You’ll be glad to hear my symptoms have almost retreated, so
no more nasty poems - I promise.
The last day of 2013 was busy with preparations to celebrate the turn of the year. I tend to go into a manic clean-up phase so that the new year arrives to find our homestead spick, span, spruce and gleaming.
The last day of 2013 was busy with preparations to celebrate the turn of the year. I tend to go into a manic clean-up phase so that the new year arrives to find our homestead spick, span, spruce and gleaming.
A welcome break from
chores : our neighbours, Maria and Marina, come to sing the Kalanta. While the Christmas
songs, much like the carols, focus mainly on the lowly birth and express
festive greetings, the New Year Kalanta can vary from place to place. They
usually mention Aghios Vasilis, Saint Basil, whose name-day is celebrated on
January 1st and it is traditionally he who brings the children gifts
on New Year’s Eve. The content common to all is the wish that the new year
bring health and happiness to the residents of the house being visited. Despite
a missing front-tooth and the balloon being a poor substitute for the
traditional triangle, the girls sang us the Kalanta with gusto, charm and a
great degree of cuteness.
In return Kalanta singers receive the traditional gift of
coins and sweets and of those one of the most popular is the traditional melomakarona
, or ‘honey cookies’ as the Australian
Women’s Weekly Cookbook describes them.
Like shortbread in the Scottish Highlands, this is a delicious sweet which
around Christmas and New Year is to be found in every household as a welcoming
treat for visitors.
The story of its apparent derivation is interesting: one component
is meli – honey which, along with
orange juice, helps to give these cookies their rich, luscious taste. (The other ingredients are usually butter,
sugar, oil, flour and grated lemon rind, with chopped walnuts for a final
smothering - a marvellous melange!) The makarona,
however uncovers a more complex explication. One suggestion is that it
comes from the Greek of the Middle-Ages, makaronia,
a food based on a flour dough which was prepared to honour the deceased, the makaritis.
Whether our present-day
sweet resembled its earlier namesake in appearance or shared similar
ingredients has been lost in both culinary and linguistic mists. It is all
hypothesis, but fascinating, nonetheless. There are only a few on the plate
below and I have to ‘fess up: we had
already eaten most of them!
So here are the melomakarona
along with home-made shortbread – a great cultural amalgam, right?- and some
liqueurs made from our very own produce: mint and pomegranate.
Recently our Hogmanay habit has
been to have neighbours over for a Reveillant. Just before midnight, Ioannis
sings for his supper by going outside while we switch off all the lights to
send the old year off. His first task is to smash the dried pomegranate thereby
conferring on us health and prosperity. Apparently the greater the ensuing
mess, the more seeds spattered over my balcony tiles, the richer the blessing-
and Ioannis really lobbed that thing.
Next he lights the candle to symbolically
bring in the ‘wee bairn’ of the year and we will then switch the lights back on
and wish each other the very best. In Scotland the first-foot traditionally
brings sweets, something alcoholic and a piece of coal or wood – thus
symbolically ensuring the household will have food, drink and warmth throughout
the year. The candle serves the warmth requirement, but Ioannis, from Serres,
also follows his own family tradition and brings us a nice smooth stone. I
understand this is to wish that the walls of your house remain stout and true.
To me this seems to echo the final stanza of the Christmas Kalanta which says:
In this house where we’ve come
May no stone crack
And may the householder
Live to a ripe old age.
Needless to say, our first- foot, having assiduously
followed those poly-ethnic traditions, is the first to sample the treats
pictured above.
This year I have added
charcoal as a ‘combustible alternative’ – more artistic than a lump of coal and
relevant for me as in autumn I began attending art classes, a treat I’ve been promising
myself for a while.
Being a beginner is always full of fun and
frustration; add messy into the mix and that’s about the size of me with
drawing or painting materials. One
technique we’ve been practising is to black out the entire sheet of paper with
charcoal and ‘draw’ your subject by removing the colour with a putty
rubber. Below is an early attempt at
representing a classical Greek profile. My initial effort looked much too
effeminate – the hair didn’t help. So I changed the nose and chin to give a
stronger, more pronounced profile. The outcome resembled the nasty puppet Mr
Punch; his Anatolian near-equivalent, shadow–theatre puppet, Karakiozis; or
even a wicked witch, without the chin-hair. This current version is slightly
improved after softening said features a little. Recently a cousin saw it and
asked if it was Alexander the Great. Eleni, I love you for your perceptiveness,
imagination and ….kindness!
But my charcoal drawing is just a tad too monotone
an image to end on, so here is a cheerier image: our Christmas cactus got its
timing perfect this year and was a blaze of glorious blooms all through the
festive season.
Maria K, thank you for joining us and welcome to our merry
band of followers.
May 2014 bring you
all everything you could wish for.
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