I have a very strange relationship with American supermarket
baked goods. They are too big or too sweet, or just too unfamiliar. My last visit
to Tennessee feels like a lifetime ago. On that last visit I was attacked by
severe cake cravings. For just a simple fruit cake, not a creamy, iced kind of
cake. My second grandchild had arrived, and neither the mother nor the grandmother
of the newborn baby were in any mood to bake.
I walked to the local supermarket, a beautifully
located chain store. I would ramble around the suburban streets, admiring the
beautiful gardens on my way to it, but would take the shortest route home,
inevitably lugging more than I had planned to. After much searching in the
shelves and display cases, I found a box of blueberry muffins, tiny ones,
perhaps an inch and a half across. They were triumphantly borne home, along
with the regular fresh produce. Once home,
I took a bite, and was most upset with the cloying sweetness. I asked my son to
take a bite, and he was equally horrified. (Also that his diabetic mother had
been foolish enough to buy cake). The older grandchild was rarely given sweet
stuff. Could we give them to her nursery school teachers? No, because the box
was now open. My son told me to just throw them in the trashcan, but my desi
heart rebelled.
I wandered into the back yard. There was a tree with
forked branches, where I would often spy large American squirrels. Hmm. The
squirrels might make good guinea pigs for the muffins. No harm in trying. And
so, out of the remaining eleven muffins/cupcakes (can’t really tell the difference)
I kept two in the fork of the tree, whose name I never knew. (My son didn’t
know it then, either). I kept a watch from the kitchen door, and to my great
delight, the muffins were devoured in no time. For the next few days it was
party time for the backyard squirrels. They came, they saw, they gobbled. Every
day until the wretched muffins got over. They must have wondered where the
muffin dispensing person had disappeared to.
I am sorry to say that I do not really love American
squirrels. They lack the petite charm of our little desi ones. Their white
stripes are supposedly the result of Lord Rama stroking a squirrel’s back, when
it tried to help build the bridge to Lanka by carrying pebbles in its tiny
mouth. I love squirrels in the great outdoors, but am never glad to see one on
our seventh floor balcony, which I do occasionally. My cousin’s air-conditioner’s
outdoor wires were chewed up by squirrels. His wife’s blouse was stolen
off the clothes line and stuffed inside the airconditoner to line their nest.
Not good neighbours at all.
Nonetheless, they are beautiful creatures, with
their bright, shiny eyes and bushy tails. Whenever the Covid gods permit me to
meet my grandchildren, I might celebrate by buying a box of blueberry
muffins just for the backyard squirrels.
I should have begun following your blog a long time back, Dipali. :-) You write so wonderfully.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for your very kind words!
ReplyDelete