The
Goose of Christmas Past
by David Leite
I’ve been a haunted man for 13 years,
and I put the blame squarely on Tiny Tim’s crooked little
shoulders. It was December 1990, and I had just finished rereading
A Christmas Carol.
Inspired by Tiny’s exultant prayer, “God
bless us every one,” I decided that I, too, would have
a proper Christmas dinner. The next day I marched into my local
butcher shop and ordered a goose. Luigi, a short, rotund man
who had to stand on a milk crate to talk to his customers,
leaned over the meat case and cocked an eyebrow: “Have
you ever made a goose before?”
“Puh-lease,” I replied, even though the only experience
I had cooking fowl was microwaving Swanson turkey dinners. “Plenty
of times.”
“What size do you want?” he asked, obviously trying to
entrap me. But I outwitted him.
“Oh, the usual.”
When I returned
several days later to collect my bird, Luigi instructed me
in the ways of goose cookery. While he babbled
on about something to do with pricking the skin and draining
the fat, I imagined myself parading into the dining room
with a bird so splendiferous, my guests couldn’t
help but break into a chorus of “God Rest Ye Merry
Gentlemen.”
On Christmas Day, I awoke early to
prepare the goose. To ensure a moist bird, I tucked pats
of butter under
its
skin, then
slid it into the oven. After several hours, I checked
to see if the magic thermometer had popped up, signaling
the
goose
was done. But I couldn’t find one — anywhere.
I yanked the goose out of the oven, sloshing a tsunami
of fat
onto the floor, and turned the bird over and over looking
for that confounded popper. Just then the doorbell rang,
so I returned
the goose to the oven and hoped for the best.
As my five
guests sipped Diet Coke and nibbled from an artfully
arranged platter of Doritos and Lipton Onion
Soup Dip, I
excused myself and took the phone into the bedroom closet.
“Ma,” I whispered, “how
do you know when a goose is cooked?”
“Is this a joke?” she asked.
“No, I’m serious.”
“How do I know? I never made one.”
“What do you mean? You make capons all
the time. Aren’t
they emasculated geese?”
With that, she
put my father on the line.
I returned ten minutes
later, fully educated in the sex life of fowl, and asked
my guests
to be
seated.
I placed
the goose
on the table and began carving, but every time
I sliced, I hit bone. No matter what angle
I tried, the knife
simply slid
off.
“So much for ‘Christmas is coming, the goose is getting
fat,’” I tried to joke, as I strip-mined
the bird for meat with a fork. Eventually I
gave up and divided the
two legs among six plates. My guests looked
down at their pitifully small portions.
“We could always order pizza,” one guest offered. I glared
at him until he withered back into his chair.
After they all left, I railed against God,
Tiny Tim, and Luigi as I cleaned up. Furious,
I grabbed
the
platter and
flipped
the goose into the trash. And there, staring
up at me, were two perfectly plump breasts.
In my
frantic
search
for the
magic thermometer, I had turned the goose upside
down and later carved
from its scrawny, meatless back.
In the years
that followed, I’m happy to report that
I’ve become a whiz at roasting. Indeed,
at my country home I’ve cooked a barnyardful
of chickens, turkeys, poussins, and even guinea
hens. But never, ever goose.
Then one day while
visiting Danny, a country neighbor,
I told
her about my debacle. “AND YOU HAVEN’T MADE
A CHRISTMAS GOOSE SINCE?” she bellowed.
An ex-pat from England who’s blessed
with an alto’s lungs and
cursed with a hearing problem, Danny clocks
in at a decibel level just below that of a
Boeing 747.
“Nope.”
“WELL, NEXT WEEKEND WE’RE MARCHING
INTO YOUR KITCHEN, AND I’M GOING TO SHOW YOU HOW IT’S
DONE PROPERLY,” she
announced.
She thrummed her fingers on
the table as she dictated a shopping list.
Then suddenly
she
thundered: “OH MY, WE’LL
HAVE A THUMPINGLY GOOD TIME.”
I had
my doubts.
The day of our lesson, Danny
burst into my kitchen with her arms filled with herbs,
bottles, scraps
of paper,
and two
roasting pans. “LOOK,” she
said, waving a carving fork that would
do the Marquis de Sade proud. “FOR
INFLICTING THE JABS. YOU HAVE TO PRICK
THE GOOSE ALL OVER TO DRAIN THE FAT.” Drain
the fat? Where had I heard that before?
Suddenly, I remembered Luigi’s
lecture. Maybe he wasn’t such a
bad butcher after all.
I took the bird
from the refrigerator,
and Danny cooed, “MY,
THAT IS A PROPER CHRISTMAS GOOSE, DAVID!” She
took it from me, rinsed it, and lightly
seasoned it with salt and pepper.
Then she stood as if in a trance.
“Danny? Is something wrong it?” I
asked.
She put her finger to her lips, lowered her
head, then said softly (well, softly for Danny), “Now’s
the time to think of all the people
who have ever borne a grudge against
you, and — go for it!” With
that, she descended upon the bird with
her carving fork. To judge from the
ferocity
of her stabs and the contentment on
her face, my guess was she was fantasizing
about Tony Blair. When the bird was
sufficiently
pincushioned, she leaned against the
counter and trumpeted, “BOY,
WAS THAT CATHARTIC.” She looked
like a boxer who had just won a prizefight.
“So what’s next?” I asked,
enjoying being a private to her Patton.
She slipped the bird
in the oven. “WELL, YOU SIT HERE
AND MIND GOOSEY, AND I’LL BE
BACK IN A COUPLE OF HOURS.”
“What? Why?”
She looked at me
as if I were daft. “I’M KNACKERED,” she
said. And with that, she tramped
out the back door. “THE
DIRECTIONS ARE ON THE TABLE,” she
barked.
Without Danny there to
guide me, I was immediately haunted
by the
goose
of Christmas
past. I
rifled through her
scraps of paper, which in Danny’s
world constitute a recipe. One
read that the bird needed to
be turned three times. “Turned?” I
said aloud. Another: “Drain
the fat.” But when?
Visions of snickering guests
danced in my head. Still, I knew
that if I didn’t face this
bête noire head on,
I’d probably develop a
severe tic every time I saw a
goose or break out in hives when
served foie gras. So I made some
calculations and estimated when
to turn the goose; poured
off the fat several times, lest
there be another flood; and brushed
on Danny’s secret mustard-and-garlic
coating.
When I removed the goose,
it was nothing like the catastrophe
I
had wrought
in my youth.
It was a
beautiful mahogany
color, and the mustard coating
had formed a crackly, crispy
crust. One last hurdle, though,
before
I
could be free of my demons. I
poked the top
of the
bird. Yes!
Just
as I thought:
It
was a lovely, juicy breast.
Twenty
minutes later Danny muscled through the door. When she saw
the goose, her
face clouded
over. She
leaned in
close, inspecting. She tilted
the bird one way, then the
other. “Oh,
no,” I thought. “I
did it again.” Finally,
she said, “BRILLIANT, DAVID.” I
beamed.
She transferred the bird
to a platter and held it aloft. “BEHOLD
THE GOOSE,” she crowed.
Then she thrust her chin toward
the dining room. “NOW,
GOOD GOD LET’S EAT!”
Tiny
Tim himself couldn’t have
said it better.
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