Change Is Hard

…but change is certain.

Pie conversations

29 Comments

I was talking to my mom yesterday evening. Not literally of course, as she’s been gone since July of 2004. Not even out loud because my husband and my dog were watching football nearby and the Lions were winning.

No, I was talking to my mom because I was making an apple pie with apples I’d gotten from an orchard a couple of towns west of here. It was a last minute decision to run over to Spicers Orchards to get old fashioned baking apples, on a beautiful, crisp Sunday afternoon.

My family used to go to Spicers when we were kids, in the 60s and 70s. Back then it was a one building small place with acres of apple, pear and cherry trees. I have lots of good memories of all of us there.

But it’s not small anymore.

When I arrived, late in the day, I noticed right away all the additional parking. Most of which was filled with cars. An entire field that used to be, well, a field, was parked full of cars. Not to mention the regular lot next to the building that houses the bakery and picked fruit and jelly and stuff. And another full lot across the street.

Something told me Spicers is not the same anymore.

I hadn’t worn a coat, assuming I’d park in the lot and buzz into the store, grab some apples and go. Apparently it wasn’t going to happen like that. I tromped up and down the hills and finally made it over to the store.

For the weekend (I assume just the weekend) they had moved the sale of donuts outside and the line, double wide, stretched from the back of the building, where the tables holding the donuts were, to the winery on the other side of the huge parking lot. There seemed to be nothing left of the small local orchard I remembered. It just wasn’t the same.

Inside, where apples and cider and fudge and ice cream and jelly and cookies and bread were being sold, the line went from the cash registers (now 4 instead of 1) to the back of the store. The place was packed with people.

My first instinct was to turn and flee.

But I was there, so I found some courtland baking apples and a half gallon of cider and I got in line, trying not to feel claustrophobic as people pushed by, their arms laden with goodies. I have to say those cashiers were expedient, and I was paying and back on my way walking up and down the hills to the distant car before I could consider buying a cookie.

So I was telling mom all of this while I was peeling and slicing apples, as I was mixing and rolling the pie dough. It’s not the same, I told her, just not the same.

Then, with my head in the pantry, grabbing some sugar, I had a flashback to a pie she used to make. We called it cheesecake but it obviously wasn’t. There was cream cheese and maybe lemon pudding, in a graham cracker crust. For half an instant, probably because I’d been talking to her about Spicers, I thought I’d just ask her what was in that pie.

It’s still a gut punch, even after nineteen years, when I realize all over again that I can’t ask her anything anymore. It’s not the same, mom, just not the same.

But the apple pie? It pretty much looks the same as the apple pies mom used to make for us decades ago. Mine isn’t as pretty as hers were, but I’m betting it tastes the same.

Some things, regardless of commercialism, never change.

Author: dawnkinster

I'm a long time banker having worked in banks since the age of 17. I took a break when I turned 50 and went back to school. I graduated right when the economy took a turn for the worst and after a year of library work found myself unemployed. I was lucky that my previous bank employer wanted me back. So here I am again, a long time banker. Change is hard.

29 thoughts on “Pie conversations

  1. It’s hard when we can no longer pick up the phone to get that little bit of information we seek. But I think she would be proud. That is a pretty pie.

    And yeah, little places from our memories, rarely stay little if they are successful.

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  2. I guess the business is happy to grow, but it is shocking to find that ‘it’s not like it used to be.’ I hope the pie was delicious.

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  3. I remember roadside fruit stands from when I lived in the mid-Hudson valley of New York – I remember one of them in particular, that I was able to visit when I was back there a few years ago – like Spicer’s, it was not the same. It too had grown and become a big business.

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  4. I’m the same. Mom passed in 2015 and I still wish I could speak to her. Your pie was marvellous, I’ll bet!

    Deb

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  5. Ah, yes! Success is a double-edged sword for customers. It keeps the place in business, but it’s hard on the memories. Then again, nothing does stay the same, does it?

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    • No, nothing really does stay the same. For years they were small though, and when I visited, particularly when I was out in the orchard picking cherries, I’d unconsciously and then sometimes consciously look for my family among the trees.

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  6. Wow, moms. Whether pies or snowshoes. What a great connection you had/have with your mom, Dawn. I can smell that pie clear over here!!!!

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    • It was pretty darn good pie. I don’t know if my mom every did snow shoes…I know she never skied, but she ice skated once in awhile. And she water skiied 1x a year just to prove she could.

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  7. Orchards are a HUGE business around here and I know exactly what you mean about it not being the same. They are there for enter now. I also know the feeling of wanting to ask for a recipe or just a question. Hugs to you.

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  8. omg that pie looks amazing!

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  9. I really don’t like crowds like you described. Still, I’m glad you persevered, got your apples, and made your pie (bet it was delicious!). You’re right — things change, and all those changes aren’t necessarily for the better. So much more commercialism these days. Sigh.

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  10. I know exactly what you mean about missing your mom. Mine has been dead for 15 years and I feel exactly the same way. Your pie looks beautiful and I bet it was delicious, too. I am planning to make an apple pie this weekend.

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    • Hope your apple pie was good. It’s sort of a labor intensive pie in that you have to peel and cut up all those apples. VS a pumpkin pie you can make from canned pumpkin, or a cherry pie I can make from frozen cherries picked last summer…but it was well worth the work!

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  12. That’s the same with me and my mum’s meat pie although I’m pretty sure she didn’t really have a recipe. I wish I had written down so many family stories. Now it’s too late.

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  13. What a wonderful pie maker you are! That crust is just beautiful! I can totally relate to your experience upon arriving and realizing it “aint’ what it used to be” We always visited a wonderful farm that went on for acres and sold their own fruit, veggies, in a quaint little store. Well 20 years later I decided to take a ride up to Tice’s Farms and imagine my surprise in finding it was now Tice’s Corner and “they paved paradise and put up a parking lot” A shopping center now stood where that beautiful farm had been. Heartbreaking.

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    • Not fair! They should have left it be, but when people get old the next generation isn’t always able or willing to take on the family business, and it’s so tempting to take the money for the land and run. I imagine that is what will eventually happen to the farm my mom grew up on. But hopefully not in my lifetime!

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  14. Such a pretty pie, I bet it was delicious!

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