Beach Bottle…. Memories of Santa Monica

So it’s hot today in Portland. The temperature is in the 90s. The beach sounds like a good place to be… with a beach bottle.

We’re just not used to this kind of weather, at least not until late August when we might get hit with a heat wave. So, I’m in reverie in front of the air conditioner.

Me with a beach bottle

When I was living in Santa Monica, I could walk a few blocks to the beach. When special company came for a visit, I would make what I called a “beach bottle”.

How did I make it? Pay attention, Judith.

Squeeze fresh lemon juice into a bottle, from a just-picked lemon, off the tree in the backyard. Add water and sugar to taste. Here comes the good part:

Add whatever might be your pleasure at the time. Rum? Vodka? Gin? With a splash of Drambuie, Cointreau, Lemoncello, or whiskey for a taste of Kentucky.

Here’s a photo of me enjoying one when Hannah and al-Gene came for a visit. Santa Monica was paradise.

I’m not as trashed as I appear. Really. Ha, ha.

Ode to the Old Lemon Tree

Today, I’ll make lemon pudding, I thought. I’ll squeeze the fat fruit. I’ll scrape the bright rind. I’ll stir the cornstarch and sugar together with the zest then I’ll pour in the juice. I’ll stir in sweet milk and when it begins to thicken, I’ll add in the creamy butter.

Then there came a memory like they are wont to do.

A lemon tree stood alone in the yard, scarce of leaf, bent and rough of bark, unexpectedly laden with fruit.

That old tree brought me joy on days when I tired of rice and onions. I’d go to gather the flawed, dimpled, sun-like yellow fruit to make pudding.

All I needed then was sugar, an egg, a lemon and cornstarch to stir until thickened. Lemon desserts aren’t lemon to me unless they make my jaw hurt from the tartness.

Now that I have the luxury of butter and milk, it doesn’t diminish the sweet and tart lemon pudding I made when I was poor… more poor than I am now.

The old lemon tree is far away but I’m sure it still stands. Why would anyone dare to cut down such a bountiful tree. But then who knows for sure what others might do. At least in my memory it still stands.

Now, I buy lemons from the bins at the store, the same store where I buy the butter and milk. I don’t know where any of them have come from or how far they’ve traveled.

I’d prefer anyday to go out and gather lemons from the old lemon tree. I’d fill my pockets with the warm fruit, heavy with juice and make the simple pudding that makes life good.