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December 22, 2024

Four tall Christmas trees

Thirty-seven years have passed, and yet, I still remember as if it were yesterday the excited energy I unleashed when I made the outrageous promise to put up four 6-foot-tall Christmas trees in our first tiny restaurant that we had decked out for the holiday season.

The idea came to me as I was cutting out small molasses cookies in the shape of trees that I was going to serve for dessert in December 1987. The restaurant had been open for over six months and, as our clientele swelled, so did our audacity.

— “Boss, did you fall on your head again after putting up your signs?” exclaimed Platon, our new dishwasher from the Caribbean. “Just make us a Christmas log like you see in all the store windows.”
I struck a deal, promising to make him a carrot cake to take home if he helped me install my towering surprises one afternoon after closing.

I got down on all fours in the living room of our apartment and cut out four huge padded trees from a large piece of bright green material to put up in the diner’s side windows. Each night during the week before Christmas, I sewed on different coloured felt circles by hand, various ribbon garlands, white cotton ball snowflakes, small blue satin stars, big silver buttons, real small candy canes and eight small pink-feathered cotton birds that an elderly customer had brought me one day “in case I might find some use for them in the restaurant.”

The trees were “planted” and installed some days before Christmas, reaching right to the top of each window and within reach of delighted small hands, who were given permission to take the small red and white striped candy canes if they waited until the day after Christmas. Atop each tree, a large star in sparkling yellow brocade perched comfortably, as if content to rest after climbing to the top. In actual fact, it was our brave Platon who got up on a chair, placed on a table, and made sure that each star was securely attached to the top of each tree.

— “Platon, I need your help. I’d like to prepare a free Christmas dinner for our most loyal customers. For Mirella, Jean-Claude, Carole, Marcel and for our taxi-driver friends, the brave firemen and for all those who perhaps don’t have a family. What do you think?”
— “Are you sure, Boss? It will cost you an arm and a leg to feed all those hungry people who are going to stuff themselves full.”
— “Platon! I’d like to make them a really nice dinner, like a Christmas Eve party with turkey and tourtières, and maybe a few of the Greek specialties I’m pretty good at making.”
— “Boss, who taught you Greek cuisine?”
— “We’ll talk about it later, Platon. Take a piece of paper and write…”
— “Boss! You’ve never taken a single day off since the restaurant opened and now you’re going to do dinners?”
— “Platon! Stop talking and listen to me. I want to throw this big dinner party on Sunday, December 27.”
— “OK, Boss, if you insist. We have 12 days to get everything ready.”
— “Platon, let me check the grocery list. Add pork and ground veal for five or six large tourtières and meatball stew.

And so my young teenagers, my faithful Platon and I worked with love to surprise and delight 28 people invited at the very last minute to our Christmas feast. All the food was laid out over two red tablecloths covering the long counter. An appetizing, delicious-smelling feast served piping hot! Five large tourtières cut in pieces, a steaming pot of meatball stew, a turkey right out of the oven that Platon quickly carved up, our delicious baked beans with small cubes of ham, a plate of my secret cretons recipe, braised pigs’ feet you could eat with your fingers, a huge bowl of carrot and parsnip purée, my sublime sweet potato gratin and an entire assortment of holiday condiments. Caroline, our morning waitress, had wrapped four large fudge squares in wax paper for each guest to take home for the next day.

Marcel turned on the radio, and Mirella and Jean-Claude playfully danced a few steps to the Christmas tunes. My eldest hurried to move the tables towards the Christmas trees to open up space for a dancefloor. Everyone was moving, singing, swinging and twirling real teenagers on vacation. Their bellies full, their hearts satisfied. I was suddenly the happiest woman in the world.

The moral of this true story is clear: we should GIVE BEFORE WE RECEIVE.

Happy holidays to all of you, dear readers! Below you’ll find a little gift… the recipe for my famous fudge. Enjoy!

Cora
❤️

My famous fudge
Ingredients

  • 3 cups (750 ml) light brown sugar
  • 2/3 cup (150 ml) melted butter
  • 2/3 cup (150 ml) 15% or 35% M.F. cream
  • 2 cups (500 ml) icing sugar
  • A pinch of love

Preparation 

  1. Grease a 6-inch x 10-inch pan.
  2. In a saucepan, mix the brown sugar, butter and cream. Bring to a boil.
  3. When it reaches a boil, continue cooking for 5 more minutes.
  4. Remove from the stove. Add the icing sugar while whisking vigorously by hand or with a hand mixer until smooth.
  5. Transfer the mixture to the pan, spreading it out evenly.
  6. Let cool and cut into squares.
  7. Enjoy with a cold glass of milk!
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