A while back, in 2015, I shared the below memory with you of my young adulthood,
when my spouse was in the Air Force, and we were spending our first
military Thanksgiving, together with other people serving, away from home. At that
time, I couldn't find the recipe for my Memory Pie, which is a soybean
pie (no, really, please keep reading) that tastes like a pumpkin pie.
But, thanks to a decluttering project, I found the recipe. This
was my second copy of the cookbook - I had worn the first one to
shreds.
So what happened when I found the recipe?
I offered to make it, but my spouse took one look at the recipe, and
said "no". When we went to our local supermarket, I couldn't even find
dried soybeans. So I am not going to bake a pie for you.
I will leave you, instead, with a link to the recipe, which is available online.
But I will not leave you with the pie. Just a memory of what we called "having friends over since we were thousands of miles from home." In modern times, it may have been called a Friendsgiving.
It was the mid 1970's and we were over a thousand miles from home. It
was my spouse's first Thanksgiving in the military. He was undergoing
technical training in Texas. And he had friends in his class, all of
whom were far away from home, too.
For the most part we were in our late teens or early 20's, but among us
was a slightly older man. Sgt W. was from Iowa and he was a soybean
farmer. As I recall, he had joined the National Guard and was training
with my spouse's Air Force class.
Sgt W. had never eaten a soybean. He had never sampled the crop he grew.
In the mid 1970's, soybeans weren't common the way they are today. But I
had become an on and off vegetarian in college, and I had fallen in
love with a couple of books - Diet for a Small Planet and Recipes for a
Small Planet. As I wasn't working at the time, and my spouse was making the tiny
salary of an airman, money was tight and we used the methods explained
in this book to stay healthy. We ate whole grain homemade breads, bean
and rice casseroles, and even dishes made with the healthy soybean.
In one of these books was a recipe for a mock pumpkin pie made with
pureed soybeans, pumpkin pie spice and other ingredients I can't
remember (nor could I find the recipe in a long Internet search last
night).
My spouse invited several of his classmate friends, including Sgt W., to
Thanksgiving dinner. And, an idea hatched in my mind. Why not make
something with soybeans for him?
We had a turkey, and other items no longer remembered. It was one of
the happiest Thanksgivings I remember, because we were all away from
home but not lonely, and I remember our companionship much more than I
remember the food.
Except for one thing. When I served my "pumpkin pie", Sgt W. dug in,
and said he liked it. So did everyone else. I even liked it, and I
don't like pumpkin pie.
So I admitted to him that his "pumpkin pie" was really soybean pie. And he didn't seem to mind.
I wonder what he said when he returned home to Iowa when his class was over. We never saw him again after that.
I don't know where Sgt W. lives today, or if he is even alive. Sadly,
I know at least one of the young men at that dinner passed several
years ago. So I don't know if W. remembers the young woman he had
Thanksgiving with, in an apartment near an Air Force base in Texas in
the mid 1970's, and the soybean pie she served him.
If you are out there, Sgt. W, Happy Thanksgiving tomorrow to you and your family.
Tomorrow I will be participating in both the United States Thanksgiving and the twice monthly Thursday Tree Love meme. I'd like to wish all of my readers a Happy Thanksgiving.
Gobble, gobble to you!
ReplyDeleteAnd to you!
DeleteI love this story. Happy Thanksgiving.
ReplyDeleteHappy Thanksgiving to you!
DeleteI've had bean pie a few times here in NYC - not the same beans but same idea, and yummy!
ReplyDeleteCurious about your pie now - was it navy bean? There was a startup here that made the most delicious pumpkin pie (and I don't like pumpkin pie!!!!) he was going to get into navy bean pie, and suddenly he disappeared. So I never got to try the navy bean pie. I need to try to make it one day.
DeleteWhat a truly lovely memory! Of the time, the friends and at least one dish!
ReplyDeleteAnd Happy Thanksgiving to you as well, my friend!
Stay warm, friend!
DeleteThat sounds like an interesting recipe. And good for you all for getting together.
ReplyDeleteHappy Thanksgiving!
ReplyDeleteWhat a lovely memory
ReplyDeleteThat was a lovely memory. I enjoyed reading it. :)
ReplyDeleteAn absolutely wonderful Thanksgiving Post. You're the best my friend. HAPPY THANKSGIVING TO YOU & YOURS. HUGS, Marie
ReplyDelete