grill rack here.

Now isn’t that way yonder more manly than “Honey, let me run out on the deck and take the cover off the Big Green Egg?”

There is fire. A wood fire. No part of this equation incorporates anything that ends in -ette. This is a fire that required an axe, not opening a sack.

And you’ll notice that there are no burgers, or brats, or, God forbid, salmon filets on the fencing come grill. There is meat, real meat, with bones sticking out. Meat so immense that you need a pitchfork to turn it. A farm implement, good people, not a kitchen utensil.

This is how it was done back before grills had wheels, before we talked about our “outdoor living spaces,” before Martha Stewart tried to convince us that barbeque sauce should include either maple or chipotle.

This is down-home, shade tree, finger-lickin’ good barbeque. Barbeque for real men…and real women too!

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There may come a time when you find yourself winding down a two-lane country road. And along that road you may see a field. And in that field you may see an odd grouping of bright flame-colored flowers.

Photo courtesy of Ulf Eliasson via Wikipedia.

Meet Hemerocallis fulva, otherwise known as the common orange daylily or roadside daylily. This tangerine titan of perennials is considered by some to be a weed, an invasive species. But weeds don’t grow in perfectly straight lines. And weeds don’t grow in the shape of corners.

You see, these daylilies mark the foundations where front porches once stood, where families lived, where generations were born and died. These rows are an attempt to bring beauty to a life that was probably not always beautiful and was more likely harder than the ground from which these blossoms erupt. The hearty nature of the daylily mirrors the hearty souls of county folk willing to scratch out a living on their own ground rather than become beholden to another.

Granny loved the daylily and planted hundreds of different varieties around her home.  Along with the common orange there were lilies with single, double, and spider petals, some with ruffles, some with “eyes.” Lilies in every color of the rainbow from the palest peach to purples so dark they were very nearly black. Lilies bearing names like  “Daring Deception,” “Chicago Blackout,” and “Emerald Dew.”

Opie, me, and the lilies

There were dayliles that had been divided and traded for other varieties. Some were store bought – ordered from catalogs and anxiously awaited. One was even a special hybrid cultivated by another local lily enthusiast as a gift to commemorate the birth of a granddaughter.

We watched for buds to blossom not wanting to miss a special showing which, twenty-four hours later, would become a soggy, wilted shadow of its former glory. We went out early to pick them for a special Sunday bouquet or to show off in the annual flower show.

Granny has been gone from us for ten years now, but I’m sure that the lilies she cultivated so carefully continue to bloom with veracity, even in the face of South Alabama’s sun and heat, hurricane and drought. I’m sure their myriad colors still bring joy to those who gaze upon them. And I know that their blossoms will ever greet the morning sun long after we have joined Granny.

Although it’s name means “beauty for a day,” there are countless years of history lost to books, lost to us, that are commemorated only by lilies in fields. That is why this plain Jane perennial is no more a weed than the mighty oak. For even though its blooms may be fleeting, its rows will ever endure to mark a time in history that wood, stone, and mortar could not.

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