Okay, okay. I’m a week early!
But Astrid and I are in Atlanta as we speak, having just spent a glorious
weekend in the north Georgia mountains with my kids and grandson.
Halloween is everywhere. However, for this post, my thoughts are
back home where we live in the Netherlands….
Where THOUSANDS of these chestnuts have fallen to the ground from the
HUNDREDS of trees that surround our citadel city. Seriously.
Actually, they had all but fallen by the beginning of this month.
OCTOBER. AUTUMN. FOOTBALL. They sprinkled the ground like
lost-n-found money. Like gems from the sky. I became the little
girls and boys everywhere who came with their mommies…and bags…to collect their
treasures. “Look, Mommy! Look at this one!”
One day I took out my own bag and collected my own. Enough to sink my
imaginary ship.
TRICK: Not
a one of them was edible.
All my life I had heard about chestnuts roasting on open fires at this time
of the year. Though I had never seen or experienced it, I envisioned
crackling fireplaces in cozy, romantic homes. No one ever told me about
the 55-gallon oil drums around Europe's open-air markets, spitting their fires
underneath iron plates sizzling with sweet chestnuts. The kind you
eat.
Who would have known there were two kinds! I first found ones like
these in Germany years back and raced home to roast them in the oven. I
had eaten my first roasted chestnuts in Munich a few years before and could
hardly wait to taste them again. I thought I had found money on the
ground.
TRICK: Those weren’t edible either!
And that’s when I found out they either are or they aren’t, depending. The ones that are are sweet chestnuts. The ones
that aren’t are horse chestnuts or buckeyes! Another trick and what a
waste, since the Buckeyes are my archrival.
Nevertheless, I found myself a perfectly-shaped specimen from the above
stash (where I live surrounded by chestnut trees--the ones that are non-edible
tricks), and turned it around tenderly in my hand on my daily walks…until it
felt like a TREAT.
And because the Dutch don’t seem too keen on the edible variety (why is
that???), I now wait eagerly for our trip to Düsseldorf, Germany, in early
December, to visit the Christmas market…and to find my chestnut vendor on the
corner who will serve me up a paper cone full of the sweet delicacies.
Such is life's sermonette. Sometimes you have to pick through the
tricks till you lay your hands on the TREAT!