Happy Easter Sunday! And to the Greek Orthodox branch of my family, happy Easter-candy-on-sale-Eve! Aunt Deb's gonna hook you up and good. The same goes for the person who can finish that quote without Googling it first! First person in the comment section with the right answer (hint: the answer is somehow relevant to Easter) gets a box of See's Scotchmallow Eggs, along with my undying love and respect. But I totally get it if you'd rather have the candy. Dark chocolate, marshmallow and caramel...does it get any better than this? If you don't like dark chocolate...well then you're a heathen, and begone with ye!
I thought about my mom all day today. While running, of course, since my September race is in her memory. At church, because the Easter flowers made me think of her in the yellow dress she wore to my First Communion. Mostly, though, the holiday brought back so many memories of her because it was one of the times she really had the chance to shine.
Mom was a great mother, both generous and creative, and she really pulled out the stops for Easter. Every year she'd go to Bromilow's Chocolates (if you're in the NJ area, check 'em out, they're awesome) and load up on chocolate bunnies and foil-wrapped eggs. I still can't eat a chocolate bunny without wincing (I can't help it, I'm sensitive!), but those eggs were the star of the show. Some of them went into our baskets (and although we never had much money, we always had our own basket) along with the standard jelly beans, malt eggs and Peeps. The rest of them were the quarry in our annual Easter egg hunt. Every year, Mom would write a poem, customized for whatever home we were in, and hide the eggs in batches of three for my brothers and me. Those little eggs really got around...we'd find them hiding in the bookshelves, taped under the desk, even in the spider plants. We begged for those hunts even when we were way too old for them. I think I even took over one year, because they gave us such a laugh. I wish I had a sample here to post...maybe next year, after we unpack.
I couldn't replicate the chocolate egg hunt at my house this year. For one, Seph is too young to understand the rhymes and follow the directions. For another, I have pets, and my first instinct when seeing something brown on the rug is not to eat it. But the last directive my mom ever gave me, in the letter she left for me after her passing, specifically mentioned keeping the family traditions going. What, might you ask, is the time-honored Angelo family Easter tradition? The "dud" egg.
It's easy. You start with perfectly normal egg dye- your choice. Now attempt to color said egg in an unusual hue. The standard goal is purple, although salmon is a good choice some years. The object is to end up with a hideously ugly egg that can only redeemed itself as an egg salad sandwich. This is accomplished, either accidentally or on purpose, by moving the egg from one color bath to another in an attempt to redeem the color into something remotely attractive. Ugly is the goal, but laboring for several minutes only to end up with what looks like an ordinary brown chicken egg is pretty good, too.
Seph with the purple dye...can she do it?? Hmm, looks like she's ended up with...brown. Although I bet if I check her fingers carefully, I can find that nice mottled salmon-violet color. I guess we need to dye another day...