
My mother made good on her promise.
My mother was a hero.
In January of 1978 my brother Richard and his wife were flying home from their vacation, and would be stopping by my parent’s home to pick up Sam, their dog. Sam had been my dog, but since moving into their new home which was all decorated in white—white wool carpet, white sofa, white upholstered dining room chairs—and with me off at college, the dog had gone to live with Richard. I was six when my mother promised me that I could have a dog, but only if I could wait until I turned twelve. I didn’t mention the dog thing again until my twelfth birthday and then, surprisingly, my mother made good on her promise. I think she felt guilty that I would be home alone, with the last of my three older siblings heading off to college. The fact that my mother took me shopping for a puppy is the first example of my mom as a hero, since she was not a dog person (note the white carpet and white furniture). In addition to a lot of white, the new home had slick parquet floors, in a great open area which at its longest spanned 55 feet, and which sat atop 6″ of hollow-core concrete slabs. My dad was in the precast concrete business and there was a lot of structural concrete in the new home. After over 25 years (they had paid off the mortgage) in a 1920’s era home with the creakiest of floors, my father was proud of the solid floors in this new dream house. One could sneak from room to room in the new house without the slightest sound. There was no give to these floors.
Mom had prepared Richard’s favorite lasagna for dinner, and it sat on the counter waiting to go in the oven. A proficient multi-tasker long before they had a word for it, she phoned the airline to see when the plane would be arriving at O’Hare, and while on hold she took a minute to lay down the phone and run into the other room for a moment. Mom always had hot feet and instead of shoes or slippers she wore those nude-colored knee-high stockings. She had a drawer stuffed with hundreds of them in all shades of nudes and beige and taupe. As she ran into the other room, while the airline played hold-music, she slipped on the smooth parquet, and her hip landed right on that 6″ of immovable, hollow-core concrete, and broke.
Realizing that it was painful to walk, Mom crawled into the kitchen and somehow put the lasagna in the oven. She managed to get to the couch to wait until my brother arrived and called an ambulance. On her way out the door, on a stretcher, she told us when the lasagna would be ready and that we should be sure to check on it and sit down to eat it while it was hot. My hero.

An old recipe, with my regards to Dan Quayle.
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I didn’t break anything, I only had a cold, and so I can’t claim to be anywhere in a league with Ruth Gordon. Yet even though I was feeling ill I felt compelled by that mysterious, maternal force to produce a meal. The day before I had taken out the bag of frozen turkey scraps which had been in the freezer since Thanksgiving, and it was time to use them or toss them. As I lay in bed all day, feeling sorry for my pitiful virus, I contemplated the thawed turkey scraps and how I had planned on a lovely pot pie for dinner. Feeling the need to make dinner, and also feeling very lazy, I made a hurry-up version of a pot pie, making more of a cobbler than a pie. I made pot-pie filling as usual, poured it into a casserole dish, then mixed up a batch of biscuits in the food processor and glopped on bits of the biscuit dough on top of the filling,
Last night we had Turkey Cobbler for the third night in a row. Max asked me how much more of it there was and when I replied, sheepishly, that he must be sick of it, he said, “No, I could eat this every night for weeks! I love this!” I think I just invented Max’s favorite dinner, which I can make when he comes to visit me some day, when I’m watching his dog. I will endeavor to be a heroic mother. I will not, however, ever have a home that is decorated in all white.

With a father who loves biscuits and gravy, and a teenage boy's love of carbs, it makes sense that this is Max's new favorite meal.
Dori, this is one of the sweetest stories ever. I love being in tune with you through this blog! It almost feels as if we’re living in the same town again–to me, at least. I know it must be kind of lonely for you sometimes, sending thoughts out into the ether, wondering if any of them are being intercepted. But rest assured, I read every single one and feel closer to you each time.
Hugs and kisses to you and your tribe,
Candace
I’m very happy to know that you are reading and enjoying. It’s great to share. Hugs back to you and yours!
I remember the day you got Sammy! I was very impressed that you trained him to stay out of the living room. Especially since we had a very badly trained dog who liked to bury bagel crusts in the sofa cushions.
I have never heard that story before. My mom told a few stories about Sam (she was also not a dog person) but not that one. What an amazing lady, Grandma is my hero too. Maybe I’ll make my dad his favorite lasagna next time he visits!
Sarah, I think that your parents were coming back from a trip to Florida. It was the first week in January. A friend of mine, Donna Gates, was staying with us, in from Connecticut for interviews that she and I had at the U of I in Chicago to get into the medical illustration program. She and I had been at our interviews that day and Aaron and Donna, or maybe just Aaron drove us back to Long Grove where we found my mom on the couch, and your dad convincing her that they needed to call an ambulance. And I think it was up to me to get the lasagna out of the oven on time and it may have burned a little. I think that my dad must have been picking up your parents from O’Hare. That would have been the plan. What a crazy memory.
Dori, A beautiful, touching story, so many mom hero’s…I too love connecting with you through your blog and your recipes. You do a wonderful job:) kerrie
Dori,
This story is a definitely a keeper. What a tribute to the strength of maternal love, multi-taskers that we are forced to be!