1.17.2010

Great Granny's Noodles


Again, another post from last year, but I couldn't resist with my new found scanning capabilities and my mom giving me a picture of my Grandma Great making my favorite food in the whole entire world. I know I say something is my favorite a lot, but this is the one. Ask my mom. She knows me well and could testify to this noodle soup being my all time love.

Look hard at the black and white photo. The woman in the forefront is my great grandma. She is at Como Hot Springs in Morgan I believe and they are rolling out homemade noodles. So I think I'd call this a time honored tradition. My Grandma Great was born on April 15, 1891 so I believe this photo dates back to the early 1920's. My red headed child shares this birthday with this great great grandma as well as his Grandma Clawson. The red headed child is lucky to share a birthday with two wonderful women.

(Last years post)

Now these noodles are truly tradition. The first gal I know who made them was my great granny on my moms side. Her name was Viola Telford, but we always just called her Grandma Great. My mom has an old photo of her and her sisters up somewhere near Morgan making these noodles al fresco (outside). It is a great pic. They're all in there dresses and aprons rolling and cutting noodles for another great family meal together. Grandma Great then passed this tradition onto my grandma Barker and what a treat that has been. (black and white photo above.)

My grandma Barker lived next door to me my whole life, and I realize now that I took that for granted. She was a quiet lady, who was always home. Every once in awhile she wasn't so quiet though. I remember swimming in our pool one lazy summer evening and we heard the loudest sneeze ever. It was grandma Barker out on her swing in her yard two houses away. We kids yelled back, "Bless you grandma!" and in response she yelled back, "Thank you kids!" We still get the giggles thinking about that night. How could you not love this woman. With the few choice swear words she taught us, and the noodle making tradition to pass on, she is a gem!

I would catch the school bus at her house when I was in elementary. The cousins and I would leave our homes early enough so that we could play outside together until the bus came. If it was a cold morning we would go inside my grandmas home while my grandpa would keep a lookout for the bus. Grandma always had a box of Twigs to share, and plenty of popsicles in the summertime. We lived at her house most of our childhood. We played in her trees, peed peas with her, (shelled peas) and loved to eat her noodles. I don't remember her cooking anything else really, but her chicken noodle soup was amazing. I remember going over to grandmas house to do her hair with my mom and there would be noodle sheets all over the kitchen. She'd roll out the dough balls super thin and then let them dry everywhere. Every surface was covered in newspaper with the noodle sheets on top drying. After the noodle sheets were almost dry she would cut them into strips and then cut super duper extra thin noodles out of the strips. Almost shavings. The noodles were then put in a huge pot of chicken broth and served piping hot. On the table, was placed big bowls of chopped up green onions, shredded chicken, and bug juice. That is what we call Soy Sauce. You know when you squish a bug. The guts are the same color as Soy Sauce therefore its nickname. It sound a bit gross, but you know you've ripped off your fair share of grasshopper legs! Don't deny it:). You would then place your own toppings in your bowl of noodles and slurp in up like a ziggy piggy. It was divine!

Grandma Barker wasn't the warm fuzzy kind of granny who would squeal and hug the guts out of you, but she loved you in her own way. She never gave big gifts for birthdays or Christmas, but she never forgot your birthday either. I think I was her favorite (OK so Hollie really was but that's ok) because every birthday she would call me and tell me to come over for a little something. At her house sitting on the counter would be big brown grocery bag filled with noodle especially for me!! I know it took her hours to make those noodles, but Grandma knew they were my favorite thing in the world. Just shows she really did love me best! I would take them home and my mom would fix a big pot of Chicken Noodle soup for me. I loved it. I loved Grandma Barker.

The tradition continues. I only remember my mom making noodles from scratch once or twice because it took so much time, but really it was because my mom's wrists were never the same after all that cutting. It's a wrist wrecker that's for sure. But my mom found a great replacement. Kluski Noodle at the grocery store are a great substitute for homemade when you just don't have the time or wrist power. My mom would add her special twist to the mix. She would make the soup and then we'd bake homemade blueberry muffins to go along side of the soup. That's my mom's addition to the tradition. She would always serve the soup in her best china bowls, and everyone loved that meal. You could ask any one of my siblings today and I'll bet Chicken Noodle Soup was one of their favorite meals too.

A few years after I got married I called Grandma Barker and she passed the recipe down to me.
Now Hollie was lucky. She actually got the demonstration from Grandma. Therefore she should be the master noodle maker now. I've made these noodles a few times since then, and each time it brings back floods of memories. I spent all morning Tues. making the noodles (it burned a lot of calories as an added benefit!) and we finally had them for dinner tonight. This isn't a meal you want to rush, therefore that is why it was served on Sunday not Tues. The rest of the week was just too crazy, or someone was coming for dinner and there is NO WAY I was going to share these noodles with anyone. It has to be those who know the time and tradition that goes into this meal and someone you truly love. My kids and James are those lucky eaters today. We made huckleberry muffins to go along with the soup tonight and might I say it was all I expected it to be. It brings a smile to my heart and happy thoughts in my head, and yummy sounds from my mouth. That's what food can do to us! So thanks to Great Grandma, Grandma Barker, Mom and now me. I'll teach Emma one of these days so she can pass it on to her family. What a traditions to have. The best kind I might add.

Grandmas Noodles

3 c. flour
7 eggs
2 t. salt

Mix all the ingredients together and form into 5 balls. Let the dough rest a few minutes. Roll each ball into a thin sheet. Let sit until almost dry. When dry cut into 2 1/2 in. strips and then cut into super thin noodles. Let dry. When ready to cook, bring a pot of water to a boil. Add noodles and cook 5 mins. Drain noodles and add to chicken broth. Serve with shredded chicken, green onions, and bug juice. (soy sauce) Serve with blueberry muffins.

3 comments:

  1. so funny that you put this post today...I just made these noodles last night for dinner today.. We love them! I never chop them as small as grandma..dang it.. it hurts too bad!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Your carrot pudding is baking in the oven right now. I had to use GH raisin cinnamon bread...but I think it will work in a pinch. tee hee I can hardly wait to taste it! AND noodles happen to be one of my very favorite things in the world. Tried the bread with just a little dill (dried, from my garden) and it was fabulous! Keep posting these great recipes.

    By the way, my dad always called soy sauce "bug juice"...is it a generational thing?

    ReplyDelete
  3. I saw you on KSL last week and started looking at your blog. Love it! This post brings back memories for me, too. My grandma made noodles the same way, and she made the BEST chicken soup with them as well! She would cut them really wide, probably at least an inch and a half, and they were delish. BTW, you're the first person, besides my hubby, who I've ever heard refer to soy sauce as "bug juice." :)

    ReplyDelete

LinkWithin

Related Posts with Thumbnails