Eggs! I see them
over-easy, I see them sunny-side up, I see them scrambled. Eggs are nutrient rich, lean and high in
protein. Aesthetically, their whites and
golden yellow yolks are pleasing as much to the eyes as they are to the
palate. But the ones that I am most fond
of are the ones that are just over easy and slightly greasy from the oil in the
pan to ensure that they don’t stick to the pan and rupture the beautiful soft yolks.
Why? These ones remind me of my grandmother. As a child, we didn’t eat a lot of eggs and most of the time, when we did, it was scrambled haphazardly, which I think my parents made because we were always in a hurry to get to school or piano lessons, or maybe my parents were just too tired to wait patiently for the egg whites to cook slowly, while keeping the yolks soft. So whenever we went to our grandmother’s house and she made these eggs for us, what a treat!
But the treat wasn’t necessarily the eggs itself. The treat was being with my grandmother and her love of laughter and her hunger for joy. As a child, she used to take care of me while my parents went to work. There wasn’t ever a lot of money. There weren’t shopping sprees or elaborate lunch dates or any fancy cars to drive us anywhere. There weren’t any dolls with sophisticated wardrobes or a 3 storey doll house. There weren’t any video games or indoor play places with a maze of jungle gym apparatus. We walked where we needed to go. We ate when we were hungry. We talked when we were together.
One time, I specifically remember the both of us walking to one of her friend’s apartments. We knocked on the door and when the door opened, there were almost a dozen other “grandmothers”, some of them playing card games, some of them laughing and dancing, and even one other grandmother by the window smoking a cigarette. Back then, smoking wasn't as taboo as it is today. But if you were a woman, a Korean woman at that, it was completely forbidden. That day, that cigarette and all those women dancing and playing and laughing represented a rebelliousness and carefree-ness that was liberating. For a moment, I felt like I was peeking into a secret and exclusive club that didn’t need anything other than the pleasure of each other’s company and joy in that moment. And in the centre of the room, performing a Korean folk dance with all the other ladies boisterously laughing and clapping along, was my grandmother, giggling and smiling.
All those ladies have long since passed away, including my
grandmother. And many of those
grandmothers probably passed on their humble heirlooms or jewels or some
tidbits of wisdom to their offspring. When
my grandmother passed away, she left her resounding laugh to my sister. And to me, I have inherited her love of that
laughter and happiness. Every time, I
hear that laughter out loud and feel a ridiculous joy regardless of what is happening
around me, I think of my grandmother’s eggs.