Friday 3 June 2016

Cookies Again!

In February, this guest post appeared on my blog, much to everyone's (especially my Mum's and my own) delight.

And guess what - the cookies have made another appearance, and I have another guest post about them for you!

In case you were not yet reading my blog in February, or don't feel like clicking on the link to the old post, here is a brief summary of events:

Last year in April, my Mum wrote this guest post with her recipe for Easter Bunny Cookies. They were a big hit with someone living on a different continent - you could almost say these cookies (or at least their recipe) travelled the world. One very kind lady in Canada, herself a fellow blogger, shared the recipe with a friend, and they both decided to give it a try and made the cookies for two events: First to offer them as welcome nibbles to visitors at their church, and then in the shape of eighth-notes for a fund raising event at a women's music club.

The February post resulted from an email the fellow blogger sent me, and here is what she wrote last week:

- - -
 
Hello Meike and Meike’s Mum,

As promised, here is the report of your cookies’ latest contribution to the Women’s Musical Club of Winnipeg, held in another of Winnipeg’s historic homes for “Swing Into Spring,” the club’s 16th annual ‘McCelland Scholarship’ fund-raising event. 
 

755 Wellington Crescent does not have the notable romantic caché of the love story that research into Moss House proposed, but I have garnered a little of its history, nonetheless. Probably designed by its first owner, William Arthur Irish, the home was built in 1929 for his second wife and the couple’s growing family. 
(The first Mrs. Irish passed away nine months after moving from Winnipeg to Victoria, BC, to a home Irish is known to have designed and built there.) Irish later married Mary Edith Fares (then 22), in 1922. Mary Edith was the daughter of William H. Fares, who made his fortune in cattle, livestock, and meat-packing. 
Irish established himself in a contracting business with Mary Edith’s brother-in-law, businessman J. A. Saul; his upward mobility led him to become presidents of four companies in the business of insurance and finance, and to assert himself into the “who’s who” of Winnipeg. 
Being a member of the City’s elite, the Irish name made the society page, and less felicitously, newspaper headlines, for reason of his disputing the will of his friend, the nationally influential and enterprising erstwhile mayor of Winnipeg, Alexander MacDonald. Less notoriously, William Arthur Irish made the papers one final time, 2nd January, 1942, the headlines comprising only his name and the value of his estate - $229,101.00 - revealing him (if not his house) to have been significant public interest.

I asked the most senior member of the WMC about the house; our lovely Margaret knew the date the house had been built, and went on to say that she had known Irish’s son, Bill. Margaret didn’t have other information about the house (maybe the new owners would know), but she was instrumental acquiring the house for our event. 
Gracious, charming, canny, and compelling, Margaret has found homes for the event for each of the past 16 years, - but she had had no luck this year until she told the story of her disappointing search to a boutique esthetician, a woman who believes in things meant-to-be. Herself a musician, she spontaneously offered “755” for the event that brought about 175 people through her dining room for tea sandwiches, sweets...
 

...and Meike’s Mum’s cookies:

My Mum's cookies are the eighth notes at the top end of the plate. I wouldn't mind having the entire plate to myself :-D

Adjacent to the dining room, a white baby grand piano almost glows in the light-drenched sitting room. Our sparkly hostess - self-described “lily girl” - volunteered the story of peeking through the window to see that white piano, and discovering her house (meant-to-be), before she had even looked inside. Her first impulse was confirmed by the detailed references to fleurs-de-lys in archways at the front entrance and above length of the dining room table. Love stories here are written between the lines, but one came to light when the man of the house sang the praises of a woman with a most beautiful voice: for a few minutes in an erstwhile tea-room hushed to listen to the white baby grand piano (played by a former McClelland scholarship winner), our “lily girl” sang her Ave Maria.

“Swing Into Spring” was a resounding success. Our lovely (and wily) Margaret, who has reached her 90th year, is stepping aside as event Chair, but will stay on to help again next year. It will be a while until Meike’s Mum’s cookies make another appearance – a winter concert in February, 2017, perhaps - but I am already not only looking forward to finding stories, but to sharing them with you. You will be very much in mind as I make the cookies in the shape of eighth-notes for the next special event. 

Thank-you so much.

- End of guest post -

Isn't that yet another great way to show what blogging can result in? Admittedly, this is neither life-saving nor life-changing, but I love the way my Mum's cookies have formed a link between us and the Women's Musical Club of Winnipeg, and how the stories of life and love in those beautiful houses can appear on my blog thanks to my Mum's original guest post with the cookie recipe. 

19 comments:

  1. I never cease to be amazed at what comes from blogging (and from making cookies!) and this is, yet again, a lovely story bringing people across the world together.

    I had to look up "esthetician" (a person who specialises in skin and skin care) but am still unsure as to a 'boutique esthetician'. One lives and one learns.

    I must have another go at the cookies. Mental note made.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's such a nice way of bringing people together, isn't it!
      I knew what an esthetician is, but like you, had not heard the term in connection with "boutique". I imagine it a beautician in a rather posh place.

      Delete
  2. What a delightful story of how the internet can make connections between people who are quite far apart in real life. Meike's Mom's generous sharing of her special recipe with blog readers led to their delicious appearance at a Women's Musical Club of Winnipeg Tea so many thousands of miles away.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, it's definitely a story worth telling! Thank you, Kristi.

      Delete
  3. How fun: connecting through cookies!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Wonderful story! Blogging is strange and lovely, sometimes! Meike, your mom sounds like a treasure.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. She is, Jennifer, she is! A treasure, and highly treasured.

      Delete
    2. Oh dear, that makes me really embarrassed! ;-)

      Delete
  5. I love this. Ok, it's not life-saving or life-changing, but that doesn't mean it's not worthwhile or important or worth sharing. Blogging has introduced me to people who live on the other side of the world and, while we've never met, I consider them friends and kindred spirits. Thank you for sharing this heartwarming story Meike. xx

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You are welcome, Gillian. And the same goes for me - blogging has allowed me to "meet" people I would have never come in contact with otherwise, and it has enriched my life.

      Delete
  6. Just so great!! And very interesting to read. Your mum must be so tickled!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I am sure she is, Nan! She'll probably comment here, too.

      Delete
  7. Oh my, I absolutely LOVE this!! What you kidding me, it is so great, I really think you should contact a local TV news show and tell them about it! I mean it, it is that good a story!
    I love how this is written also, the "sparkly hostess" makes you just wish you could have been there, doesn't it? Please tell your sweet Mum how tickled I am about this story of her far reaching eighth note cookies!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. She'll read your comment, Kay, and probably reply here, too :-)
      Although I think this story is worth telling, I doubt any TV station would be interested in it... it's not spectacular enough... But it would make a nice change from all the bad news and terrible stories.

      Delete
    2. Oh yes, I am tickled, really, and amazed about my cookies going around the world! The original Easter-bunny-cookies became eightth notes cookies....

      Delete
    3. Easter Bunnies Into Musical Notes! That is how I would start the TV newscast if they would let me write the piece! Hey, we NEED good news like this these days!
      And Meike, thank you for sharing this on your blog!

      Delete
    4. Kay, you are very welcome - I think it's great of the lady who has sent me that email to let us know about how she took the idea from my blog - and my Mum's recipe - for her continuing contributions to the women's musical club's festivities!

      Delete