Category Archives: Holy Week

Pane e Vino

In which the author contemplates the ancient recipes of a region of Southern Italy, the contents of the pockets of Stephen Foster, the days of Holy Week, and the moon that journeys with us this night.

Taralli

We are in the midst of Holy Week, the most complex of celebrations in the Christian calendar. We have been for a few days now. It began with Palm Sunday, and I have a confession to make: Palm Sunday is not one of my favorite days. Father Seamus likes to say that attendance at St. Bernard’s always increases for Palm Sunday. “People come when we give things away at Mass,” he says, but give me all the palms you want… I still have never been fond of the day and of the reading of the Passion of the Lord. The congregation has its parts to read and it always feels a little lackluster to me, half-hearted. I’m also never sure what the proper mood is supposed to be on Palm Sunday. Celebration? Mourning? And then––and this is a rather bizarre thing, I know––I just do not like the word “Hosannah,” and it comes up a lot on Palm Sunday, especially in the newer songs.

And so I tend to avoid Palm Sunday Mass. Tonight, however, is Holy Thursday, or Maundy Thursday. And with Maundy Thursday, we get to one of my favorite nights. It begins with Mass, and here it is a trilingual affair in English, Spanish, and Creole, bringing the entire congregation together. Each year I recognize people I see just this one night each year. It is my one chance each year to sing in Creole. Sometimes––last year no but this year perhaps––it is a Creole song that just happens to be set to the tune of Stephen Foster’s “My Old Kentucky Home,” and I love that. I sit there amongst these people that I know in this once-a-year fashion, like the old Creole woman who reminds me of my grandmother, and I think of Grandma and also Grandpa and all the ones I love who have come and gone, and I think of Stephen Foster, who died with a slip of paper in his pocket on which he had written the words “Dear friends and gentle hearts,” and I inhale the incense and the ritual I have known for as long as I can remember and I let it wash over me and it is nothing at all like Palm Sunday. It is quite certain that this is a night for contemplation, and I am secure in that state.

The tradition is to visit two more churches once Mass is done on Maundy Thursday, for a total of three. Some folks go for seven, but like the seven fishes we Italians eat on Christmas Eve, seven is an awful lot of one thing. Grandma was content with three churches and so am I. The moon is always big and bright and it follows me along on my journey, which usually takes me from Lake Worth to West Palm Beach and then over across the lagoon to Palm Beach and then back home again. It is a full night. At each church, I sit in the quiet stillness, usually me and a few other souls. Even in the churches that are not mine I recognize a few people I see but once a year, on this night. At St. Edward’s, which is on Palm Beach and looks a bit like the Vatican, which is not what we’re accustomed to on this side of the lagoon, it’s always the woman near the front row with a veil of black lace over her head.

My mother tells a story of my grandmother Assunta at work in the kitchen, making the taralli for Easter, on one Maundy Thursday, when Nardine Uzzi, who probably was called Cummara Nardine, because everyone was a cummara in those days, came by and said, in their broken English dialect from Lucera, “Come on Assu, facime i sepulica!” That is, “Come on, Assu, let’s get to the churches!” But Grandma protested that she couldn’t go; she had to finish making the taralli. And so Nardine said, “Ok, we make them together subito subito” (fast fast) and so they did and then off they went to visit the three churches: St. Blaise, St. Francis, and Holy Cross. Sometimes Cummara Catherine would go, too, and then they would stop at the chocolate shop to buy chocolate bunnies for Easter.

I never even met some of these people and yet they are some of the people I think of as I make my rounds and sit in those dark churches as the moon follows along. Earlier in the day, on the Maundy Thursdays that go well, I’ll get to help out my mom and my sister with some of the traditional baking for Easter. There are the braids of sweet dough that Grandma Cutrone used to make for all of us grandkids, there are the Humpty Dumpties that I’ve been decorating since I was a little boy, and there are the taralli. They are a sort of pretzel, traditional to my family’s part of Italy, Apulia. Grandma would make them for Easter and for Christmas and sometimes for no reason whatsoever, but always for Easter. They are central to the Easter table. And perhaps you would like to make them, too. If you do, it’s good to have someone to share the labor with, just like Assunta and Cummara Nardine. This way you finish subito subito, and then you’re done with it, giving you more time to enjoy the fruits of your labor, together with friends and family. Don’t forget the wine. Bread and wine, pane e vino: taralli pair perfectly with a good Italian red wine. This is as it’s been for my people since time immemorial. In remembrance of everyone.

T A R A L L I
3 cups flour
2 cups semolina
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 cup olive oil
1 1/4 cups warm water
anise or fennel seeds

Preheat oven to 360 degrees F. Mix the dry ingredients together, then add the olive oil and water and a liberal amount of your choice of anise or fennel seeds. You can work by hand or use a mixer to make into a nice dough. Let the dough rest 15 minutes. Next, shape by rolling pieces of dough into ropes and twisting into the shapes you see in the photograph above (rings, twists). Have a large kettle of salted water boiling on the stove. Drop the shaped taralli into the boiling water, a few at a time. As they rise to the surface, remove them with a strainer. Place them on an oven rack and once the rack is full of boiled taralli, place the rack in the oven and bake until golden brown and crisp.

 

 

A People in Darkness Have Seen a Great Light

EasterMorning

We celebrated the mysterious holiday/holyday of Maundy Thursday by night, and this gathering by night returns again for Holy Saturday, the last day of the Easter Triduum. The mysteries deepen as sunset brings the Easter celebration in its oldest form: the Easter Vigil. We gather together and we begin in darkness. A fire is kindled, and from that new flame, all the candles are lit. Each and every person holds one. The transformation and the return of light is tangible and real. There is no mistaking it: darkness is overcome.

It’s been a long Lenten journey. My gift to you today: a little levity. What follows is a Convivio Dispatch from a few years back, one of our most popular dispatches ever. The scene is Easter Vigil mass on Holy Saturday. Have you ever been to an Easter Vigil mass? It is one of the most beautiful ceremonies you’ll witness, to be sure, but it’s a marathon mass, a true test of stamina, not for the weak of spirit or of strength. If you’re going to an Easter Vigil mass tonight, maybe you should read this first, just for the fun of it. ––jlc

 

CONVIVIO DISPATCH: HOLY SATURDAY NIGHT

It’s Holy Saturday, the night that officially closes the somber and reflective season of Lent, and the even more somber and reflective week known as Holy Week. We Catholics cap off the week with the hours-long Easter Vigil mass, a test of will for anyone, to be sure. But it is this mass that is the high point of the liturgical year, a grand spectacle to usher in the miracle of Easter.

Tonight’s long Easter Vigil mass at St. Bernard’s lacked a little something, though, and the general sense was that this year’s transition from Darkness to Light, from Somber to Joy, from Death to Life, was not quite as dramatic as it was in years past. And we can all pretty much place this sense of inadequacy on the statue of the Risen Lord at the back of the church. The concept each year is the same: We begin after sunset in a dark chuch, and once the good news is proclaimed, the lights and the organ grow gradually brighter and louder, while the bells ring triumphantly, as all the marble statues are released from the purple shrouds that have covered them since Holy Thursday.

But the statue of the Risen Lord, which hangs some four feet above the doorway opposite the altar, is well known amongst the congregation as the the Statue That Fell Upon the Head of the Usher, which happened as the unfortunate man was using a pole to release it from its purple shroud on another Easter Vigil night, three or four years ago. It’s happened just that one time, but still, the ushers grow increasingly timid with each passing year, and what used to be done with great zeal and flourish is now done rather gingerly and with palpable fear. The lights are all on and Sister Kathleen, the reluctant organist, has gone well past crescendo and so has no choice but to settle into quiet notes––notes that feel a bit like they’ve worn their welcome––and Father Seamus watches and prays from the altar, and the congregation turns and winces and looks away because they don’t want to watch what’s happening with the pole and the purple cloth but they turn again to watch anyway, lest they miss what might happen if it happens, and there is more wincing, and then finally one usher goes in for a folding chair, one of the chairs behind the back pew for the potential overflow Easter crowd. He gets the chair to stand on it, so as to have more control over the situation, or perhaps to lessen the blow should the statue fall again by reducing the distance and velocity it would travel downward toward his head––but then he hesitates again and Sister Kathleen just flat out stops playing and finally the other ushers just gather together and go for it in a great show of Christian strength and solidarity. They push the pole up under the purple cloak and lift it from the head of Christ and the statue rocks back and forth and there is, somewhere, an audible gasp.

But the statue of the Risen Lord settles down again, and all is well for another year, no ushers are in need of stitches, none have been clobbered into unconsciousness.

Jesus Christ is risen today!
Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Hallelujah!
And the ushers are all okay!
Hallelujah!

And when the nighttime mass is done, we great each other with “Happy Easter.” And so Happy Easter, Happy Spring. May your days have great flourish when they need to.
John

 

Image: Easter Morning by Caspar David Friedrich, oil on canvas, 1833, [Public domain], via WikiPaintings.

 

Good Friday, 1613. Riding Westward

Sorrows

It’s Good Friday. This is a favorite poem of mine by John Donne. The language is old, but it takes not very long to become attuned to the spelling and cadence, so allow yourself that for this Second Day of the Easter Triduum.

Let mans Soule be a Spheare, then, in this,
The intelligence that moves, devotion is,
And as the other Spheares, by being growne
Subject to forraigne motion, lose their owne,
And being by others hurried every day,
Scarce in a yeare their naturall forme obey:
Pleasure or businesse, so, our Soules admit
For their first mover, and are whirld by it.
Hence is’t, that I am carryed towards the West
This day, when my Soules forme bends toward the East.
There I should see a Sunne, by rising set,
And by that setting endlesse day beget;
But that Christ on this Crosse, did rise and fall,
Sinne had eternally benighted all.
Yet dare I’almost be glad, I do not see
That spectacle of too much weight for mee.
Who sees Gods face, that is selfe life, must dye;
What a death were it then to see God dye?
It made his owne Lieutenant Nature shrinke,
It made his footstoole crack, and the Sunne winke.
Could I behold those hands which span the Poles,
And tune all spheares at once peirc’d with those holes?
Could I behold that endlesse height which is
Zenith to us, and our Antipodes,
Humbled below us? or that blood which is
The seat of all our Soules, if not of his,
Made durt of dust, or that flesh which was worne
By God, for his apparell, rag’d, and torne?
If on these things I durst not looke, durst I
Upon his miserable mother cast mine eye,
Who was Gods partner here, and furnish’d thus
Halfe of that Sacrifice, which ransom’d us?
Though these things, as I ride, be from mine eye,
They’are present yet unto my memory,
For that looks towards them; and thou look’st towards mee,
O Saviour, as thou hang’st upon the tree;
I turne my backe to thee, but to receive
Corrections, till thy mercies bid thee leave.
O thinke mee worth thine anger, punish mee,
Burne off my rusts, and my deformity,
Restore thine Image, so much, by thy grace,
That thou may’st know mee, and I’ll turne my face.