Category Archives: Food

No Matter Where

I grew up in a suburb outside Charlotte curious about everyone and everything from a place located anywhere but there.

I wanted to know what people ate, what they believed and why they believed it.

One constant in all of my travel, friendship and life experiences is the appreciation of landscape, cityscape and what people cultivate.

When I write, my favorite part of the story is deciding how my town will look or if the landscape is resonant of the narrow hills on which I grew. If the land flows alongside a river, or if is flat and full of golden corn.

True of many writers from the Carolinas, I’m attached the land and different cityscapes.

As a small city journalist, I studied the different structure of a town and how it influences the citizens.

As the wife of a Christmas tree farmer’s son, I learned what passion for land means:

It is something, in spite of all the words in the English language, I could not portray to you.

The passion of which I write is born and breathes with men and women like my husband.

A shot of my father-in-law’s farm where apple trees once produced fruit. The Christmas trees grew on another part of the land.


Flowers outside my father-in-law’s house.

My son, Charles, on a John Deere tractor in his grandfather’s barn.

Flowers Charles brought to John and me.


John does a project for his father where tomato plants will later grow.

On days I take my son to the park, John, my husband, reminds me he had worked on a farm. In his spare time, he and his siblings played in their imaginary world on the acres of their parents’ farm land. The garden provided food for their table.

As a reporter, I covered towns with an agricultural background. I understood terms such as grass fed beef and how a farmer’s soy bean crop was ruined by too much rain.

Now when I shop and cook, I go to a farmer’s market where my husband last summer restored the roof. Crops are grown by farmers from North and South Carolina. Anywhere else I shop I look for the same freshness.

Food, like landscape, inspires with its many colors, traditions throughout the world, smells and sounds.

Salad with fresh tomatoes and lemon as a garnish from the farmer’s market.

S

Salmon plated over brown rice and fresh cooked spinach, feta and onions.

Food from the land or city takes us somewhere we long for, even when we cannot afford the plane ticket.

We yearn for it.

It influences us.

Therefore, we imagine a place of which we write.

Where is your place?

By Rebecca T. Dickinson

The Write to Cook: Two Men and the Little Chef

The Write to Cook: Two Men and the Little Chef

Mom and Dad both worked hard.

Mom was a high school teacher, and Dad worked as an insurance claims adjuster. Most childhood meals were eaten at a restaurant or brought home.

I believed Mom could cook if she put her mind to it, but she never showed interest. Daughter of the feminist movement, she chose to shape her knowledge of the world.

Dad tried to cook. Through the years, he has improved from making starch-filled meals full of potatoes and rice to providing a variety.


My Grandmother Dickinson’s apple cake, which I made at Christmas.

Since I began cooking in college, I attempted to reconnect to the time spent with both of my grandmothers in their kitchens. One worked as a teacher and came home to cook. The other was a homemaker.

Although ambition drove me to chase a writing and teaching career, I also yearned for tradition. I found the kitchen was the place I went when I needed a break from writing and editing, and it also inspired me.

In the old days, some women bonded in the kitchen. I ended up with two and a half men in mine.

Many families affected by the economy live in a multigenerational household. My family is one of them. We share a small kitchen in which we wash dishes by hand.


 M
y husband and I cooked breakfast together.

This space – a place that was once my sacred room when I was a partial stay-at-home mother – is shared by my father, husband, son and sometimes my brother.

Dad, John and I work as much as we can, and we know work awaits us at home. We prepare meals for a family of six and our kitchen space shrinks.

“Don’t you want to let people flavor that to their taste?” my husband asked before one breakfast.

“That’s the way my grandmother made them,” I replied.

“Things can change, can’t they?”

“Sure.”

“You know how your dad likes to put random spices on things?”

“Yes, and he doesn’t look at what goes in like I do.”

One, two, three and then four of us will end up in the kitchen on any given night. The little one, our son, wants to bring his little bike in the kitchen. All of us chase the little chef out.

For the most part, the boys’ club lets me decide what we’re doing. But they are also strong-minded men with their own opinions about the kitchen.

“Mother and Thomas are tired of chicken,” Dad says at least two weeks out of the month.

“I would make a vegetarian meal, but I’m the only one who would eat it,” I say. “I go with what we have in the freezer or in the fridge. If one of them wants to go to the market, great.”

I admit I have a little bit of an attitude sometimes. Obsessive Compulsive Disorder and the desire to keep everything organized does not always work in my family or the kitchen.

Dad wants to work like an octopus, and my husband sits down at the table after my parents and brother have already finished their meals.

As exasperated as I become with no dishwasher, three working burners, someone taking up my counter space or one of the beloved men in my life directing me in the kitchen; I realized we have created a new tradition.

We also laugh in the kitchen.

John throws ice down my shirt.

Dad plays, sings and imitates family members. He is one of the few people who shares my sarcasm.

Then there’s the little boy who stops in and asks if one of us will put on his helmet so he can ride his bike through the kitchen.

Last night, as I made Shepherd’s Pie, I discovered a red toy car in a drawer with the blender. I smiled and called for my little chef.

By Rebecca T. Dickinson

Write Big, Use Small Words: Best Love Ever

Look on your Valentine’s Day Candy.

What words do you read?

Are they long or short?

Does your candy say: Indulge My Passion or Flirtatiously Yours?

Sometimes you need no words at all to say, “I love you.”

In June 2012, my husband, son and I moved out of our apartment after he lost his job. It was another heartbreaking challenge for us.

Not long after, a storm came.

It destroyed roofs and buildings, including the front part of our favorite fresh food market.


John, who is a builder and intelligent in structural design, found the material and went with my dad to put on the roof.



Now I’m old-fashioned in some ways.

I like a man who gets on top of a roof to work.

My husband did that. He worked with his great strength. In a time when we had little, he gave everything.



His work has withstood many more storms.

Words and Photos by Rebecca T. Dickinson

What Matters Most: 3 Reasons the Season of Thanks Continues

An autumn sky.


I am late for an important date:

A date with gratitude and a date to blog.

Thanksgiving break carried my family and me on a train ride of illness, dealing with death, baking challenges and realizing what matters most.

The Christmas shopping season catches our attention with ringing Hersey kisses commercials and bright red and green colors. It is easy to forget the meaning of Thanksgiving. It is easier to see knock down prices on Black Friday weekend.

Remember, remember the season of thanks in November.

Charles Dickens wrote we should keep it in our hearts all year long. I believe the same theory goes for being thankful.

Three lessons reminded me why I am thankful.

Lesson 1: Health

My grandmother said, “Always be thankful for your health.” I heard a lecture voice at the age of sixteen. Turns out she was right.

Last Sunday, my family kicked off Thanksgiving by meeting my husband’s father and sister at a restaurant. My son—who suffered from a cold—dealt with a misunderstanding from the milk. He was not eating after he drank. Not long after, everything came up.

I cleaned him and let him play with a car. He sat next to me at the table. He tugged my shirt and whimpered. Charles—a very independent 2-year-old—rarely clings to me. Before I could figure out what was wrong, everything came up again.

Vomit covered our shirts and pants as we went to the bathroom. It was the one occasion for which I’d forgotten to pack extra clothes. I felt like a horrible mother, but I cleaned him up again.

As I came out of the bathroom, two teen girls stared at me. Years ago, I would’ve thought How did that woman let herself out of the house like that, or when I become a mother I will still care about my appearance.

The foul milk-smelling stains on my clothes transformed into something else. They were mommy battle scars. They were a reminder: Hey, Rebecca, you’re not all that. Any moment, something could change.

On the ride home, my husband and I dealt with Charles’ health. The next day we learned he had an ear infection, from which he is still recovering, and I became sick, too.

Good health should never be devalued.


Not all food or autumn decorations are beautiful.

Lesson 2: Baking does not Always go the Baker’s Way

No secret. I make cheesecakes. Since I made my first one, I’ve perfected the method as I have learned the steps and requirements of a good cake maker. Making cheesecake is different from other cakes. For one, you use a different pan.

You don’t want your cake to sink.

You want your cake to be moist, but not so moist if falls apart.

You don’t want cracks on the top.

An engineer tries to solve a car’s problems. I attempt to perfect my cheesecake methods.

One week ago, I made two cherry cheesecakes. One was a belated Veteran’s Day present for my father, and the other was my brother’s birthday present.

My father’s cake went untouched as every member of my family ate Thomas’ cake.

I did everything I did before to make my Thanksgiving strawberry cheesecake except I forgot the bit of flour. The next morning my cake began falling apart. It looked like earthquake cracks separating earth as I unhinged the ring in which the cake sat.

While my family watched the Macy’s Day Parade, the OCD and perfectionist personality came out. What do I do? I can’t take this.

Luckily, we had a back up. Dad’s cake was still fresh and untouched. We took it, and everything worked out.

Lesson 3: Inspiration for a Lifetime

Dad called early last week. An emotional man, he sobbed and left a message that his first cousin had died.

This particular cousin was not a far-off relative who we sent Christmas cards to every year. She was a sister to Dad. She was a connection to the town in which my book, Sons of the Edisto, takes place. She provided historical accounts. Dad’s cousin enlightened me about members of my family who have now passed.

When I talked to her during my research in Bamberg, SC; the cousin talked to me openly. She knew of my project. She was not afraid to tell me the Ku Klux Klan still paraded through the streets of Bamberg in 1948 after a World War in which 6 million Jews were killed by Nazi Germany.

The cousin understood my grandfather—her uncle—was a hero who did not have to state his opinion, but stood up to injustice through simple actions. Her memory is attached to his, and I am thankful for everything she did for my father. I am thankful for the information she provided.

Words and Photos By Rebecca T. Dickinson

In Memory of Becky.

No More Reservations: Goodbye Bourdain

Courtesy of http://blogs.houstonpress.com

Everything must come to an end.

Sadly, Anthony Bourdain’s show, No Reservations, is one of them. Tonight at 8 p.m., the Travel Channel will show the series finale in Brooklyn.

Due to my schedule, I never watch Bourdain’s show when it comes on. I watch reruns later in the week or on the weekend. I have watched No Reservations, and I am sad to see it go off the air.

Behind the show is Anthony Bourdain, who is not only a chef, but a traveler, explorer of taste and a prolific writer. Maybe he would not call himself prolific. When you listen to his words on the show or read his blog, you know he is not another television show host. He is not another person showing you all the cool places.

Bourdain digs into a culture and what makes its food. He writes and delivers the show with sarcastic and meaningful speeches. Bourdain writes in the way we want good food to taste. He writes the way we want to dream. Whether you agree or disagree with his strong opinions—much stronger than the vodka he drinks—you cannot deny the man’s talent for words.

Beyond Bourdain’s charismatic charm with words, he taught me something as a writer. I began writing about food. Some of you might’ve read The Write to Cook blogs. This summer I explored memories, smells and stories surrounding the food I know so well.

I am not a professional chef and I do not travel as much as I did when I was a reporter and student, but I understand the vivid language high-quality food offers readers. Food should not be an overindulgence (except on rare occasions), but an art—a connection to the life around us.

What is one of the best meals you have experienced? How do you wish you could write about it?

Under Exposed: The South Carolina Upcountry

The twenty-first century fades on the Cherokee Foothills Scenic Highway. Known for the Gaffney Peachiod, early American history, and the Blue Ridge Mountains and foothills, automobiles drive past landscape seemingly unchanged with exception of the road.

Before you pack up for Orlando or California, consider what you might find on roads less explored. There are foods you’ve never tried, or names and words you never thought went together such as Peachoid. What is the Peachoid?


The Peachoid stands as a statement that South Carolina produces and ships twice as many peaches as Georgia, and it is a starting point on the Cherokee Foothills Scenic Highway. Photo Courtesy of Gaffney Board of Public Works.

A common misconception is Georgia, the Peach State, grows the most peaches on the East Coast. The fact is the small state of South Carolina grows the most peaches in the United States after California.

Native to South Carolina, I know most tourist attention is given to Charleston and what is called the Lowcountry—anything below Columbia, SC.

What was forgotten, and why did writers and historians important to the Carolinas forget the Upcountry?

According to my former history professor and author Dr. Walter Edgar, the upper half of South Carolina was considered wild and a place where small time farmers lived before 1800. Native Americans—Cherokee, Catawba, and other tribes—also lived in what is now a scenic highway and part of the Blue Ridge Mountains/ foothills region.

History lesson over.

What else makes the Upcountry special?

The natural wonders of mountains, parks, and waterfalls. Or history, food, and character.

A lot of character.

Signs and names of stores caught my attention as my husband and I drove on SC 11. One billboard read, “Stop here. Try Peach Salsa.”

I experiment when I cook. I enjoy cooking apples, bacon, and pepper jack cheese together and stuff the mixture inside a pork chop. But, peach salsa? This is when we need Andrew Zimmern, host of Bizarre Foods.

Would you try peach salsa?

As we drove to Wildcat Branch Falls, we passed a cabin. The name of the store said If Its Junk Antiques.

We drove by produce stands and smaller places in front of houses promising the sweetest and best tasting peaches and melons in the country. But, we had not reached our destination.

Wildcat Branch Falls sits off the side of the road. Stone steps lead to a higher waterfall.

Water poured into a small pool. We took our two-year-old son out, and let him walk into the pond. He cried at first, but a boy who prefers the big pool, got the hang of walking along the sandbar in the water instead of on rocks and sticks.

A woman dug rocks out of the water. At first I assumed she was a geologist. Fifteen minutes later a little girl, and four older boys rushed  down the stone steps. The mother of one or more of the boys handed them rocks.

“Have you skimmed rocks before?” one boy asks another.

“No.”

The boys lightly tossed the rocks so they skimmed the water.

A game once played by Tom Sawyer lives on in a generation where boys and girls’ fingers press video game controllers and iPod tablets. 

There might be something to those Upcountry foothills.

Words and Waterfall Photos By Rebecca T. Dickinson

Why We Need Mustard Covered Faces

Three hotdogs were not enough for the two-year-old.

Yellow mustard covered the boy’s face. He laughed when I took the plate away, and looked around for a fourth hotdog.

Every morsel he devours astonishes adults and older children. But, the little tongue licking ketchup and mustard off the plate to the point of painting his face reminds me to: just chill woman.

In moments when my toddler causes me to grab my stomach because I laugh so hard, I forget the 90 mph rush to accomplish every goal on my list.


Courtesy of http://www.daveabreuphotography.com/

Consider your goals and to-do lists whether they are for work, on a writing list, need-to-cook recipes, or personal. You feel you will not meet your objectives as you try to multitask. Sometimes we are bitten by the pressure of our goals instead of seeing them in good light.


Photo by Rebecca T. Dickinson

A moment—

fireflies in summer,

cute dog catching a ball,

or a toddler putting his face and mouth to a plate of mustard—

is all it takes to make us pause.

I know I need to:

  • Complete editing separate chapters for a nonfiction project.
  • Prepare to review a new project.
  • Wait to hear news on two prospects—news that could bring about good change.

I want to:

  • Have enough quiet time to read my online XHTML book so I can learn.
  • Study and learn SEO.
  • Complete Sons of the Edisto editing.
  • Research and add more agents to my list.
  • Edit more short stories.

BUT, you see two lists. Believe it or not, there is more.

Changes are on the horizon. Deadlines are coming. I need a mustard-in-the-face moment to remind me: it’s alright if you don’t finish everything this minute. I believe the same applies to most people who want to accomplish a lot in life.

I have split my passion between writing, education, and domestic interests such as cooking. I have wondered if I could work on my book while I earn an MAT. Both require dedication. Not to mention, I’m a mom. It is enough to blow the lid off the pot.

I’ll admit I have not written or edited in three days, with the exception of today’s blog, and I am glad. I needed to laugh, and regain a clear picture.

What makes you stop and think?


        Photo by Rebecca T. Dickinson

Post by Rebecca T. Dickinson

Three Weeks Round Up

By Rebecca T. Dickinson

Ideas run around my mind like the Tasmanian devil. I know it’s because the last three weeks have taken consistency out of my family’s schedule due to moving and reorganizing a kitchen. So, I’d like to wrap up the most relevant lessons I have taken time to consider.

  • No matter what, take one section at a time when you pack. Otherwise the entire room will swallow you whole. What did I learn from packing? People will go crazy to the point of insanity. My two-year-old son adapted to the move better than John and I.
  • It takes more than one week to organize a kitchen where a blender once had one beater, and no one knows what the purpose of my pastry cutter is, or why I keep cloves of garlic instead of just garlic salt. For me, a kitchen is where the heart of home beats. Love is put into food, and Dad loves being the assistant chef. He pretends he has his own cooking show. I also believe I put the best of myself in this second art.
  •  Hope and laughter remains strong. I know a job waits out there with my name on it. I still plan to attend graduate school whether in the fall, spring, or another year, and finish editing my two books. (One I’m obligated to complete by the autumn, hopefully.) Sons of the Edisto deserves completion above all other projects. A good editor in the early stages of Sons said, “If you love something enough, you will make time for it.” I believe in the statement. What is it you want to make time for?
  • Writers have more tools than ever to find a route to publishing whether it’s self-publishing, an e-book, or a good agent. I am researching agents who might make a match for both projects. I look to see what they’re looking for, and what they specifically look for in a query letter and book. I read articles about agents. Kristin Nelson said in her Friday blog that it is good to take the prologue out if your manuscript is requested.
  • Other writers have asked my opinion about narratives and memoirs since the move. Why? I’m not sure, but I’m grateful they think my opinion is worth something. I think because there are so many writers it is our nature to compete, but with more available options, it is easier and better to aid one another.
  • I went to a writer’s group today, and I feel refreshed and inspired to move Sons of the Edisto along. I am in the third part of the book as far as editing, but I feel positive about the work I’ve achieved.
  • Writing about food comforts me, and a side project will be Cooking Sketches, some of which I will post in The Write to Cook posts. I taught my Dad how to crush and chop garlic cloves yesterday. He says, “Where did you learn that?” I said, “You didn’t think all those hours of watching the Food Network went to waste, did you?”
  • Finally, despite surrounding circumstances, I keep writing and editing. Maybe I’m insane, or maybe I fell love long ago. There is no pulling me out.

What are you going with your goals?

The Aftermath


PART III of the Bannister Histories

By R.T. Dickinson

July 1876, Bamberg, South Carolina

Men on dust streets walked past stores, restaurants, and banks with green awnings. They spoke in hushed voices about when Union Army occupiers would leave. Soldiers had stayed in towns around the Low Country, and restaurant owner Joey Langston—the man from Minnesota—welcomed them before Southerners into Joey’s Lunchroom.

White men of North Railroad Ave. beat their fists on tables outside city hall. The newspaper editor printed paid, anonymous editorials about the opinions stated in their meetings. The same men—who had retained their wealth and restored their houses across the from the railroad track—wanted to take back the state legislature, where the unfortunate colored majority ruled the state with help from the Yankee Caesar.

The only part of the politikin’ that concerned Joey’s Lunchroom first cook, Oliver Bannister, was if Papa Langston would shift his focus to Southern clientage. Oliver and the other two cooks—both women—prepared South Carolina food: Low Country broils on Saturdays, fried catfish, and fried chicken. Joey cared less for the aristocratic Southern families. He was born in a backwoods cabin, but North Railroad’s residents dictated his future as much as Papa Langston.

“Look, old man,” Oliver said, “those Yankees is leaving within the next year. You serve second lunch to Bamberg folks. You think they’re going to forget when the government’s boys are gone?”

“My only son served the Union,” Joey said through his teeth. “Those rebel bastards blew him to shreds. I never got to bury him.”

“And, my daddy was killed by Yankees, and I still serve Yankees … You’s running a business, and those soldiers ain’t going to be here too much longer. Every Southern man will be telling you, ‘Go back to the North.’”

“I’m sorry I blew up at you. War doesn’t bring good feelings to anyone. You lost your daddy, and I lost my son. You’re my boy now. I know what those rebel rousers think of me. Once they get first pickings, they won’t eat anywhere else.”

In a slow hour, Joey went to the garden. He picked from the tomato plant. Plump, fat, and red, the plants shined in the breath-sucking humidity. The summer heat never bothered Oliver. Everyone needed to eat, and he was the only cook to tend the gated garden behind Joey’s Lunchroom.

“Shame you’re a cook,” said a voice demanding enough to steal the sun’s essence.

Oliver stood from his basket of tomatoes. He lifted his hat and wiped sweat off his forehead. The girl wore a green dress with tassels on the back of her bell curved dress. She wore a white bonnet and held a light green parasol over her head.

“A lady like you ain’t supposed to be out here in this heat.”

“I can handle the heat as much as you,” she replied.

As she turned her head, the woman’s pinewood shaded curls bounced. Green around the rims, Oliver knew those eyes.

“What is some girl from Minnesota going to do is this heat. Faint?”

“I work a garden as good as you any day.”

“Well, come on then. I got these beautiful tomatoes waiting for your sweet, gentle fingers.”

Oliver walked to the gate. Adelaide Langston smiled, and he wrapped his arms around her. Oliver kissed her as if war would come and shatter lives again.

Will Oliver make a major change at the restaurant? How long has Adelaide known Oliver?

+++

A good book deserves attention. I think of it as building a strong relationship. In June, my manuscript Sons of the Edisto turned six-years-old.

Due to the professional deadlines of a second book, I have been unable to edit Sons of the Edisto as much as I’ve wanted in 2011 and 2012. While it is in the editing stage, I share stories inspired by the book’s back stories I wrote long ago for Sons of the Edisto’s characters and families. The last entry was The Boy with No Mother.

The Bannister Histories follows the family story of JD Bannister—a central character in Sons—and his father, Andrew. Oliver Bannister is the unlikely patriarch of what will later become a family fighting for power within itself.

© 2006-2012 by R.T. Dickinson. All rights reserved. No part of this blog post or material related to it may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without prior written permission of R.T. Dickinson.

Writer’s Note: The stories take place from the 1860s to 1924. You may find what we in the twenty-first century call politically incorrect terms—as Lisa See said in the beginning of Shanghai Girls. The word used in regards to ethnicity is true to the era.

What is the Art of Narratives?

By Rebecca T. Dickinson

Where were you born? Why is it important? Did it have a cute front porch, or roaches crawling over beds?

I have a confession.

I never thought I’d write or edit nonfiction. What was/ is special about my life? When I worked as a journalist, I enjoyed writing features about people. Their lives fascinated me. It was easy to write about them, and it’s easy to write about my primary client’s life.

What is the art of the narrative whether it’s literary, analytical, or a memoir?


Courtesy of http://foxpointcapeverdeanproject.com.

Two projects encouraged me throughout 2011 when I submitted the narrative Grass from the Grave/ We Never Said Hello. PaniK sought to tell the struggles of pre-parenthood whether it was abortion, miscarriage, stillborn, or the decision to keep a baby. It digs into the most intimate parts of a mother or father’s being, and there are well-written stories that put mine to shame.

Impact by Telling Our Stories Press shows great talent also. I am humbled by the other authors in the anthology and honored by publisher CoCo Harris’ faith in my abilities as a writer. A single short memoir made the difference in my life as a writer. It helped mold me as an author.

I am now taking a second look at life. A writer friend, who is also working on an excellent nonfiction project, is a fellow photographer mom who knows the rises and falls of parenthood. She reminded me when I pushed my client harder for a deadline to complete a current project, “It is hard for writers to sit and write intimate parts of our lives. Imagine what it’s like for others.”

What lingers of the community news journalist sets deadlines. I don’t always meet them, but I need deadlines the way writers need quiet time to just write. In a summer filled with more editing than writing, I forget the art of just writing. And, I figure why not experiment a little more in the narrative field?

In addition to two books and occasionally brushing up short stories, I am writing what I call Cooking Sketches. They are short memoirs tying a significant story in my life in with food. You might see some of this in what will be an ongoing column post: The Write to Cook.

I admire Anthony Bourdain. I am in love with his writing. The man knows food, but he also understands how to write. What if I could combine the cooking and food I know with stories absolutely unforgettable? I know how to make real Vidalia fried onion rings, and a love story and airplanes go with it.

If you chose something significant in your life to write about it, what would it be?

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