Finding memories grown from a simple bacteria.

A partly-buried, never-forgotten childhood mystery resurfaced for me this weekend. It happened at Viking Days, held at the Nordic Heritage Museum in Ballard. It was there - amidst the Danish aebelskivers, Valhalla jokesters, and battling metal (shrouded) heads - that I found the path to a simple recipe I once feared might have died nearly 30 years ago with my grandmother. 

As with most epic quests, the basic back story centers upon a rare form of homemade yogurt. Specifically-speaking - a traditionally Scandinavian, slightly sour version, with the barest of crusts on top that served to hold the sugar I was allowed to sprinkle on it as a child.  We called it "fee-lah-bunk," even though the word never appeared before my eyes and I often thought I'd mispronounced it once...and then just kept on repeating the mistake in perpetuity. Whatever semantic form this kefir-ish treat took, my Grandma Jennie made it. To do so, she used a bacterial starter I presumed was as guarded as the launch codes for the Cold War's nukes. However, the gathering of the milk used as the base was where the poetry came into play for me.

Whether or not you subscribe to the foodie revolution that's realized the benefits of raw foods, there's actually a full blown trend underway when it comes to using that form of milk. I'm sure there are people who need to run for the bathroom by merely thinking about or even walking down the aisle of their local specialty grocer that carries this unpasteurized elixir. I'm not sure what I think of it myself. Cow's milk straight from the udder is an acquired taste for any species other than a barn cat. Personally, I wouldn't be surprised to find a few hairs floating at the top of the bottle if I were to buy the stuff these days. I'll let the foodies and the vegans and the back-to-the-landers debate raw milk on the merits. I'm just riffing on the memory. For now.

So back in my day, we went right to the source. Growing up in the northern wilds of Wisconsin meant that there were dairy farms in every direction. On a dairy farm you'll invariably find some form of a "bulk tank" used to collect the recently gathered milk. The basic logistics of making "fee-lah-bunk" was to visit one of those farms, chat up the friendly farmer for the sake of proper neighborliness, and then fill a Mason jar or two with raw milk to take home to Jennie so that she could add her starter. It was this act of gathering that was so special to me. I can still remember riding on the big bench seat of my Dad's epic Ford(s) on this mission. It always seemed to be summertime, with the magic hour light turning everything a cooling down shade of orange. Those memories are coated in amber for me, including the ride back toward home with the warmth of the milk emanating from the glass of the jar into my little hands. I'd be given the big boy responsibility of hanging onto the milk all the way to Jennie's house. A few days later, the new "fee-la-bunk" would be ready. No food ever tasted sweeter in those elementary school years. With or without the added sugar. 

Fast forward a few decades, and buzz right on by the occasional conversations I've had about this yogurt-y treat. When it's come up, the answer from the befuddled random Scandinavian I'd ask would always be the same.

"Never heard of it." Or maybe, "how do you pronounce that again?"  

And so that memory faded, as they often do when covered over with Facebook status updates, online dinner reservations, and the endless stream of utterly forgettable data we've all seemed to concede to without actually agreeing is worth the distraction. 

That is until this past weekend's Viking Days. 

When I saw the various food vendors broken down by the nations of origin within the Pan-Scandinavian mix, I drew the memory of "fee-lah-bunk" up in my memory bucket. So I started asking around. As a last resort, I was pointed toward an older gentleman in a Swedish flag apron. "He's the only one who might know," I was told. So I laid it out for him. 

"I'm looking for the bacterial starter for a traditional yogurt my grandmother made. I think it was called 'fee-lah-bunk' but I've heard it called other things. Do you know about it and where I might find it?"

He replied, "I'm a Dane, and I was born on Queen Anne." In other words, he was a lovable local. And something of a fraud.   

I'd come up bupkis once again. Or so I thought. Until I heard a half-barrel-sized, gray-haired woman behind me say, "I'm a Finn. I live in the UP. I've got the starter. We call it 'villi.' I've never heard the 'bunk'. I can send you some."

So not only did this random, adorable Yooper know of what I spoke. She gave me a Finn's version of the origin story.

"You know how it came here from the old country, right?" 

I confessed that I didn't.  

"It came on a piece of cheesecloth." I've since imagined a forward-thinking Finn passing the time in steerage, thinking of all the lactose-intolerant immigrants who would benefit from this wonder yogurt passed down from generation to generation all thanks to the musty swatch she had tucked in her knickers.

Or maybe it was sent on a piece across the centuries and oceans via FedEx. Either way, it won't be long before I start looking for a package with a small town Michigan return address containing a supply of bacteria to make my very own strain of new memories. 

Oh, and I finally got the spelling right, too. It's "filbunke." For that, I credit Wikipedia. Because not every question need be answered at Viking Days. Just some of the really special ones I didn't realize I'd been carrying around with me all this time. 

 

My Great Lakes Loop - Gallery #2

Summarizing a few weeks on the road with a mere handful of images isn't really possible. That is, however, the point of posting a few pics at this stage. Big overview, minus the nuance. I've still got two days left in Wisconsin and Minnesota before heading back to Seattle. I have new and freshened-up stories swirling around me like a cloud of deer flies. If we soon cross paths, my apologies for what may well seem a manic rundown of what I've found along the way. I love the exploration side of this "investigative memoir." But I will soon transition from this time on the road to the equally exciting time of getting it all on the page. Here's hoping the narrative payoff will offer real snap, crackle and pop...sorry for the copyright infringement with that overdubbed ad copy...I'm still trying to get a decent response to some questions from Kellogg's...they're the sort of corporation that has me acting more like Michael Moore when I'm generally more along the lines of updated Charles Kuralt...

Click on the photos to make the gallery advance. No captions for the time being. Treat it like a visual MadLib. Sent, as luck would have it, from Madison - one of our nation's most unapologetically liberal places. 

My Great Lakes Loop - Gallery #1

There's certainly a more elegant way of doing this than just posting a pile of pics. Elegant, however, I ain't got at the moment. What I do have are loads of images from my current "Great Lakes Loop". Rest assured, it's been a fascinating trip thus far. I rolled into Detroit yesterday and I'll soon hit the road for other Michigandering. All the pics in this gallery are pre-Detroit. My apologies for the lack of back story on what made the random-ish cut. So there will be more to come. Here's a taste of what I've been seeing along the way - click on the photo(s) to advance through.

 

Soaking up the Soo

I've been working on Pelting Out  long enough to exercise a healthy skepticism in the new material I come across. As a part of doing so, I spent last night in Sault Ste. Marie - home to one of the most mispronounced/misspelled/misunderstood place names in North America. Call it "Soo Saint Marie" or just "the Soo".  There would be even less here today were it not for the history and innovation of the Soo Canal. Even at the height of its engineering heyday, the Canal is an industrial expansion upon a once natural waterway between Lakes Superior and Huron. But I'm nonetheless intrigued by this place. Go back far enough and you'll find many competing origin stories. I found what I came looking for, which included wanting to see whether (or how) both sides left certain parts out of the narrative. I should back up a bit to say that "sides" in this particular place corresponds to the border between Canada and the United States. The Canadian historical narrative is different than the American one. Not necessarily opposed. It's what gets left out that intrigues me. Add to that the current emphasis that Stephen Harper (Canada's Conservative Prime Minister) has chosen to re-frame the War of 1812 (which actually lasted until early 1815). and contrasts then and now between the U.S. and Canada.

Intriguing stuff, right? Uh...maybe not yet. I'm leaving out a ton of detail. And I'm about to hop on the road for another long day of driving. Monday was Winnipeg. Tuesday Thunder Bay. Yesterday Sault Ste. Marie. Today is more parts of Michigan and then back into western Ontario. Detail will follow, I promise. And please don't wait for the movie. You'll like the book better.

 

Trying finding mention of The Chicora on the U.S. side of the Soo.

Trying finding mention of The Chicora on the U.S. side of the Soo.

Pointing my road canoe toward Thunder Bay

I quickly fell in love with Winnipeg and the whole keystone sensibility here in Manitoba. It's not high gloss. When it tries to be, it fails rather innocently. Today's plan centers upon Thunder Bay. Maybe eight hours of solid driving, plus or minus whatever superhumandriver focus or distractions come up along the way. I arrived in Canada with a plan. Google has filled in the blanks thereafter. How else might a person who's never been to a particular place claim with some degree of assurance that they know what to expect on down the road a full day's drive? Much less claim that a late afternoon arrival at a well-reviewed rural B&B after a well-timed handful of stops planned along the way might still mean a chance to catch "Pacific Rim" at 7:05 in Thunder Bay? Crazy and/or arrogant people talk like that. Or they did just a few short decades ago. 

Even when I'm doing research, I still shoot for the sort of road trip where I can be a traveler and not a tourist. I won't claim the defined difference between the two as my own formulation. Rather, it was offered up on the platter of conversation between Philip Caputo and William Least Heat-Moon in a NYTimes piece about travel (published this past Sunday). I totally agree with their context. So that's how I roll. With as much appreciation for the little stories and the big sights (or sites) along the way. With the advantage of knowing through experience that if you don't have a plan, you won't see the poetry that comes from improvising.

So if we cross paths out there, I'll be that guy scribbling notes, making calls, chatting up the person behind the counter and scanning the horizons. And whatever fork in the road you approach today, I hope you encounter someone smiling as they head your way.

 

Another Sting. Just "making copies".

The Edward Snowden case seems pretty far away from the boundaries of my current book research. Yet the tentacles of domestic surveillance twist and stretch pretty far if you let your mind go. Before long, a tenuous link seems possible to all sorts of innocuous things. Like good ol' snail mail. And, no, I'm not currently wearing a tin foil hat.

Instead, I'm thinking about a distantly related domestic spying story that crossed my radar on July 4th. If you didn't see it, the mere novelty of Postal Service spying should garner at least an old-timey raised eyebrow. Goodness knows mine certainly arched when I saw a breakdown of "mail covers" and how one forgetful employee in Buffalo let an internal notice of doing so slip on by. The evidence ended up in the subject's mailbox. Who happens to run an anarchist bookstore. Nothing will come of it, in all likelihood. I humbly suggest that our collective lack of surprise to such matters - especially in the wake of Snowden's desperate cry for attention - stands as a most striking national evolution. This story stuck with me and I suggest checking out. You just might never look at your pile of Pottery Barn catalogs and ValPaks the same way again.

The famously grody, unisex CBGB bathroom. As seen at The Met/Costume Institute's "PUNK" exhibit - May 2013.

The famously grody, unisex CBGB bathroom. As seen at The Met/Costume Institute's "PUNK" exhibit - May 2013.

Sipping the same ol' weak tea

I'm no longer surprised by the U.S. Congress. Reluctantly. They simply can't help themselves. Even the most hopeful among us increasingly expect our elected representatives will hijack any debate to redirect the conversation, bog down any bill with unnecessary junk, and gut any requirement in favor of alleged allegiance. So it went yet again with the Farm Bill. People aren't paying attention, so any desire to tease out what's most offensive about this debate is an exercise in futility. The underlying point remains that...well, nothing changes. Operationally or philosophically. Most disturbing (should be) that all current funding levels stay the same. Whether too little or too much. And our preparation for future disasters - whether flood or drought or a 17-year-cycle of cicadas - remains nonexistent.

 Happy Happy Happy Solstice, America.

The Teapot Dome Service Station in Zillah, WA reminds us of a simpler time. When government scandal led to...um, novelty architecture? 

The Teapot Dome Service Station in Zillah, WA reminds us of a simpler time. When government scandal led to...um, novelty architecture? 

"Modern Farmer" and Governors Island

I noticed a spiffy, new magazine title near the checkout at our local Whole Foods earlier this week. "Modern Farmer"  - anchored in the Hudson Valley, yet seemingly structured to cover the gamut of ag interests across a hungry (yet often disinterested) nation. I'm admittedly intrigued. This isn't necessarily an endorsement and they've only put out a few issues since launching last October. These folks appear to be pros and the effort is much appreciated.

As an entirely different sort of acknowledgment, I also noticed a story in the NYTimes earlier in the week that included some awesome demolition photos. Governors Island in New York Harbor is one of those fascinating immigration portals that rarely gets the fawning press directed at Ellis Island. Yet. The transition from what's left there to what will be a new park was made somewhat more apparent by blowing up (or down?) the shell of a building I noticed while doing a touristy ferry tour with my wife and daughter over Memorial Day weekend. For all you history nerds, this might be worth a quick looksie.

(Pre-demolition) Building on Governors Island

(Pre-demolition) Building on Governors Island

Finding life on every block in NYC

I left NYC nearly a week ago, and the processing of what I saw and learned on this latest visit continues. The streets roil with inspirations for me - it's so hard to slow things down enough to take stock of what I learn there. As a result, it's taking me time to filter through the hundreds of photos and piles of new ideas to incorporate into my story's arc. So goes the business of squishing and squeezing an untidy story into an approachable narrative arc.

But here's a tidbit I hope might be enjoyable as a quick bite. I saw while we were visiting the obit in the NYTimes for a woman who made a documentary about a photograph. Meta enough for you? Most folks will recognize the photo ("Harlem 1958") where a dizzying crowd of jazz greats are captured in their mid-morning glory. The obit listed the address. I diverted my early morning run from the parks (Riverside, Morningside, Central...) up into Harlem to capture a few of that stoop for myself. There were no musicians up at that hour. Only a few friendly trannies further south on 5th Avenue and delivery people on their rounds, tossing things off their trucks. But as I mentioned earlier, it's such rare occasions when the City slowed down and cleared out that I felt like I could see a longer arc than just navigating the crowded block right in front of me traversing Midtown in full bloom. I'm thankful for those morning moments.

The stoop used for "Harlem 1958" - as photographed by me on May 30, 2013. 

The stoop used for "Harlem 1958" - as photographed by me on May 30, 2013. 

Someone recently asked me why I run if there's such a serious risk of injury and all the other overplayed bad news bearing down on such a sporty lifestyle choice. Here's the answer I should have given - because of the chance to see things like this when I know that almost everyone is still getting the sleep we all need. Life's a series of trade-offs. This is what I take away from my choice in that trade. I can live with that.

Visiting the Brooklyn Navy Yard on Memorial Day Weekend

Now that I'm up and running here, the time has come to kick the tires a bit. At the very least, I hope you are here to do the same. There's a lot of ground I want to cover. This will be a new blog that takes the energy I've contributed in the past and strips it down considerably. Connected to that simplification is my desire to get this site out there before I begin shopping around the book I'm writing. ​So look for faster content. More mobile contributions. Images. Less polish - if that's what I should call what I did in the past. More brevity. Yes, that is an oxymoron. Sue me.

​To start, I spent a hearty hunk of my day in Brooklyn at the Navy Yard. The good folks at Turnstile Tours offer a few different ways of seeing the history that's out there. Today was a World War II-era tour that perfectly coincides with an obscure origin story angle I'm pursuing. I can't say enough good about what they do out there. Check back for some photos, too.