In this installment, Elsie tells about a couple of foods
that her family used to make, a misadventure with her father’s dinner, and a
few animal interactions.
Sometime when it
snowed, we would make ice cream. We started with a ten pound tin can with a
clencher lid. We’d put some cream and a little milk, sugar, vanilla and eggs.
We’d find a big drift of snow, we put doun in the snow. We took turns twisting
and turning this ice cream. Of course we open the can up once in a while to see
how it was coming a long. Icicies were used to freeze the cream instead of the
snow, of course the icicles had to be gathered and copped up.
Mother made the best
beef steak pudding, as she called it, it consisted of beef, a little flour, a
little water, pepper and salt with a suet crust. She cooked it on the back of
the stove allday long, on a wood stove. It was cooked in a heavy fire proof
bowl, covered withe a cloth. Tied with a string. Then the pudding was put in a
pan of water. This was a wonderful dinner with good mashed potatoes.
Mother cooked her
plum pudding this way also.
One day Dad asked us
to go over to the other ranch, across the flied, from us. This farm also
belonged to the Dorrs and the Shaws. The tenants had moved and on one was
living there. He had seen some scallions (little onions) over there going to
waste. So one day Bill and I decided to go over and get some for him. We
cleaned them and put them on the table ready for his dinner. That night Dad was
happy to see that we had gotten his scallions. He took one bite. (What ever is
this, where did you get this?” We told him it was what he wanted. Bill and I
never had tasted or smelled garlic before. We thought it didn’t smell like
onions. Bill and I got a kick out of this, he wanted us to get them and then
they didn’t turn out right.
When the thrashers,
came they would lift up the bundles of wheat. The binder had already been there
and put the wheat in sort of standing up piles. The thrashers were pick up the
piles and feed them into the machine to knock the wheat out of the stacks.
Under some of these piles were a few baby mice, all pink and white. We children
liked to watch the thrashers but also these litt mice. Bill and Walter being
older than I, would encourage me to carry one of these cute little mice into
the house and scare my mother. Of course the boys came with me but I carried
this little cute mouse, by the tail into the house. I can still see Mother
yelling “Get that out of here. One day she even got and stood on top of the
table. Holding up her skirts yelled, Don’t let him loose in here
This was funny until
one day, there wasn’t any mice. We found a water dog a little one, I was
supposed to carry this in to the house. I took hold of his tail as I had did
the little mice. He had a different He just curled up and bit me on the hand.
That was the last I ever did that. The boys could carry their own animals after
that.
I was surprised
Mother didn’t like mice, as she had a little poem. I think she made up. The
poem went like thi
I’m only a wee little mouse ma’m
I live in the crack of your house ma’m
With a small piece of cheese
And a very few peas
Only having a little feast ma’m
Oh, no need to open the door
I can slip right thru this crack ma’m
I always enjoyed
this little poem. She said there wasn’t anymore to it.
Every spring the
sheepherders would bring their flocks of sheep, by our house, on thier way to
the foot hills, to feed during the summer months. We lived on a small hill, we
could see them coming in the valley below. The sheep would stir up a cloud of
dust. Bill and I would run and get on the gate posts, the posts were flat on
top, so we could sit on them. We waited for the band of sheep to come by. Then
we would ask the sheep herders, if they had left any little lambs along the way
that couldn’t make it. They would tell yes and where they had left them, not to
far from where we lived. Bill and I would run all the way and fetch this cute
new born baby lamb home with us. Sometimes there was only one and another time
there would be a pair of twins. No matter we shared our little lambs. We knew
how to feed them out of a bottle. Later they could eat grass and wheat like the
big ones. We gave them a lot of love and attention.
Out of curiosity about that little verse about the mouse, I
did a quick search on the internet. Without looking very hard, I found what is
probably the original of that poem. It is entitled “The Mouse” and was written
by Laura Elizabeth Richards:
I’m only a poor
little mouse, ma’am!
I live in the wall
of your house, ma’am!
With a fragment of
cheese and a very few peas
I was having a
little carouse, ma’am!
No mischief at all I
intend, ma’am!
I hope you will act
as my friend, ma’am!
If my life you
should take, many hearts it would break,
And the trouble
would be without end, ma’am!
My wife lives in
there, in the crack, ma’am!
She’s waiting for me
to come back, ma’am!
She hoped I might
find a bit of a rind,
For the children
their dinner do lack, ma’am!
’Tis hard living there
in the wall, ma’am!
For plaster and
mortar will pall, ma’am,
On the minds of the
young, and when specially hung—
Ay, upon their poor
father they’ll fall. ma’am!
I never was given to
strife, ma’am!
(Don't look at that
terrible knife, ma’am!)
The noise overhead
that disturbs you in bed,
’Tis the rats, I
will venture my life, ma’am!
In your eyes I see
mercy, I’m sure, ma’am!
Oh, there’s no need
to open the door, ma’am!
I’ll slip through
the crack, and I’ll never come back,
Oh! I’ll never come back any more, ma’am!