Lady Mary and Sir Jacob |
(Sorry about the blinding yellow. I took the picture in almost complete darkness- candlelight only.)
Their feast was a medieval extravaganza. We arrived at their house and dinner wasn't quite ready. Mary was worried that we were waiting. We assured her that we were enjoying the wait. How often do we get to wait for a meal- that someone else is cooking- while seated in comfort? They invited us into their candlelit meal with a ribbon festooned hair piece for the girls and a Nerf-type sword for the guys. The table was laden with piles of grapes and loaves of homemade bread(lemon raisin- it reminded me of stollen.) The bread was braided and as tasty as it was pretty. There were candles and shields everywhere. They had sparkling grape juice to drink. Then, they brought out the food. Oh my, what a feast! Jacob had won a turkey at a turkey shoot.(For the non-country folk- or for those of you who have never seen the movie, Private York- a turkey shoot is a type of sharpshooter contest.) So they had a big turkey with stuffing on a platter, two roasted hens, potato pancakes, homemade rye/bacon rolls and English peas. We were allowed plates, but no serving spoons or silverware. As you can imagine, the kids jumped right in with both hands! It was very, very good and so much fun. Mary worried there wouldn't be enough food, but we had plenty. (John and Tim went over there and wiped out the leftovers for lunch the next day.) Their dessert was chocolate cake- made from scratch- and filled with bananas and cherries and topped with whipped cream. And just in case that wasn't enough and because Mary loves her new father-in-law, they also had another chocolate cake with a chocolate glaze on it- again, made from scratch. Can you imagine making two different kinds of yeast bread and two different cakes from scratch all in the same day- not to mention a turkey? And then they say that every recipe was from their new German cookbook. My feet hurt just thinking about it. We were all stuffed when we rolled away from the table. We ended up hanging around for another couple hours watching a movie (and napping.) We had a wonderful time and they did a great job of preparing their first feast on their own!
Will read Isaiah 62:5
"For as a young man marries a young woman,
so shall your sons marry You,
and as the bridegroom rejoices over the bride,
so shall your God rejoice over you."
I so enjoy reading about your annual feast days, complete with scripture verse. It is a real blessing to me. Thank you for sharing. Blessed Christmas to you all!
ReplyDeleteAmen, Lindah.
ReplyDeleteHow nice that Mary and Jacob live close enough to be a part of the Koen tradition! Would that I could be as well ... but this is next best thing!
What a feast! I can see the hostess/host being as excited about giving as the rest of you were about receiving...but then, that's the (very loving) point isn't it.
Love you so, Mama
[p.s. I don't miss a word, Nina - but sometimes the 'prove you''re not a robot sequence' is beyond me.]
I bet it felt different going to another house for one of the Christmas Feasts but what a treat. That sounded like some meal. We went to a jousting tournament at a castle that is part of a mall on the western shore of MD. We were seated in tiered seats with tables in front of us in a semicircular arena. We were served dinner sans eating utensils while we watched the jousting tournament....quite interesting. A good part was the hot towel we were served at the end of the meal for clean-up.
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