Showing posts with label St. Patrick's Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label St. Patrick's Day. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Creating Mischief on St. Patrick's Day

My American family loves to celebrate our Irish roots. That means many things, including a nightly cocktail hour passed down for many generations (my grandfather made bathtub gin during Prohibition to tide them over during that difficult period).
Vintage shot glasses from aVelvetLeaf
We have corned beef and cabbage regularly for dinner, not just on St. Patrick's Day. Easy, cheap and delicious! (Although I have to admit, it does taste better than it looks, even with a food stylist....)


Corned Beef and Cabbage photo by fetchmyrecipe.com
However, on St. Patrick's Day and on Halloween night, we like to serve mashed potatoes or colcannon with our corned beef instead of whole boiled potatoes so we can hide little fortune-telling charms in the mash.  

As I've blogged about before, it’s an old Irish Halloween tradition to bake a Halloween cake called a barmbrack that has charms hidden in it to tell guests’ fortunes. As Episcopalians we also put charms in a King's cake on Epiphany and often had these charms in birthday cakes when I was little. Our tradition could have stemmed from any of those things.

The charms are a baby, a ring, a coin and a thimble.

The traditional meaning of the charms was this:


Thimble:  This person will remain single.
Ring:       This person will get married.
Baby:      This person will have a child.
Coin:       This person will become wealthy. 

As some of these old meanings may venture into political incorrectness, you may want to "update" the charm meanings these ways:

Thimble:  This person will keep a good house.
       This person will be a hard worker.
               This person will have a happy home.
Ring:       This person will be happy in love.
               This person will find romance soon.
       This person will have a good love life.
Baby:       This person will have a happy family.
               This person will have a big family.
               This person will love children.
Coin:        This person will make lots of money.
               This person will be a generous person.
               This person will have a good job. 

Be careful not to break a tooth!

[See instructions to put together your own fortune telling charm set at the bottom of this blog.]


Another fun thing our family did is to have the naughty leprechaun of the house make a visit on St. Patrick's eve. Every year my kids set little traps to catch our leprechaun or would write him notes asking him questions or making requests. I kept a few of them.
Vintage leprechaun figurine from aVelvetLeaf
One year, they wrote this:

Dear Mr. Leprachuan- 
     If you could leave us a clover or your hat or something, that would be great, but don't mess up our house you green leprachuan. Also, are you the same leprachuan? What is your name? Love, K & W
                                                
Our Leprechaun left them this:

 Dear O'K and O'W-
      You two always want something from me! I don't give out my stuff- I steal things from you! Have you been missing anything? 
      I do have to admit that this year you have been doing a great job keeping your rooms really messy for me. If your darn parents would quit interfering, they would be wonderful places to grow mold and other nasty green things. Keep it up! 
    You should know that my name is Sean O'Malley O'Sullivan McGillacutty Shannon O'Flynn. I am your leprechaun. I was your parents leprechaun, I was your grandparent's leprechaun and their parents' leprechaun.  You will NEVER get rid of me, and you'd better learn my name!
    For your goody, look in the biggest green plant in your house. I left something unhealthy with lots of sugar in it there for you. Keep up the good work with all the horrible messes you make. It just makes me laugh! I messed up your house to set a good example for you.
                             Love, Sean, your leprechaun


When the kids would get up in the morning, our chairs and tables would have been overturned, the traps would be smashed, and there would be a box of little powdered sugar donuts left in the green plant. Oh, the magic of childhood!
 

To make your own fortune telling charm set, plan a trip to the craft store (don't forget your coupons!)

  • In the baby shower section, buy a package of little plastic baby charms.
  • In the wedding shower section, buy a package of metal or plastic ring favors. 
  • In the sewing notion section, buy a set (if possible) of inexpensive thimbles.
  • From your coin purse, choose a new-looking quarter.
Put the quarter into a little pan of boiling water, and leave it in there for 10 minutes or so. Remove the coin and let it cool on a paper towel. 

You can use the charms over and over, or if you have sets, you can allow guests to keep their charm. If you use the charms more than once, be sure to follow the boiling instructions to sanitize them. Plastic charms can be placed in the boiled water with the burner off. Be sure your hands are clean when handling sterilized charms.

When serving food with charms hidden in it, always warn guests to chew carefully or search their food with their fork or spoon before eating to avoid biting into a charm. We don't want a lawsuit on your hands...

To put into a cake:
   For a homemade cake, wrap charms in small packets made of aluminum foil or just use as is. After the cake is cooled and before frosting it, use a butter knife to carefully cut a slit in the side of the cake and slip each foil charm packet in in various places, then frost the cake. For a purchased bakery cake, do the same as above right through the frosting, then repair the frosting with a wet butter knife. 

To put in mashed potatoes:
    On Halloween or St. Patrick’s Day, make mashed potatoes with or without cooked cabbage. Right before serving, stir sterilized charms (without foil packets) into potatoes.
                
Erin go Bragh, and slainte!






Friday, March 16, 2012

My family kidnapped St. Patrick

I now know that I am Irish down to my genetic core.
Lucky Irish horseshoe

Lots of people have Irish heritage here in Oregon, and all over the U.S. I always knew I had Irish ancestors on both sides of our family, but we've been here for a long time. I never had a grandpa with an Irish accent or anything.

In high school lots of my good friends had names like O'Keefe, McKeegan, McCrea and Mulloy, along with me, McCafferty.

St. Patrick's Day has always been big with us- we decorate our houses and we not only took the day off from work but the day after too, and celebrating started about 11:00 am. Don't have the time or energy to do that anymore.
Irish straight shot trophy

We have funny little Irish traditions in our family like hiding a ring, a baby, a coin and a thimble in our birthday cakes or mashed potatoes. When I was little, the sayings were that whoever got:
    the ring:would be the next to be married;
    the baby: would be the next to have a child; 
    the coin: was going to be rich;
    the thimble: was going to be an old maid or bachelor.

As we got older those fortunes seemed outdated or didn't fit who was at the table, so we revamped them- whoever got:
     the ring: would have a romantic episode;
     the baby: would have a child come into their life somehow;
     the coin: would come into some money;
     the thimble: would be given a wondeful gift.
Irish fortune telling charms

We always chewed very carefully when we ate birthday cake.

When my kids were little they would write little notes to the leprechaun that lived in our house and when they woke up on St. Patrick's Day, the leprechaun would overturn the furniture and leave them powdered donuts next to a green plant. You mean, that doesn't happen in your house? Hmmmm....

We decided to get my dad Dennis' genes analyzed to see what it would tell us about how Irish we really were. 

We found out that he is related to an ancient Irish king named Niall Noigiallach, or Niall of the Nine Hostages who lived in the late 4th and early 5th centuries. He is famous for being the one who kidnapped St. Patrick.

MY FAMILY KIDNAPPED ST. PATRICK!

Niall had 8 sons who were very prolific. Today 21% of the men in NW Ireland are related to him, and 2-3 million males worldwide, including my dad and my son.

When I say I'm Irish, I mean it!

(And on a side note, my mother's side is English, Welsh and Scotch-Irish, and she always said her people were Scots who raided the Irish in ancient times, then got cut off by the Irish army and so stayed in Ireland and married Irish women. Think Braveheart kind of guys.....sigh.)

This explains so much.....

Happy St. Patrick's Day!

Irish whiskey menu board

Friday, May 13, 2011

Unashamedly superstitious

 Okay, so I am a little superstitious. There's nothing wrong with that. After all, I have an Irish heritage so I come by it honestly. Come on, admit it, aren't you the teeniest bit nervous that it's Friday the 13th today? Are you being a bit more cautious today?

If you spilled the salt, wouldn't you be the least bit tempted to pick up a pinchful and throw it over your left shoulder, just in case?


Do you believe in the wee folk? How about the tooth fairy and Santa's elves? Have a leprechaun mess up your house on St. Patrick's Day eve? Read fairytales long into the night when you were little? Look out in wonder at what Jack Frost had done to the windows on a frosty winter morning? Oh, I bet you forgot all that stuff didn't you? Did you grow up and stop believing in magical things?


Well, you can revisit the magical thinking time of childhood by trying my family's tradition of fortune telling charms in birthday cakes. On someone's birthday, four little charms are slipped into the cake (either homemade or from the bakery). When the cake is cut, served, and nibbled on, four guests will have their fortunes predicted!

The traditional meanings are the one who gets the thimble will remain single, the one who gets the ring will get married, the one who gets the baby will have a child, and the one who gets the coin will become rich. These fortunes can cause horror or confusion in this post-modern age or when one is a bit older, however, so alternative interpretations can be applied. How about: the one who gets the thimble will have a happy home and live to pay off their mortgage, the one who gets the ring will remarry and find happiness on the second (or third) try, the person who gets the baby will serve as an awesome mentor to a younger person in their business, and the person who gets the coin will be the most generous of everyone in donating towards the latest natural disaster relief!

It is also fun to add these charms (reusuable after sterilizing, of course) to the mashed potatoes or colcannon on Halloween or St. Patrick's Day. Just be sure and warn your guests to be careful when they bite down! It's easy to put a little kit like this together yourself and start your own little Irish tradition, or you can get one from my etsy shop at
http://www.etsy.com/listing/74026616/fortune-telling-charms

And don't just avoid walking under those ladders, opening umbrellas in the house, or breaking mirrors due to superstition. They're just dumb things to do!
To see a fresh etsy shop called Mymble's Daughter, a Jewellery and Art shop for the Victorian Ornithologist, and run by Peggy Seymour (adorapop) who obviously believes in fortune telling and fairies, go to http://www.etsy.com/shop/adorapop
Don't you love this fortune telling necklace?

 





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