Every so often, around 2 or 3pm, I look at the clock and
think, “Huh, I haven’t had too much pain today.” These are famous last words in my life. It seems inevitable that about ten
minutes after I utter them, the pain begins creeping and settling into my upper
back and shoulders.
Usually grocery shopping is agony for me; all the standing,
browsing, carrying unbalanced loads, reading ingredients lists in search of
those pesky sugars. A few months
ago, after repeatedly finding myself near tears in the checkout line, I learned
that I should always use a shopping cart, regardless of how little I plan to
buy. Shopping carts carry the
unbalanced loads without straining my back, and they make good supports when I
need to lean on something for a while.
A few weeks ago I spent about 20 minutes at the supermarket. I was feeling good enough that I spent
some time doing recognizance on natural sweeteners and ingredients lists. When I got to my car (with my cart) I was
pretty amazed at how little pain I was feeling after so long in the store.
Then I got home to my pile of tomatoes, basil and onions,
prepared to spend a few hours making a vat of Creamy Tomato Soup. I started the work of blanching
the tomatoes to prepare them to be diced and peeled. Then I went to work on dicing them and preparing the onions. After about 15 minutes of work, I
thought, “Huh, all this work and I’m not in any pain yet. Must be a good day.”
Oops.
Then it started.
Gradually the burning sensation grew stronger and stronger
as I added ingredients to the pot.
As the soup was cooking, I went about cleaning up the dishes, knives and
cutting boards from preparation, and the pain increased. I wiped down the counters and limped
into the living room where I sprawled out on the hardwood floor watching the
clock as the soup simmered.
The next step was to puree the soup in small batches. This turned out to be an ordeal. For all my excitement about owning a
food processor, I was not prepared for how messy, disorganized and frustrating
this part would be. In order to
dump out the bowl, I had to remove the stubborn blade, splashing soup down the
hole and on the spindle. Wiping
down the food processor between batches, ladling the soup into the bowl,
removing the bowl and dumping the pureed soup into another bowl, each step sent
fire through my muscles.
Step by step this continued. I transferred the pureed soup back to the pot, added the
milk and tomato paste, and whisked it together.
By the time I finished transferring the soup into zipper
bags, rinsing and labeling them, and stacking them in the freezer, I could hardly
believe how much pain I was experiencing.
I finished up washing the dishes and wiping down the counters – I have an
ant infestation in my house, so I need to clean things up promptly, otherwise I
would have curled up in a ball at this point or earlier – and again I hobbled
over to my favorite spot on the hardwood floor. It was hard even to get down there to rest.
Looking up at the
skylights, feeling the breeze from the windows, sensing some relief from the
burning sensation in my shoulder blades, I tried to think of how good it would be
after a long day’s work to come home and eat some of that tasty, homemade
tomato soup with a slice of bread and maybe some cheese, and I made a mental
note to choose easier recipes in the future. (I bet I'll forget, though.)
1 comment:
It sounds amazing! I'll have to try it. Homemade goodness. And my mom just got a nifty tool that might be a future option four your souping- an immersion blender!
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