Recently the only Hungarian restaurant near my house closed. This was a tragic blow for my whole family, since we love Hungarian food. In honor of The Epicurean, the late Magyar eatery, I am posting an essay I wrote about it back in 2009. (The deer pictured is not either of the deer mentioned in the story. The doe above was one we met while on vacation in 2011).
On the day of my birthday, December 31st, I drove
out into a light snowfall to meet some of my family at The Epicurean, one of
the few Hungarian restaurants in the Chicago
suburbs. My father, a full-blooded
Hungarian, longs for the food of his homeland, and so makes the hour-long drive
to this restaurant at least once a year.
Today, he was treating me to a birthday lunch.
We settled at the table: my mother and father and I in a
45-year reunion of my birth, and my sister Claudia, who is staying with my parents
while she’s in town from Virginia .
The first thing we noticed was that this lovely restaurant,
beautifully decorated with all sorts of Magyar touches, was very cold. My father told this to our waiter, Luis, who
greeted us with a tentative air that lasted throughout our visit. Luis assured us he would turn up the
heat. Then he asked if we wanted any
drinks to start with. My father plunged
right in.
“I’ll have
a scotch on the rocks.”
Luis looked
apologetic. “I’m sorry, we don’t serve
scotch.”
My father’s
face fell. I don’t know if it’s a
Hungarian tradition (his own father always drank highballs at family events) or
just a personal preference, but my father loves his scotch on special
occasions. “Wine, then.”
Luis looked
uncomfortable. “We don’t serve any
alcohol.”
From this,
I don’t think my father ever quite recovered.
“No? You did the last time we
were here.”
“We haven’t
for a year or so.”
So he took
our soft drink orders and went on his way; we sat in the large room, cold as a
barn, and tried to change the subject away from the lost J & B.
My parents
showed me pictures of a deer they’d found in their yard that morning. It had an injured leg, and it sat
convalescing under my parents’ backyard birdfeeder. “Did you call animal control?” I asked.
“Yes. They said they don’t do anything for deer.”
You may
recall my story of the dying cat in my parents’ back yard this past
summer. I couldn’t understand, first,
how these animals seemed to seek out my parents, and secondly, how there seems
to be no help in the world for sick wildlife.
The doe, my
mother told me, had eventually stood up and limped away, and they lost track of
her. They didn’t think she’d been hit by
a car, because only one leg was affected and there was no visible blood. I wondered, odd as it sounded, if she could
have slipped on the ice and sprained a muscle.
Her thin leg was visibly swollen.
Troubled by
this, I took my plate to the buffet table.
There is no Hungarian food that is not delicious to me, from chicken
paprikas to beef gulyas (goulash) to palascinta, which are little sugared
crepes. Chicken soup with delicate
hand-made noodles, crisp pierogi filled with meat and potatoes, sliced
cucumbers mixed with spices, szekely gulyas (a delicious blend of sauerkraut,
tender pork, sour cream, and true Hungarian paprika), and dumplings, wonderful
dumplings—made lunch a delight.
And for dessert there was a six-tiered Dobos Torte with
chocolate rum filling and a jelly-covered cookie on top.
It never got warmer in the restaurant (we feared these were
signs of imminent closure), but the lunch was as delicious as ever. My mother, who in forty-five years has never
missed acknowledging my birthday with wrapped gifts, gave me a lovely
Guatamalan bag, in which I can carry the ubiquitous papers that need grading.
Altogether it was a lovely experience; but I kept thinking
about that deer long after we parted.
How sad that a wild animal has no one to care for it when it is wounded.
That evening my sons and I picked up my husband from work
and I begged him to let me drive around a bit and look at Christmas lights as a
birthday treat—before everyone took them all down. Despite his hunger for dinner, he agreed, and
the four of us drove to what I think of as “the rich side of town” to see the
truly lavish displays. We drove down a
suburban street with homes that seemed to have been transplanted from East Egg
and marveled at their light displays.
It was snowing again--a soft and lovely accentuation of the
holiday visuals. Suddenly a deer was
there, bursting out of someone’s yard.
On the rare occasions that I see deer in the suburbs, they are always
does, but this one was a buck—an eight or ten point buck who trotted right next
to our car like a guide into the New Year.
I was speechless with delight.
I braked finally, and he cut right in front of us, a
beautiful silhouette in the soft snow, then stood to the left of the car,
seemingly curious. I rolled down my
window and greeted him. He didn’t seem
at all frightened by us; perhaps deer only fear hunters because they can smell
the scent of aggression. We were simply
in awe. “Hello,” I said. “Thanks for being a good omen.”
He stared back with his wide unblinking eyes. We drove away, and only later did I realize
that I had my camera in my purse, and that I could have captured a
once-in-a-lifetime shot.
Still, I have the memory of his beauty, and the good feeling
that he brought to the end of the year.
2 comments:
Julia, my Hungarian-born mother (Jewish, not Magyar) never served a meal for company without a dish of those sliced cucumbers in vinegar with paprika. I confess I never ate them.
They're an acquired taste; they're good as a side dish. ;)
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