posted by
owlfish at 10:13pm on 06/11/2005
The crackle of fire flames licking up a pile of wood, glowing in the leaflets of piney branches, gusting smoke on a cool, breezy autumnal evening reminds me of hot apple cider, hot chocolate, and roasting s'mores - perfect fall treats. Hot chocolate is more ubiquitous, but the other two treats are very American and Canadian - not British at all, and what is Guy Fawke's Night but a celebration of the unity of the United Kingdom in the face of potential destruction?* We ate fire-baked potatoes, hot pot, sausages, parkin, and gingerbread while flowers of fire rained down with the mist from all directions.
C.'s extended family hordes wood all year 'round in preparation of bonfire night. Broken furniture, torn town fences, Christmas trees - all are saved up in preparation for a night of organized destruction, hours of burning into the depths of the night. They set off their own fireworks, but, however much fun and sparkle there is in the yard, others in the neighborhood have invested in more industrial-grade fireworks: larger, higher, brighter cascades of brilliance in a flurry of explosions for hours on end.
For all the beauty and warmth and company, there was so much there that reminded me of other things, other times and places, beyond the frustration of trying to explain what cider is - here, cider is purely an alcoholic drink, rarely tasting of apples, let alone the intense essence of apples the way cider does. It reminded me of the familial fireworks set off by my extended family on the 4th of July - I've never attended, but heard so much about them. It reminded me of how I clung to our old Christmas trees, still green and soft, once twelfth night was over; at least once, I so couldn't bear to be parted with it that I hid it behind a large pine tree in our yard, so it wouldn't be taken off with the garbage for chipping. It reminded me of childhood hay wagon trips.
The fireworks grew infrequent, and the flames died down into lurid coals, burning into the night.
* Or, if you're feeling snarky, you could argue that only the Brits would have a day commemorating a failure.
C.'s extended family hordes wood all year 'round in preparation of bonfire night. Broken furniture, torn town fences, Christmas trees - all are saved up in preparation for a night of organized destruction, hours of burning into the depths of the night. They set off their own fireworks, but, however much fun and sparkle there is in the yard, others in the neighborhood have invested in more industrial-grade fireworks: larger, higher, brighter cascades of brilliance in a flurry of explosions for hours on end.
For all the beauty and warmth and company, there was so much there that reminded me of other things, other times and places, beyond the frustration of trying to explain what cider is - here, cider is purely an alcoholic drink, rarely tasting of apples, let alone the intense essence of apples the way cider does. It reminded me of the familial fireworks set off by my extended family on the 4th of July - I've never attended, but heard so much about them. It reminded me of how I clung to our old Christmas trees, still green and soft, once twelfth night was over; at least once, I so couldn't bear to be parted with it that I hid it behind a large pine tree in our yard, so it wouldn't be taken off with the garbage for chipping. It reminded me of childhood hay wagon trips.
The fireworks grew infrequent, and the flames died down into lurid coals, burning into the night.
* Or, if you're feeling snarky, you could argue that only the Brits would have a day commemorating a failure.
(no subject)
I know, I'm such a Yankee. I don't think I've ever even had alcoholic cider; I know I can find it fairly easily, but I've never tasted it. I'm always too attracted by the sweet apple goodness of the non-alcoholic stuff. Mmm.
I just remembered I'm out of apple cider. Boo.
(no subject)
Subjectively, parkin was a lot like gingerbread-type cake, only drier, with fine grade oats mixed into them. It's apparently a traditional bonfire night dessert.
Hot pot is a potato and onion dish, oven-baked, and, if my one experience with it is anything to go by, finished off with pickled cabbage and/or beets. Here's some commentary on the subject, although to read it, it looks like lamb is a usual addition.
(no subject)
There's wonderful alcoholic cider in the world, but I'm picky about it. I don't like most brands, because they don't taste of apples at all to me. My favorite brand is Canadian - B.C. Grower's. They do both a Granny Smith and a Macintosh apple alcoholic which taste just like the kinds of apples involved.
(no subject)
I do seem to remember finding something cider-like in the UK, I want to say it was one of the brands of apple juice that approximated the stuff that one heats up and mulls ... OH-- The Evil Coffee Empire (TM) might have an idea, as it's the time of year they sell the hot caramel cider ...
(no subject)
But only the Americans would have a national anthem commemorating one.
(no subject)
(Though it is very weird to have a national anthem that, basically, commemorates The Other Side's extremely crappy marksmanship.)
(no subject)
Find a farm that sells it in plastic gallon jugs. I wish I could recommend one, but I don't have a source around here - there's a good orchard-farm that goes to my local farmer's market, Fryer's, but they don't make cider with it, despite selling wonderful single-variety apple juice. (I actually Googled them to try and find this out, even after remembering I had a flyer stuck to the fridge downstairs. Am possibly getting too used to Google. Had to go and consult the flyer anyway.)
I managed to miss Bonfire Night entirely this year, though I get enough fire-worship camping at other times. Fireworks are pretty, but more so when viewed from directly underneath - I have a suburban-garden-firework-display-organizing friend who considers it entirely adequate to measure the required ten-meter safety zone by pacing it out walking in circles.
(no subject)
But it was a success! A gloriously successful defence of... the monarchy. Ok. Glad that worked, then.
(no subject)
And as for your footnote: yup, and we're proud of it :-)