While I will offer up a few drinks at the
end, with the holidays upon us and many looking to find just the
"right" gift for spouses, family members, significant others and
friends, I thought I would share a few gift memories.
Black Friday and Cyber Monday have passed
and, in fits of conspicuous consumption, the American public has spent money it
does not have, for gifts. These gifts will likely be forgotten in the next year
or two, perhaps sooner. For those giving
gift cards or cash, the gesture so appreciated when received, will almost
certainly forgotten as soon converted into goods.
Looking back at over 60 Christmases it is
amazing how few gifts are easily remembered, still fewer that call forth
memories, and costliness is not a factor.
I have received the requisite numbers of
ties, robes, slippers, and sweaters, though I remember none specifically. Predictably, there have been cash and gift
cards though I cannot remember exactly what was purchased with them. Wait!
As I write, I recall that one
Christmas, the monetary gift from my parents went to buy a new steering wheel
for the jeep I wrote of in an earlier blog.
I really wanted that steering wheel as the old one was badly cracked and
worn. Of the gifts I do recall, almost
all are from my childhood.
$9.95 in 1958, $900 today |
The spiritual low in Christmas gifts
received had to be about Christmas of 1959 or 1960. This was rock bottom disappointing. Much more so than my getting a Daisy pump BB
gun when my friends all had lever actions.
Picture a time when the ultimate Christmas
reference for toys was the Sears & Roebuck catalog, Westerns reigned
supreme in the movies and on television, and children actually went out of
doors to play Cowboys and Indians.
I wanted a Fort Apache by Marx - an opus in
brightly colored injection molded plastic. A
timbered cavalry fort with soldiers, cowboys, Indians, horses...I can
still see that catalog page today. Come
Christmas morn, gifts under the tree, the smell of cocoa, what was in
store---toy soldiers, model planes, Fort Apache? No. It was Eskimo Village, a predecessor of
the Arctic Explorer play set pictured above.
At that time, I was all about shoot ‘em up military
and cowboy stuff. An Eskimo
Village? Dad must have lost his mind or waited until
there was nothing left to buy, or grabbed the first toy that came to hand. He was in the army. Why in God’s green earth would he pick Eskimo
Village? The box held igloos, sleds,
dogs, walrus, polar bear, Inuits etc.
All foreign to my interests and world view - and such a
disappointment. It snowed that Christmas
and I had a go at playing desultorily with the Village outside. Later, on occasion, playing with my electric
train, I would drag out the Eskimo Village and its minions. Somehow, the Eskimo Village just did not feel
right alongside my Lionel, my green Army men and those beloved Army trucks. The
icons of the frozen North were soon relegated to the bottom of that old footlocker.
The last memorable gift was the Christmas of 1965
in Camp Drum, New York. I had moved on
to fishing, spending time in the woods, and wanting to hunt. My parents gave me a shotgun. Now this was
not an extravagant gift. Not a
Winchester, or even a Remington, it was a well-used Mossberg 12 gauge bolt-action
shotgun with an adjustable choke. It was
about as close to the "bottom of the line" as you can get without
being indecent in quality. Never mind
that. I took a good number of rabbits
with it and enjoyed it immensely.
As parents, my wife and I have managed to
be spectacular failures in gift giving. We have heard more than once from our
children that they never got what they wanted. Oh well. As they say, "Life sucks, then you
die."
As we mature (though many never do) gift
giving and receiving becomes secondary to spending time with loved ones or, in
my case, seeking a quiet corner away from loved ones. My wife
and I seldom give each other gifts anymore, preferring to get what we want,
when we want it. Perhaps that is best
since there is never disappointment.
Like all things in life, this also has a downside; you also lose the
chance to cultivate those memories of gifts - good, bad, or indifferent.
Today’s drinks are from Holiday Drink
Book, by the Peter Pauper Press, 1951.
This book can be found, in its original box, for under $10 today. It would make a cute stocking-stuffer for
someone enjoying 1950's tchotchke's and some simple drinks.
Like those Army trucks, the Falernum Cocktail is worth trotting out repeatedly.
This basic Hot Buttered Rum recipe, just as that "plain Jane" old
Mossberg, does its job. A no frills, no fuss, way to warm up on a cold winter
day or night.
This last drink, a picker upper for that
morning after, has to be the "Eskimo Village" of cocktails. While I would gladly take eggnog or almost
any other drink utilizing raw egg, the Nose
Dive Cocktail would be far from my thoughts - and yes, I made one and
quaffed it.
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