I baked for the first time in months today. I intended to bake sooner, more often, and didn’t. Reasons/excuses…
But the prune plums finally arrived in the stores here about two weeks ago, and they demand that I bake. I bought probably close to ten pounds of them over the last weeks and watched some of them rot before my eyes because there simply wasn’t the stretch of time needed to actually bake. I have around four pounds in the freezer, cut up and sugared, waiting to be turned into freezer jam because that’s all I had time to do.
We are semi-homeschooling this year for the first time, and the adjustment is rough. There have been glimmers of the sublime, but mostly it’s been a hard slog for everyone. The boundary between school and not-school, the role of teacher vs mom, the inherent issues with online-only curriculum are all still “challenging”. Scare quotes, woohoo. By the end of this week, my daughter was just over it, all of it, and that included me.
This morning everything was ready to bake, because I had intended to to bake with my daughter yesterday afternoon to celebrate making it through the week, but, no. A botched lesson and matching mother/daughter meltdowns threw that idea out the window. My daughter and I gingerly explored each other’s mood and prickliness over breakfast, and I ventured the suggestion of going ahead.
I watched my daughter relax into the magic of mixing and kneading. Handling the dough, holding the smooth, barely sticky dough ball before she plopped it into the bowl to rise were full body pleasures for her. Later, I scraped the risen dough out of the bowl into her hands, and she caught it with delight. She sniffed the buttery yeasty scent of the raw dough like perfume. By the time we had placed the plums in our respective cakes and slid them into the oven, our sharp edges had blunted enough for her to declare with equal parts hope and conviction that she and I were a good team after all.
Salvation by yeast.

