Real RA: The Benefit of RA Hands
Photo by David Govoni
Sometimes, RA doesn’t just take. Sometimes, RA gives.
When I still lived with my parents, I was in charge of pies.
I'd found the perfect recipe for the crust and loved experimenting with
different fillings. Our kitchen wasn't very wheelchair accessible, so my mother
would place the ingredients and tools on the dining room table and I'd get to
work. I love the feel of flour between my fingers — the cool softness of it,
the way it packs into smooth shapes that fall apart with the slightest touch.
After adding slices of butter, I'd mix it into the flour with a pastry cutter
until it was a pile of pea-sized pellets and then get my hands in the bowl to
smush them together into a ball of dough. You know the rest: rolling the dough
into a large circle, carefully adding it to the pie pan, fluting the edges and
adding the filling. Shortly thereafter, the delicious smell of baking pie would
waft through the house.
I grew up in a baking household. For as long as I can
remember, my mother’s baked goods were a regular part of our diet. When I was
little, I helped — possibly "helped," it may have gone faster without
my assistance! I loved when she made bread, It was my job to crumble the yeast
into the warm milk, stirring until it was dissolved. Then I stepped back and
watched while my mother incorporated the flour and kneaded the dough, leaning
the heels of her hands into it. This part, I couldn't do. Juvenile arthritis in
hands makes it impossible to work the dough as hard as it needs to come together
and become bread.
When we moved to Canada,
my mother continued making bread and also tried her hand at that uniquely North
American treat called pies. Oddly enough, this master of baking couldn't make a
good pie crust. We went without pies for many years and then one day, I had a
hankering for pie and while she was busy cutting up apples, I made the dough.
It was the best pie crust we'd ever tasted. And from that moment on, I was the
designated pie maker.
It wasn't until years later that I realized why I could make
pie crust and my mother couldn't. It was during a conversation with a friend,
who blithely proclaimed that "people can either make pies or bread."
She, too, was in the category of not being able to make a decent piecrust to save
her life. All of a sudden, the pieces clicked into place and I realized why.
Bread needs kneading. A lot of kneading. To be a good
bread-maker, you need strength in your arms from the shoulder all the way down
to the hands. Pie crust, on the other hand, needs a gentle touch. Almost every
piecrust recipe warns you against handling the dough too much — if you do, the
finished crust won't be light and flaky.
In other words: RA hands are perfect for making piecrust.
Pain and lack of mobility work together to give you the gentleness this kind of
dough needs. Once the pea-sized pellets have been gathered into a ball, you're
done. Any more manipulation of the dough will ruin the crust. That means you
get to stop before your hands hurt!
The ability to make the perfect piecrust isn't the only gift
RA gives. Look around you in the inflammatory arthritis community and you will
see support, advice and friendship. Together, we are creating positive change,
each one of us gathering with others to make a whole. Like the pea-size pellets
make the perfect dough when handled gently, all of us give to each other and
work gently together to make something better.
This is crossposted from the CreakyJoints website.
Comments
But then I didn't have to, for the longest time. When I got married, my husband loved pies and I loved baking but not crusts so he made me a deal: he would make the crusts and I would fill them.
Never take a nap on a Sunday afternoon. I woke up to "a pie crust, and a little left over." Meaning 11 pies to fill. (Where we got all the pie tins I do not now remember.) We threw an impromptu party and had ourselves a celebration!
Speaking of which, I should remind him of that. You never know what might happen.
Happy baking to all. Note: Try cherry, pineapple or blueberry, pineapple. They are delicious! Also, don't forget chicken pot pie. Yum! :)